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To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (385)4/3/1998 1:32:00 AM
From: Darren DeNunzio  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 3178
 
The FCC, ISP'S, and Access Charges

This fact sheet offers informal guidance on an issue that has generated a great deal of public interest. Updated January 7, 1998

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In December 1996, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) requested public comment on issues relating to the charges that Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and similar companies pay to local telephone companies. On May 7, 1997, the FCC decided to leave the existing rate structure in place. In other words, the FCC decided not to allow local telephone companies to impose per-minute access charged on ISPs.

Please Note: There is no open comment period in this proceeding. If you have recently seen a message on the Internet stating that in response to a request from local telephone companies, the FCC is requesting comments to <isp@fcc.gov> by February 1998, be aware that this information is inaccurate.

The FCC issued an unrelated public notice, DA 98-2, on January 5, 1998 in connection with a report to Congress on universal service. Pursuant to the FCC's 1998 appropriations legislation, the Commission must submit a report by April 10, 1998 on several issues including the legal status of Internet services under the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
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Background Information

Each long distance telephone call you make includes per-minute fees that your long distance carrier pays to the originating and terminating local telephone companies over whose facilities that call also travelled. Those fees, which are designed to recover the costs to local telephone companies for use of their facilities, are referred to as "access charges."

As part of its Access Reform proceeding, CC Docket 96-262, the FCC in December 1996 sought comment on the treatment of ISPs and other "enhanced service providers" that also use local telephone companies' facilities. Since the access charge system was established in 1983, enhanced service providers have been classified as "end users" rather than "carriers" for purposes of the access charge rules, and therefore they do not pay the per-minute access charges that long-distance companies pay to local telephone companies.

In the Access Reform Order, FCC 97-158, adopted on May 7, 1997, the FCC concluded that the existing rate structure for ISPs should remain in place. In other words, the Commission reaffirmed that ISPs are not required to pay interstate access charges.

When it began the Access Reform proceeding, the Commission also issued a Notice of Inquiry, CC Docket 96-263, seeking comment more broadly on usage of the public switched telephone network by Internet and interstate information service providers. A Notice of Inquiry is a request for information that does not involve any specific proposed action. The Commission stated in the Access Reform order that it intended to use the Notice of Inquiry record to develop a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) proposing actions to facilitate the efficient deployment of data networks.

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Frequently Asked Questions on Internet Services and Access Charges

Q: Does the FCC regulate the rates charged by Internet Service Providers (ISPs)?

A: No. ISPs are considered "enhanced service providers" under FCC rules. The FCC does not regulate the rates that enhanced service providers charge to their subscribers.

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Q: How does the FCC regulate the rates that local telephone companies charge to ISPs?

A: ISPs purchase local phone lines so that customers can call them. Under FCC rules, enhanced service providers ISPs are considered "end users" when they purchase services from local telephone companies. Thus, ISPs pay the same rates as any other business customer, and these rates are set separately in each state. By contrast, long-distance companies are considered "carriers," and they pay interstate access charges regulated by the FCC.

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Q: How are access charges different from the rates ISPs pay now?

A: Today, ISPs typically purchase "business lines" from local phone companies. Business lines usually include a flat monthly charge, and a per-minute charge for making outgoing calls. Because ISPs receive calls from their subscribers rather than making outgoing calls, ISPs generally do not pay any per-minute charges for their lines, which is one reason many ISPs do not charge per-minute rates for Internet access. Access charges, by contrast, include per-minute fees for both outgoing and incoming calls. The rate levels of interstate access charges are also in many cases higher than the flat business line rates ISPs pay today.

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Q: Have local phone companies requested authority from the FCC to charge per-minute rates to ISPs?

A: Since 1983, there has been an ongoing debate about whether enhanced service providers should be required to pay access charges, based on the contention that these companies use local networks in the same manner as long-distance carriers. In June 1996, four local telephone companies (Pacific Bell, Bell Atlantic, US West, and NYNEX) submitted studies to the FCC concerning the effects of Internet usage on these carriers' networks. The companies argued that the existing rate structure did not reflect the costs imposed on local telephone companies to support Internet access, and that Internet usage was causing congestion in part of the local network. In connection with these studies and other pleadings, several local phone companies have asked the FCC for authority to charge interstate access charges to ISPs, although they have not filed a formal petition for rulemaking.

