The FCC late Friday approved purchase and privatization of Alltel by TPG Capital and Goldman Sachs Capital with a condition that concerned some commissioners. The order contains language capping Universal Service Fund payments to Alltel at 2007 levels, unless Alltel files cost data showing its per-line costs are less than the capped funding level or immediate compliance with the E-911 public safety answering point (PSAP) location accuracy standard.
The FCC should raise the income ceiling for LifeLine and Link-Up program eligibility so the programs are in line with a similar one subsidizing heating costs, the Iowa Utilities Board said in comments filed late Friday. The FCC voted in 2004 to raise the Lifeline and Link-Up eligibility ceiling to 135 percent of federal poverty guidelines, seeking comments on whether to raise it to 150 percent. The agency recently asked for comments to “refresh” that issue, which had lain dormant.
Hearings and letters to the FCC and NTIA on DTV consumer education will multiply in September, when Congress returns, Hill aides said in interviews this week. Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Daniel Inouye, D- Hawaii, told reporters he will convene a fall hearing on the DTV transition, saying a July 26 session convinced him “more needs to be done.” House Telecom Subcommittee Chairman Ed Markey, D-Mass., also will scrutinize consumer education efforts, an aide told us.
The National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) faced a heaping plateful of telecom resolution proposals at its summer meeting in New York City, set to open Sunday, July 22. Proposed resolutions address Universal Service Fund (USF) reform, VoIP number use, broadband over power lines, wireless termination fees, the digital television transition and IP relay fraud.
Colleges’ Universal Service Fund (USF) costs will rise “astronomically” if the FCC moves fund contributions from a revenue- to a numbers-based approach, universities and a higher education group told Communications Daily. Colleges could have to choose between removing dormitory phones and paying the drastically higher fees, they said. Either way, there will be “negative financial, technical and social impact,” said Jeri Semer, executive director of the Association for Communications Technology Professionals in Higher Education (ACUTA). FCC chairman Kevin Martin last May said he has “long favored” a numbers-based model and plans to propose to reform USF contribution this fall (CD May 15 p1).
Arguments against capping universal service subsidies to competitive carriers are based on “short-term self interest rather than long-term public interest,” OPASTCO told the FCC. “Excessive growth in the High-Cost program that is threatening its sustainability is attributable solely to competitive ETCs,” said OPASTCO in reply comments on the cap proposal. On the other hand, extending the interim cap to all rural telecom companies would “seriously threaten” wireline rural carriers, OPASTCO said. “At greatest risk would be continued service to subscribers in the most remote and highest-cost regions that may not have other reliable service options,” said the group, which represents wireline LECs.
Rep. Boucher (D-Va.) asked OPASTCO to promote his Universal Service Fund (USF) bill (HR-2054) on the Hill Wed. at the group’s legislative conference. The measure would revamp the USF program by widening the contribution base to include all those providing network connections, and expand services to pay for broadband. “We are in a hypercompetitive global market,” Boucher told OPASTCO members, stressing the importance of getting faster broadband deployment throughout the country, especially in rural areas. USF is under stress “today as never before,” Boucher said, adding that he and the bill’s chief co-sponsor, Rep. Terry (R-Neb.), have worked 3 years on “comprehensive” legislation to deal with problems in the system. Boucher’s bill has 11 co-sponsors, all but one Republicans. It has attracted support from AT&T, Qwest, Embarq and Alltel and NTCA, Boucher said, and the challenge is to encourage trade groups that like the bill to urge other lawmakers to sign up. “This bill will not be passed into law without your personal assistance,” Boucher told OPASTCO members. OPASTCO Pres. John Rose said the group applauds the bill but thinks it wise to pursue regulatory as well as legislative fixes.
FCC Chmn. Kevin Martin plans to proceed as soon as the fall on a proposal to change how telecom providers contribute to the Universal Service Fund, he said Mon. after a speech. Martin told reporters he is waiting for a U.S. Appeals Court, D.C., decision on a related universal service issue before teeing up a proposal to replace the revenue-based contribution system with one relying on phone numbers.
The FCC should avoid asking carriers for overly granular data in studying sector competition, CTIA said. The group was responding to an agency request for comments on wireless industry competition to go into the agency’s 12th Annual CMRS Competition Report. CTIA said USF money will be key to greater wireless expansion in rural America.
Cyren Call CEO Morgan O'Brien’s spectrum proposal largely could solve America’s broadband access problems and deliver a fully interoperable safety network, he said. On a Hill panel at the New America Foundation, O'Brien said Fri. he'd have more details of the proposal Mon. in a filing with the FCC. It will answer questions about how the company can succeed financially serving public and private needs, he said.