Verizon N.Y. filed Sec. 271 application with FCC seeking approval to offer long distance service in Conn. Verizon said that it served only small slice of Conn.-- Byram and Greenwich -- using operations in N.Y., where company received long distance approval in Dec. 1999. Southern New England Telephone serves most of rest of Conn., with Verizon having corner that had been part of former Nynex service area in N.Y.C. suburbs. “We are using the same wholesale systems and processes in Greenwich and Byram that the FCC reviewed when it approved our applications for New York,” Verizon Senior Vp-Public Policy & External Affairs Thomas Tauke said. “These are the systems and processes we have used to provision more than 3 million competitive lines and the same ones the FCC has already found satisfy the requirements” of Telecom Act’s interLATA 14-point checklist, Tauke said. Earlier this month, Conn. Dept. of Public Utility Control concluded Verizon met 14-point checklist in that state. Conn. filing followed FCC approval of Verizon’s long distance application in Mass. last week. DPUC also adopted performance assurance plan that is same as one approved by N.Y. PUC, with penalties scaled down to reflect Verizon’s much smaller presence in Conn. In Conn., Verizon serves 60,000 lines, which it said was about half of number that it provided to competitors in average month in N.Y. FCC has until July 20 to rule on Conn. application. In past, Verizon has referred to applications such as one in Conn. as “me-too” filings because they used same operating support systems as those in states already approved for long distance. FCC said it was seeking comments on Verizon’s Conn. application by May 14. Conn. DPUC must file consultation by May 14 and Dept. of Justice by May 29. All replies are due by June 7. MG
Combatants in broadband wars were prepping for busy week Mon. as House Commerce Committee Chmn. Tauzin (R-La.) and ranking Democrat Dingell (Mich.) neared reintroduction of bill (HR-2420 last session) to free Bell companies from many regulations when deploying DSL and Internet backbones. With 3 rapid-fire events crammed into 3 days -- introduction scheduled for today (Tues.), hearing Wed. and Telecom Subcommittee markup Thurs. -- opponents said they still were formulating strategy. Both sides agreed many amendments were expected Thurs. from lawmakers sympathetic to CLECs and from those seeking to attach their own agendas to what’s likely to be first major telecom item to pass House this year. “Thursday’s a long way away,” said one opponent on Hill who was resigned to hard week of work, including long Wed. night after the hearing. “A chaotic markup is probably not conducive to ultimately successful legislation, but that’s the path they've chosen.”
LAS VEGAS - Congress “absolutely must take” legislative action requiring manufacturers to build digital tuners into all TV sets, one of several measures needed to hasten transition to digital TV, Rep. Boucher (D-Va.) said at Mon. congressional breakfast panel. Fact that retailers last year sold 30 million analog-only TV sets is “not a particularly helpful statistic” for broadcasters striving to comply with May 2002 transition deadline, said Boucher, member of House Telecom Subcommittee. “I believe we ought to be requiring that every TV sold contain a digital tuner,” he said, eliciting applause from audience at NAB convention.
FCC Common Carrier Bureau granted extension for filing comments and replies on joint petition filed April 5 by BellSouth, SBC and Verizon asking Commission to find that high-capacity loops and dedicated transport weren’t subject to mandatory unbundling. Extension is result of joint motion filed by 21 carriers and industry associations seeking 30 days more to respond to report “Competition for Special Access Service, High-Capacity Loops and Interoffice Transport” attached to original April 5 petition. New deadline for comments is June 11, replies June 25.
Small Business Administration’s (SBA) Office of Advocacy told FCC in letter last week that Nov. order on Enhanced 911 didn’t comply with Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) because it didn’t adequately address impact on small business. It said conclusions weren’t based on issues raised in initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) and didn’t give small businesses chance to comment on new IRFA, SBA said. SBA told FCC Chmn. Powell that his agency should draft supplemental document to seek comment on impact on small businesses of decision to remove cost-recovery mechanism. Order itself was response to petitions for reconsideration of decision to remove precondition of cost recovery from states to accelerate introduction of E911 services. Originally, carriers were allowed to defer providing 911 operators with ability to automatically locate position of wireless callers. Before cost recovery had been removed as precondition, deferral was predicated on timing of state mechanism to reimburse carriers for costs. Order under scrutiny by SBA upheld FCC decision to require carriers to install automatic locator systems regardless of whether they were reimbursed by state govts. SBA told Powell that because small businesses didn’t have chance to comment on decision to do away with cost-recovery requirement, “the Commission’s rulemaking is grievously in violation of the RFA.” Technical regulatory concerns raised by SBA center on fact that FCC relied on regulatory analysis drafted in earlier order rather than creating separate one for comment on cost-recovery requirement change. Updated analysis should be disseminated “immediately to cure this deficiency,” SBA wrote.