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Q: Is the FCC considering allowing local phone companies to impose access charges on ISPs?

A: The FCC requested public comment in December 1996 on whether ISPs should pay current access charges, and more generally on how Internet and interstate information services that use local telephone networks should be treated. The Commission concluded on May 7, 1997 that ISPs should not be subject to interstate access charges. There is currently no open comment period on this issue.

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Q: Does the FCC currently have an ongoing proceeding on Internet and interstate information services?

A: The FCC issued a Notice of Inquiry (NOI) in December 1996, at the same time as it asked for comment on whether ISPs should be subject to access charges. The NOI asked generally about how to create incentives for companies to make the most efficient use of the telephone network for Internet and other information services. The comment period for the NOI is closed, but the FCC has stated that it plans to issue a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) asking for comment on more specific proposals based on the responses to the NOI. The NPRM will consider actions other than imposition of per-minute access charges on ISPs.

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Q: What is the difference between a Notice of Inquiry (NOI) and a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM)?

A: A NOI is the earliest step in the FCC's process and typically asks questions in an effort to gather enough information to make informed proposals on a given topic. A NPRM is a request for comment on specific proposals made by the Commission. After the FCC reviews the comments filed in response to an NPRM, the FCC can issue a Report and Order adopting new rules.

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Q: Is the FCC considering taxes for use of the Internet or online services?

A: No. The debate involves charges levied by local phone companies, not government taxes.

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Q: Is this the "FCC modem tax" that has been floating around the Internet in various forms for several years?

A: The "modem tax" referred to a proposal in 1987 to require enhanced service providers to pay interstate access charges, which at that time were significantly higher than they are today. The 1987 proposal was abandoned in 1988. The current Access Reform proceeding is entirely separate.

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I believe the goverments policy regarding this issue will be changed in their April 10, 1998 report. I would imagine that the lobby is intense. You can be assured that all the players involved are represented in Washington.

I expect the days of "unlimited access" to be a thing of the past. The question is not if, but how much. Here in Los Angeles, GTE has been talking about charging an additional access fee for all additional lines added to a home for some time now. In 1980 the 213 area code was split into 4 new area codes. Last year, it was necessary to split those new areas once again. I just got used to the 310 area code only to have it changed to 562. They say that part of the reason for additional area codes is from subscribers installing a second line for use on the internet. I can see their point. My second line has had a continuous connection with the web for 904 minutes. (Thanks to a little PING utility that I wrote) That is nearly 11 days. And when I happen to loose the connection, my computer will immediately establish a new one. All of this connectivity for less than one dollar a day. What a deal! I will enjoy it while it lasts.



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (385)4/3/1998 1:39:00 AM
From: Darren DeNunzio  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3178
 
Remarks of Commissioner Susan Ness
Before the WashingtonWeb Internet Policy Forum Washington, D.C.
February 9, 1998

I saw an e-mail that alerted citizens why they should attend this forum. It said, in effect, "The Government has discovered the Internet. Come find out how they plan to screw it up."

That's consistent with a view of government that assumes we take the following approach to our jobs: "Step One. If it moves, regulate it. Step Two. If it doesn't move, kick it. Then, when it does move, regulate it."

I'm here to tell you, that's not how this Commissioner thinks -- and neither do my colleagues at the FCC.

The e-mail I received was right about one thing. The FCC has indeed discovered the Internet. Don't run away in a panic just yet. When exactly did we discover it?

Was it nine months ago, when we created the schools and libraries program to enable Internet connectivity in every elementary and secondary school classroom in America? Was it three years ago, when we began posting every public FCC release on our Web site? Was it ten years ago, when we reaffirmed that "enhanced service providers" like CompuServe and Prodigy should not be subject to per-minute access charges like those the long distance carriers pay to local telephone companies? No, it was even earlier than that.

