The FCC should write detailed rules on 911 network competition, said public safety groups in comments responding to an FCC Wireline Bureau public notice. The notice arose out of two arbitrations involving interconnection disputes between competitive 911 network provider Intrado Communications and Embarq and Verizon (CD June 8 p6). However, some telecom companies said the broad issue of 911 competition should be dealt with in a separate proceeding.
Adam Bender
Adam Bender, Senior Editor, is the state and local telecommunications reporter for Communications Daily, where he also has covered Congress and the Federal Communications Commission. He has won awards for his Warren Communications News reporting from the Society of Professional Journalists, Specialized Information Publishers Association and the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing. Bender studied print journalism at American University and is the author of dystopian science-fiction novels. You can follow Bender at WatchAdam.blog and @WatchAdam on Twitter.
The FCC voted 3-0 Thursday to allow CenturyTel’s $11.6 billion acquisition of Embarq. As expected, the commission conditioned approval on the rural carriers’ abiding by “voluntary commitments” (CD June 25 p7) submitted by the companies last week. The commitments relate to broadband rollout and to CenturyTel wholesale practices that competitive carriers raised qualms about. The deal is expected to close in less than a week and work combining the companies has begun, CenturyTel officials said.
An upcoming FCC report about online child safety doesn’t include new rules, a commission attorney said at a Family Online Safety Institute lunch Wednesday. That the FCC might regulate in the area was a concern expressed in many comments at the agency, said Robert Cannon, senior counsel in the Office of Strategic Planning and Policy Analysis. Meanwhile, officials from CTIA and Verizon said industry can address online safety issues without government intervention.
The FCC is getting close to approving the Embarq- CenturyTel merger, and an order probably will circulate this week, a commission official told us on Tuesday. People in the office of acting Chairman Michael Copps have held several meetings with Embarq and CenturyTel in the past week, and the companies submitted a revised list of “voluntary commitments” Friday (CD June 23 p6). The companies have received the rest of the approvals for the deal.
The FCC should stop “excessive” special-access pricing by AT&T and Verizon, the NoChokePoints Alliance, a new coalition of competitors and customers of the big phone companies (CD June 18 p7), told reporters Monday. “Releasing the broadband economy from the choke hold these huge phone companies have on the special-access market will be a catalyst for innovation and investment in the broadband marketplace,” said spokeswoman Maura Corbett. The coalition’s statement prompted a flurry of counter-statements from incumbent local exchange carriers and others.
AT&T could cope if the FCC adds a fifth principle on nondiscrimination to its Internet policy statement, but the company doesn’t think it’s necessary, Senior Executive Vice President Jim Cicconi said Friday. “If it were structured properly, I could certainly conceive of one that we could live with,” Cicconi said on a panel on net neutrality at the Pike & Fischer Broadband Summit.
Verizon won its appeal of an FCC decision denying the company unbundling forbearance in six metropolitan statistical areas. Ruling Friday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit remanded the order, directing the FCC to better justify its use of a market-share test. But the ruling doesn’t necessarily mean that Verizon will get what it wants.
The FCC aims to open soon a proceeding that will “closely examine” wireless handset exclusives, acting Chairman Michael Copps said Thursday. In a keynote speech at the Pike & Fischer Broadband Summit, he also called for an overhaul of the Universal Service Fund and reflected on the agency’s development of a national broadband plan.
Embarq and CenturyTel CEOs were in Washington to lobby acting FCC Chairman Michael Copps on their pending merger, said an ex parte filing. In a meeting Tuesday, Embarq’s Tom Gerke and CenturyTel’s Glen Post urged Copps to promptly sign off on the $11.6 billion deal, which has received all other required approvals. Copps still hasn’t circulated a draft order on the deal, a commission official said Wednesday. But in a recent research note, analysts at Stifel Nicolaus downplayed speculation (CD June 12 p6) that the FCC is waiting for the anticipated incoming Chairman Julius Genachowski. “With the merger review now at 190 days and [Copps'] oversight of the DTV transition successfully behind him, we would expect he will endeavor to wind up the review of this deal while he retains the chairman position, recognizing the risk that decisions that are held over for a new chairman could be held back by several weeks as the new leadership is installed,” they said.
The FCC ordered all U.S. carriers to immediately suspend termination payments to Tonga Communications. In an order Monday granting a petition by AT&T, the International Bureau said the Tongan company acted anti-competitively by blocking AT&T and Verizon circuits to Tonga since Nov. 24 (CD June 4 p12). The U.S. companies had refused to pay 30 cents per minute for international calls to Tonga, a new rate set by the Tongan government that’s triple what the carriers agreed to pay.