LAS VEGAS -- NAB Pres. Edward Fritts addressed split between Big 4 TV networks and their affiliates head-on here Mon. at opening session of Assn.’s convention, expressing confidence that it would come out as strong as ever with its “umbrella approach” to broadcast issues in Washington. Because of that split, 3 TV networks have withdrawn from NAB but umbrella approach is “our strength, a strength that has given us many victories over the years,” he said. NAB, he said, now faces “added challenge of division within our own ranks. Rather than focusing 100% on meeting challenges from without, all of a sudden we are challenging ourselves from within.” In losing NBC, Fox and CBS TV networks and their owned stations, “we are neither diminished nor demoralized,” he said.
Major League Baseball joined growing debate over interactive TV (ITV) policy at FCC, urging Commission to steer clear of adopting regulations that would diminish intellectual property rights of content owners. In recent ex parte filing in FCC’s ITV inquiry, baseball commissioner’s office said it “firmly believes that market solutions are favorable to government regulations, especially in a market as nascent as that for ITV services.” Agreeing with earlier comments submitted by NFL, baseball commissioner’s office said FCC “should recognize that content owners such as baseball have statutorily created intellectual property rights that protect the content owners from unauthorized uses of their content.” It said proposed ITV nondiscrimination rules might interfere with those rights by allowing others to use baseball’s exclusive content without permission. It also argued that content owners should be free to make their content available in market without regulatory restraints. “Put simply, governmental regulation is no match for the free market in providing content owners fair compensation and providing consumers with greater access to the content they desire,” it said.
Black Entertainment & Telecom Assn. (BETA) urged Senate Commerce Committee Chmn. McCain (R-Ariz.) and House Commerce Committee Chmn. Tauzin (R-La.) to tell FCC Chmn. Powell to “uphold conditions of last year’s merger of CBS and Viacom, specifically Viacom’s obligation to divest itself of the UPN television network,” despite Commission’s easing of broadcast dual-network ownership rule last week (CD April 20 p3). In separate but similar letters to McCain and Tauzin, BETA argued that dual- network limits should remain in place until Congress holds hearing on “how the FCC’s planned action would fuel the already rapid consolidation of the U.S. media, particularly as it relates to [the] dwindling number of black media companies.” BETA also called for passage of McCain’s Telecom Ownership Diversification Act of 2000, co-sponsored by Sen. Burns (R-Mont.), but suggested lawmakers add advertising tax deferral or credit to it. “Given the importance of advertising to the survival of black and other media outlets,” BETA said, “such a tax incentive is truly needed to have a viable, diversified telecom industry.”
LAS VEGAS Role of govt. in broadcast content regulation remained divisive among FCC officials at NAB convention here Mon. FCC Comr. Ness said content regulation generally shouldn’t be govt. responsibility, but broadcasters “have a responsibility” to “draw a distinction between what sells well and what serves the public well.” However, Jay Friedman, aide to FCC Comr. Tristani, said idea that First Amendment foreclosed regulation of TV violence was wrong.
LAS VEGAS -- Deadline next year for commercial stations to begin DTV broadcasting is “a daunting reality” for many station owners, NAB Senior Vp Lynn Claudy said at NAB convention here Sun.: “It’s scary.” At least one FCC official predicted stations would petition Commission by fall for extension of May 1, 2002, deadline, although consultant Joseph Kraemer said bid for extension could “reinforce the perception” on Capitol Hill that broadcasters were “reneging on their commitment” to quick DTV transition in order to return analog spectrum for other uses. CEA Pres. Gary Shapiro said broadcasters’ bid to extend deadline would be “political dynamite” because there was “a sense that broadcasters are not providing enough HDTV programming.”