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Industry, States Reject ‘Piecemeal’ AT&T Plan for Internet Compensation

Telecom and cable firms, states and others resisted an AT&T plan for an interim intercarrier-compensation revamp, particularly for VoIP calls. In comments last week, they urged the FCC to keep its eye on the comprehensive overhaul promised by Chairman Kevin Martin for November. Comments on an alternative interim proposal by Embarq are due Tuesday.

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Most of the AT&T proposals relate to the FCC’s handling of Internet-based traffic. AT&T wants the FCC to declare, on an “interim” basis, that carriers may collect access charges from telecom companies serving VoIP providers, as long as the calls appear to be ‘interexchange,'” and “the charges are not higher than the terminating carrier’s tariffed interstate switched access rates.” AT&T wants the FCC to expand the scope of a 2004 Vonage order by declaring that it preempts states when regulating AT&T U-verse VoIP and other fixed-location VoIP services.

The FCC should reject the AT&T and Embarq petitions, “which focus on a particular type of traffic for only one carrier,” Verizon said. “The Commission should be wary of any proposal -- whether carrier-specific or not -- that would increase rates for one service to compensate for claimed deficiencies in rates for a different service.” Instead, the commission should be concentrating on completing a full overhaul this year, it said. Cable and wireless agreed. The FCC should “concentrate its efforts on fashioning a durable regime to govern the exchange of all traffic,” rejecting proposals “that offer only piece-meal solutions,” Comcast said.

The AT&T petition “is not an answer,” said the New York Public Service Commission. “It will only make matters worse and will fail to resolve underlying issues.”

Some said the FCC should take interim steps, but only as a fallback if there’s no comprehensive revamp. If interim proposals are adopted for AT&T, the FCC shouldn’t impose them on other companies, “but rather allow others to volunteer to implement these solutions,” USTelecom said.

The VON Coalition, representing the VoIP industry, didn’t file comments but probably will file reply comments, said Jim Kohlenberger, the group’s executive director. “This is indeed an enormously important issue for VoIP users and providers,” and it’s “precisely” why VON signed on to a broader industry letter urging a complete overhaul, he said. AT&T’s proposal is another “problematic piecemeal” approach “that could slow the rollout of… innovative new ways to communicate.”

Rural carriers agreed that access charges should apply to Internet-based traffic. Rural local carriers “are experiencing many of the same problems AT&T describes in attempting to collect tariffed access charges from [VoIP] providers and associated interconnecting carriers,” said the National Exchange Carrier Association, the Organization for the Promotion and Advancement of Small Telecommunications Companies and the Western Telecommunications Alliance in joint comments. The Rural Independent Competitive Alliance agreed, but it condemned AT&T’s request to cap VoIP traffic compensation at interstate levels. “Such a declaration would force LECs with higher intrastate than interstate access rates to reduce all of their terminating rates.” CenturyTel also disputed the proposed cap, saying the limit would produce “unreasonably low compensation for rural carriers… and effectively [negate] the switched access regime.”

The FCC shouldn’t apply access charges to IP traffic, even on an interim basis, Sprint Nextel said. That would be “contrary to existing law and to the public interest,” it said. On the contrary, the commission should clarify that access charges don’t apply to IP traffic, Sprint said. AT&T’s proposal “would discriminate against IP traffic by making IP providers pay AT&T” for terminating and originating access traffic, said ISP Core Communications. It would be “arbitrary and capricious” for the FCC to grant the petition because the agency has repeatedly found that “there is no cost basis for setting disparate intercarrier compensation rates for otherwise indistinguishable switching functionality,” Core said.

The FCC shouldn’t decide on VoIP access charges in the context of AT&T’s request, CompTel said. The commission already has “at least” two pending proceedings on whether access charges should apply to VoIP traffic, the competitive carrier association said. The FCC should decide the issue there, as “extensive records have been developed.” Cox Communications agreed, saying the FCC should decide in the context of an Embarq forbearance petition on the subject.

The FCC should make clear its exclusive jurisdiction over IP-enabled services, NCTA said, agreeing with that aspect of AT&T’s plan. The action would make all Internet traffic interstate and no longer subject to state regulation. “Some state commissions… are seeking to impose unnecessary and burdensome entry requirements on facilities-based VoIP providers,” the cable association said.

The FCC shouldn’t declare interstate all fixed Internet traffic, CenturyTel said. Doing that “could well motivate network users to suddenly declare all traffic ‘IP-based’ and not subject to intrastate access rates,” the rural local carrier said. “State commissions and carriers would find themselves in the unwelcome position of having to sort out a litany of disputes that would preoccupy the industry for years to come.” The proposal might only work if the FCC offset lost intrastate access revenue with money from the Universal Service Fund or elsewhere, it said.