Level 3 CEO James Crowe called on regulators to rewrite policies and regulatory frameworks in response to “fundamental” changes in the information technology industry. Speaking Wed. at a CEO luncheon sponsored by Progress & Freedom Foundation in Washington, he said: “Even the words we use -- ‘Telecom Act’ -- are incorrect… It’s time to rewrite the Communications Act. Telephone services is only a part of much broader networking capabilities.”
Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
What is the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)?
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is the U.S. federal government’s regulatory agency for the majority of telecommunications activity within the country. The FCC oversees radio, television, telephone, satellite, and cable communications, and its primary statutory goal is to expand U.S. citizens’ access to telecommunications services.
The Commission is funded by industry regulatory fees, and is organized into 7 bureaus:
- Consumer & Governmental Affairs
- Enforcement
- Media
- Space
- Wireless Telecommunications
- Wireline Competition
- Public Safety and Homeland Security
As an agency, the FCC receives its high-level directives from Congressional legislation and is empowered by that legislation to establish legal rules the industry must follow.
Latest News from the FCC
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chmn. Pat Wood said Tues. he was encouraging major electric utilities to invest in broadband over powerline (BPL) technology and expects more money to flow to BPL soon. Wood and Chmn. Powell spoke during an unusual joint appearance after a tour of BPL facilities in Manassas, Va., provided by the city electric utility.
The FCC granted part of a petition by Core Communications Fri. that asked the agency to forbear from enforcing several ISP-bound reciprocal compensation rules approved in 2001. The agency granted forbearance from growth caps and the so-called new market rule, saying those rules were no longer in the public interest. The new market rule barred carriers from getting reciprocal compensation for new markets they entered after April 18, 2001. The growth cap was a limit on the amount of growth eligible for reciprocal compensation. The Commission chose to let 2 other rules remain -- rate caps and the mirroring rule, saying they were needed to prevent regulatory arbitrage and promote efficient investment in telecom services and facilities. With mirroring, a Bell company that wanted to pay a low reciprocal compensation rate for ISP traffic it originated needed to accept the same rate for traffic it terminated. Fri. was the deadline for the FCC to act on the petition. The Commission had planned to act on the broader reciprocal compensation remand order at the same time it acted on the Core request (CD Oct 1 p3) but reportedly couldn’t agree about the complex issue in time. ALTS Gen. Counsel Jason Oxman said eliminating the growth caps and new market rules was a good thing because the rules had “artificially limited the ability of competitive carriers to recover the costs imposed on them by other carriers that delivered traffic to the CLECs’ networks.” He said the FCC’s action helps ensure facilities-based carriers would get some compensation “albeit at an artificially low federally established rate.” Said SBC: “Instead of piecemeal decisions and subjecting itself and the industry to constant litigation, the FCC should adopt broad-based intercarrier compensation reform that would make decisions like today unnecessary.”
In comments to the FCC on how new UNE rules should be written, Bell companies urged the FCC to eliminate switches and high-capacity loops and transport from the list of UNEs Bells have to share with competitors. Meanwhile, CLECs said it’s clear competitors still need those elements under the Telecom Act’s guidelines. The FCC had asked for comments to gain input as it writes rules to replace those overturned by the U.S. Appeals Court, D.C.
The Universal Service Administrative Corp. (USAC), which administers the $2.25 billion federal E-rate program, acknowledged at a Senate Commerce Committee hearing Tues. it had lost $4.6 million as a result of an accounting change requiring the corporation to have cash on hand to meet commitment letters. The change forced USAC to sell off high interest Treasury bills (T-bills) and other assets, paying significant penalties.
With an Oct. 8 deadline looming, the FCC hasn’t come to agreement on how to legally justify a reciprocal compensation plan for ISP-bound traffic that will hold up in court. Inside sources said there appear to be enough votes to rule that ISP traffic is defined as interstate, meaning under federal jurisdiction and not subject to the Telecom Act’s reciprocal compensation requirements. However, the commissioners are struggling with how to make sure that decision holds up legally and, said an FCC official, “there’s high drama attached to it.”
Local govts. are looking to BPL to add to marketplace competition and provide service to rural and unserved areas, but it appears unlikely they'll regulate BPL any differently from other communications providers that use the public rights-of-way (ROW), including cable. That’s the view of industry officials and municipal lawyers we spoke to. Their prediction will give little encouragement to a nascent BPL industry banking on an unregulated approach, based on the reception BPL deployments have received so far.
Refusing to accept money from individual companies, the Federation for Economically Rational Utility Policy (FERUP) leaders expects to emerge as a strong voice in key telecom debates at the state and federal levels, members told us. An organization of reform-minded state commissioners, also members of NARUC, was officially launched this year and is made up of at least 14 commissioners from 12 states. FERUP held a D.C. Summit last week (CD Sept 15 p2). An IRS filing for 501(c)(3) non-profit status is in process, officials said.
LONDON -- The U.S. and U.K. see eye-to-eye on many telecom and Internet issues despite differences in their respective infrastructures, NTIA, FCC and State Dept. officials said Wed. “Technology doesn’t recognize any borders,” said NTIA Dir. Michael Gallagher. Given their common heritage and common approach to difficult issues like spectrum and broadband, he said, it’s not surprising the countries’ positions are in alignment. Investment challenges associated with broadband deployment exist in every country, said FCC Comr. Kathleen Abernathy. Neither the U.S. nor the U.K. directly subsidizes deployment, she said, meaning “we're all looking at the same things to spur investment” through regulatory approaches. Their comments came during an interview with Communications Daily.
FCC Chmn. Powell said the Commission will be very active with indecency complaints in coming weeks as many broadcasters licenses come up for renewal. “This is why we are so active with our indecency complaints,” Powell told reporters at a press briefing Wed.