It was almost twenty years ago that the FCC issued its "Computer II" rules, declaring that enhanced service providers would NOT be regulated like telephone companies. Vint Cerf, one of the founders of the Internet, tells me that he first testified before the FCC on Internet issues in 1976, over 22 years ago!

Of course, back then there was no commercial Internet. But there were academic research networks, funded and often operated by the U.S. government, culminating in the NSFNET backbone that formed the basis for the Internet we know today. Government supported the growth of nascent technologies that had not yet demonstrated commercial applicability, and then gracefully stepped back when the Internet was better able to operate on its own.

Throughout the evolution of the Internet, the FCC has been careful to tread lightly. We want to promote investment and innovation, not unnecessary work for government and unnecessary constraints on businesses or consumers.

Let me start by listing some of the things we haven't done. We haven't required Internet service providers to pay the per-minute "access charges" that are imposed on long-distance carriers. We haven't subjected ISPs to any of the other regulatory requirements that the Communications Act places on carriers -- such as price regulation or tariff filing or universal service requirements. We haven't barred providers of software for Internet telephony from selling their products. And we haven't applied any of our rules governing content in broadcasting to the Internet.

These are all steps that we were asked to take during the past two years -- sometimes by powerful companies and members of Congress. But we have remained Internet-friendly.

I don't believe in blind application of old rules, or in regulation for its own sake. Our responsibility is to promote the public interest. I take that responsibility very seriously.

In some cases, the best way to promote the public interest is to act. Congress decided that the only way we would have full competition in telecommunications was to rewrite the sixty-year old Communications Act. So they passed the Telecommunications Act of 1996, in order to break down economic, technical, and regulatory barriers to competition, particularly in the local telephone market.

And the FCC has been vigorous in making sure that the market-opening measures are fully implemented. We also have consumer protection responsibilities in competitive markets, as shown by our efforts to combat "slamming" and our new requirement that payphone operators disclose their rates on request, so that callers aren't ambushed by sometimes exorbitant rates.

In other cases, however, we can best promote the public interest by not acting -- or by deregulating. In our Competitive Carrier decisions, we have eliminated most of the rules governing domestic long-distance carriers as the market has grown more competitive. In the Computer III docket, we recently proposed to streamline the rules governing provision of enhanced services by local phone companies. And way back in Computer II, we decided that enhanced services would best grow and thrive if provided on a competitive and unregulated basis. We not only decided not to regulate enhanced services but also forbade state regulators from doing so.

The FCC of the late 1970s and early 1980s couldn't possibly imagine the Internet and the World Wide Web, as we know them today, but the Commission's decisions of that era reflect considerable foresight. My predecessors understood that a whole class of computer-based services was emerging and that these services were fundamentally different from the monopoly-dominated telephone industry. So they fenced off these new services from regulation.

Today, we are engaged in a broader effort to implement a pro-competitive and deregulatory communications policy, following the mandate of Congress in the 1996 Act. I strongly believe that the marketplace, rather than regulation, is the best mechanism for setting rates and determining which services should be available. However, we can't simply eliminate all the rules we have today and hope for competition. As long as the incumbent local exchange carriers, and particularly the Bell Operating Companies and GTE, retain significant market power from their control over their bottleneck local loop, we will need a transitional regime to move from regulation to competition.

Transitions are never easy. And they can be especially challenging in an industry as dynamic as communications and information, where the lines between one service and another are constantly blurring. Nowhere is this fact more evident than with respect to the Internet.

The Internet has been able to grow and develop outside the existing regulatory structure because the FCC has made conscious decisions to limit the application of its rules. Over the past several years, however, the Internet has become more than a mere curiosity. The Internet, and the broader constellation of data networking technologies it has fostered, are nothing less than the future of communications.

Where once the "enhanced services" industry meant a few small companies, today every major player in the communications world is heavily invested in the Internet -- and even some unfamiliar players are placing some very large bets. Consider:

AT&T's WorldNet service is one of the largest Internet service providers in the country, and AT&T recently announced an Internet telephony service that will compete directly against established long-distance carriers.

Quest & Level-3 are both making multi-billion dollar investments in the deployment of new fiber capacity, to offer new Internet services including voice telephony.

