FCC, Faced With Telecom Crisis,                Could Let a Bell Buy WorldCom
                 By YOCHI J. DREAZEN                 Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
                 WASHINGTON -- Declaring the telecommunications industry in a                state of "utter crisis," the chairman of the Federal Communications                Commission suggested his agency could allow a Baby Bell to take                over WorldCom Inc., a combination once seen as unthinkable.
                                           A merger of a large                                          regional phone carrier and                                          the nation's second-largest                                          long-distance company                                          would reverse the FCC's                                          position on such deals. It                                          could also revive the spirit                                          of AT&T's monopoly                                          before the 1984                                          court-ordered breakup that                                          created the regional Baby                                          Bells, by allowing one                                          company to control huge                                          swaths of both markets.
                                           But in his first public                                          comments on the unfolding                                          WorldCom scandal, FCC                                          Chairman Michael Powell                                          said the industry's battered,                                          debt-ridden condition now                                          leaves regulators little                                          choice but to consider such                                          options, especially if the                                          alternatives would disrupt                                          phone and data service to                                          WorldCom's 20 million                                          customers. To keep                                          WorldCom's operations                                          stable, he also called for                                          the government to continue                                          its billions of dollars in                                          federal contracts with the                                          company, rather than pull                back as some White House officials have suggested.
                 Mr. Powell cautioned that a Bell's bid for WorldCom would still be                far from certain to win regulatory approval. But one remedy for the                broader industry's ills, he said, could be major consolidations along                the lines the defense industry went through in the 1990s.
                 "There are plenty of doctrines in antitrust and competition policy that                would take into consideration the duress and state of the market," said                Mr. Powell, who in the Clinton administration was a top official of the                Justice Department's antitrust division. "If a Bell company brought a                deal to us, that would certainly be part of the consideration."
                 Just five years ago, then-FCC Chairman Reed Hundt helped sink a                potential $50 billion merger between the Baby Bell SBC                Communications Inc. and AT&T Corp. -- still the leading                long-distance carrier -- by publicly labeling such a combination                "unthinkable" because of its size.
                 A deal between a Bell and WorldCom also could lead to further                consolidation as the other Bells scrambled to acquire AT&T and                Sprint Corp. as a way of keeping pace. Mr. Powell, however,                suggested that Bells probably would have trouble affording such acquisitions.
                 Damage to the telecommunications sector, the FCC chairman said, extends far beyond ailing companies                such as WorldCom, Global Crossing Ltd. and Qwest Communications International Inc. Even relatively                stable companies such as Verizon Communications Inc. and SBC face huge challenges now that lenders                are extremely hostile to telecom companies.
                 "The real problem is that there was a collapse in this sector, a crisis in this sector, even before all of this                happened," he said, noting that WorldCom's share price had plunged to $1 before the accounting                scandal broke. "That's why this is so painful to the telecom market -- talk about something that was                down on its knees and didn't need to be kicked in the gut."
                                           Mr. Powell said a big concern is that other                                          telecommunications companies may be hiding their own                                          accounting irregularities. He declined to name specific                                          companies, but said his agency is trying to be prepared for                                          the impact a bankruptcy filing by WorldCom or other                carriers would have on their customers.
                 In a wide-ranging interview in his office where an oversized flat-screen computer monitor sits on a                sprawling desk, Mr. Powell said the government bore some responsibility for the industry's problems,                which began with the frenzy to create new companies following the landmark 1996 Telecommunications                Act. The law allowed Bells and long-distance companies to enter each other's markets to foster                increased competition, but didn't address the prospect that they would look to acquire each other and                reduce the number of competitors.
                 Mr. Powell said that he thinks the FCC may have erred in the past by implicitly encouraging the                formation of hundreds of Bell competitors without realizing how few of them would ultimately be able to                survive. Many of those companies borrowed heavily to finance their quick expansion but have since                filed for bankruptcy or appear likely to do so in the near future.
                 "We correctly believed these markets didn't need to be natural monopolies and they could be                competitive, but I think we tended to over-exaggerate how quickly and how dramatically it could                become competitive," Mr. Powell said.
                               Pressure to show profits apparently led companies such as WorldCom to cook                              their books when their performance failed to live up to expectations. "It                              wouldn't shock me," Mr. Powell said, "if there were more companies that                              couldn't resist those pressures honestly."
                               Mr. Powell's remarks came days after former WorldCom executives accused                              of artificially inflating the company's revenues by almost $4 billion angered                              lawmakers at a congressional hearing by refusing to testify. One of the                              executives, former WorldCom chief financial officer Scott Sullivan, has told the                              company's internal investigators that ousted chief executive officer Bernard J.                              Ebbers knew of his plan to shift billions of dollars of normal expenses into                              capital expenditures accounts, boosting the company's earnings, congressional                              investigators said. Mr. Ebbers's attorney denies that account.
                 Mr. Powell said Messrs. Sullivan and Ebbers deserve to be punished for their roles. "At the end of the                day, the officers of a corporation are responsible for the credibility and value of that corporation," Mr.                Powell said. "This was classic dime-store fraud, and it may have spread deep into the company like a                cancer."
                 Nevertheless, he made clear the company's long-distance and data services operations need to be kept                stable, though the General Services Administration is reviewing WorldCom's government contracts and                the White House has said it might bar federal agencies from signing new deals with the company.
                 The government "ought to be very, very careful about adding to the circumstances that might collapse                the company," he said. "This is a significant company whose assets are critical components of the entire                network. It would be messy if they became unavailable."
                 WorldCom's current management, including new CEO John Sidgmore, said Thursday that a                bankruptcy filing by the company, based in Clinton, Miss., was looking increasingly likely. Protecting                WorldCom's business and residential customers is rapidly becoming a hot political issue. On Friday,                Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Ernest F. Hollings wrote Mr. Powell that his "foremost                responsibility is to protect the integrity and reliability of the nation's telecommunications network." The                South Carolina Democrat also asked Mr. Powell to detail the agency's contingency plans.
                 At this point, Mr. Powell said, WorldCom's officials and lenders have given assurances that the                company would continue to fully maintain its voice and data networks. "It's going to be a tricky situation                because there will need to be a major restructuring of the company or its assets that doesn't lead to                service outages," Mr. Powell said. "We're watching closely, but for now both the company and the                banks believe that keeping the networks running is in everyone's best interest."
                 Still, he said, "things are becoming more acute by the day."
                 Write to Yochi J. Dreazen at yochi.dreazen@wsj.com
                 Updated July 15, 2002 12:18 a.m. EDT |