Two weeks ago, all five of the Bell Operating Companies and GTE joined with Microsoft, Intel, and Compaq in the Universal Digital Subscriber Line alliance to develop a common standard for technology to make faster Internet connectivity from the home possible.

The leading cable operators are all beginning to deploy cable modem services, with over 100,000 subscribers already taking advantage of this technology.

All of the broadcast networks are making significant Internet-oriented investments -- from MSNBC to CBS Sportsline. Soon broadcasters in the major markets will begin broadcasting in digital format, permitting a variety of data services to be offered in addition to video programming.

In the wireless arena, companies such as Metricom are taking advantage of unlicensed spectrum to offer wireless Internet access. And our upcoming LMDS auction will assign a vast swath of spectrum that could be the foundation for even more exciting services in the next several years.

Satellites are but a step behind. Exciting projects such as Teledesic, Celestri, and Skybridge promise to provide broadband communications and Internet connectivity on

A Global Basis.

To a significant extent, these developments have been nurtured by forward-looking, procompetitive, deregulatory FCC policies.

Looking to the future, I see the FCC having to grapple with three primary policy challenges regarding the Internet:

First, as the Internet grows and evolves, we are being asked to review existing regulatory classifications and their attendant consequences.

Second, we must ensure that homes and businesses have access to the bandwidth needed to fully exploit the Internet's potential.

Third, we must enable our children to take full advantage of this extraordinary tool in schools all across the country; and ensure that the benefits the Internet can bring to rural communities are fully realized.

Let me elaborate on each of these points.

1. Regulatory Paradigms

Let me give you some concrete examples to demonstrate why we need to address issues of legal classification. If present trends continue, data usage of the telecommunications network in the United States will exceed voice within the next several years. Some studies predict that, in less than a decade, voice will represent as little as ten percent of total traffic, and most of that voice traffic will be carried in digitized form indistinguishable from data signals.

Some people see the blurring of boundaries between the Internet and traditional telecommunications and conclude that the best solution is to expand our existing regulatory structure to encompass the Internet. The people who advocate these positions don't do so because they hate the Internet. The goals they are trying to achieve are often admirable. The problem is that these approaches push square pegs into round holes. If we insist on mechanical application of old rules to new technologies, we will end up with unsatisfactory results.

Our challenge -- and your challenge -- is to develop new models that allow us to deregulate rather than regulate, while achieving the public policy goals of competition and universal service. Congress understands this task as well. Late last year, it directed the FCC to draft a report analyzing our implementation of the 1996 Act, and in particular to review the consistency of our traditional demarcation between "basic" and "enhanced" services with the new statutory definitions of "telecommunications" and "information services." The Stevens Report, which is due on April 10, gives us an opportunity to explain how our prior decisions in several different proceedings fit together, and also to move forward to the next stage of analysis.

We're still early in the process of drafting the report, and I have not made any decisions about what we should conclude. I can, however, make a few observations at this point:

I continue to believe we made the right choice last May in deciding -- once again -- not to subject Internet service providers to access charges. These charges are currently set well in excess of cost, and there is no good reason to expand a regime that collects billions of dollars in implicit subsidies when our clear duty is to reform that regime, squeeze out the implicit subsidies, and establish new, explicit, competitively neutral means of universal service support.

Indeed, because we have chosen to rely on market forces rather than prescription to reduce the gap between access charges and their underlying economic costs, Internet-based services can serve to accelerate the reform process.

But in addition to the issue of access charges, we also must address issues of universal service. Universal service is a societal goal, now codified in law, and we should ensure that that goal is met in the future as technology evolves.

All providers of telecommunications services are now required by statute to contribute to a fund that will ensure the availability and affordability of telephone service to low-income consumers and consumers in rural areas, where the costs of constructing transmission facilities is disproportionately high. This obligation is not shared by enhanced service providers such as those who provide Internet access (like Erol's) or Internet content (like AOL). Some suggest this distinction no longer makes sense. Other say it does today but may not tomorrow, as new services -- such as Internet telephony -- become more pervasive and less distinguishable from traditional telephone services.

Where does Internet telephony fit? Does the answer depend on whether the call is terminated on the public switched network? Should the answer hinge on whether the traffic is voice or data? Should it matter whether the call is placed with a computer or a telephone?

We are wrestling with these questions right now. The best answers will be those that are thoughtful, not reflexive; principled, not based on short-term self-interest; forward-looking, not rooted in preconceived notions.

First-round comments were filed on the Stevens Report just last week. I suspect the debate will only intensify as technologies advance and services proliferate. I invite your participation in this important discussion.

2. Broad Bandwidth Deployment

The second great challenge for the Internet is bandwidth. Even though the fiber optic connections that make up the Internet backbone can transmit hundreds of millions of bits per second, Internet users typically see only a fraction of that performance. Part of the cause of this "World Wide Wait" is the backbones themselves, but this is an area in which multiple providers are making massive investments to meet burgeoning demand.

Although some proceedings before the Commission raise issues involving Internet backbones, I see greater urgency in the problem of congestion in the facilities connecting your home to the Internet. Here, I believe that the competition we are working so hard to promote will help.

Today, the vast majority of residential Internet users are compelled to connect to the Internet through circuit-switched Plain Old Telephone Service. They use analog modems that at best deliver 56 kilobits per second of throughput. But the quality and variety of desirable services increases tremendously at higher speeds, and many users hunger for access to greater bandwidth.

The recent announcement of the Universal DSL consortium, as well as other innovative technologies such as Paradyne's Multiple Virtual Lines, suggest that alternatives to analog loops may soon be deployed. Also, competing technologies such as cable modems, wireless, and satellite are becoming increasingly available.

Regulation, whether at the federal or state level, should not hinder the deployment of these much-needed bandwidth boosters. And neither should the fear by incumbents that these new options will cannibalize their existing higher-priced data offerings such as T1 service and ISDN.

The demand for high-speed services clearly exists, and we need to look at ways to unlock the market forces that will bring greater bandwidth to residential users. I believe that the single most important thing we can do to promote bandwidth in the "last mile" to the home is to accelerate competition among multiple providers. The more the telcos worry about losing the bandwidth market to the cable companies, and vice versa, the sooner both will be knocking on your door to offer you the services you want.

So I hope we can enlist your support in breaking open the local telephone and cable monopolies.

3. Providing Universal Service

The final Internet challenge that I would like to discuss is in many ways the most important. As a society, we must bring the benefits of information technology to all Americans, by connecting every classroom and library in the country to the Internet. This will reduce the danger of social and economic divisions between information "haves" and information "have-nots." It will also ensure that, in the future, America will have the skilled workers needed to compete in a global economy that is increasingly dependent on information technology.

The Internet overcomes geography. It allows the tiniest rural communities to access the vast stores of knowledge available on the World Wide Web, and enables the finest medical specialists to serve the most remote health care facilities.

Congress was right to establish requirements that will promote telecommunications and information access for schools, libraries, and rural health care providers. I am proud of the actions the FCC has taken to implement this mandate, and I look forward to continuing the implementation process. The schools and libraries corporation recently opened up a Web site to allow schools to apply for discounts online, making effective use of the very technology we are seeking to promote throughout the country.

Conclusion

There remain many unresolved details in our implementation of the 1996 Telecom Act, and the report Congress has requested will discuss some of them. It is important, though, to step back from time to time and remember what we are trying to achieve. I think we all agree that the Internet can be a wonderfully positive force in our society, and throughout the world. The Internet, however, is only a tool, and it is still subject to both the laws of physics and the principles of economics.

I'll leave the physics to the engineers in Silicon Valley building the next generation of routers. The economics, however, will depend in part on decisions that will be made at the FCC and at state public utility commissions.

Good policy decisions require good information and lines of dialogue between these actors, on the one hand, and investors, innovators, service providers, and end-users, on the other. I welcome your views, and I'm confident that my colleagues on the FCC do as well. I hope that you will take advantage of the opportunity.

Thank you.

(Geesh!)



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (385)4/3/1998 7:05:00 PM
From: Francis Gaskins  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3178
 
Dear Frank, I'm working on a response. It's a much much bigger deal than people realize at first.
Best,
Francis