Comments are due at the FCC by Feb. 16 on an AT&T request to discontinue certain operator services throughout the U.S., said a Wireline Bureau public notice posted Friday in docket 16-13. AT&T's application will be deemed granted March 15 unless the commission notifies the company otherwise, the PN said. Citing declining demand, AT&T plans to discontinue collect calling, person-to-person calling and four other operator-assisted services to retail customers on or after March 18 and to wholesale customers on or after June 4 (see 1601070023).
The Alaska Telephone Association called on the FCC to adopt the group's proposals to encourage broadband deployment in the state (the "Alaska Plan"). The commission should approve the Alaska Plan when it overhauls USF support mechanisms for rural rate-of-return carriers, the ATA said in a filing posted Monday in docket 10-90. "In adopting the Plan, the Commission should freeze support at 2011 levels adjusted to account for corporate operations expense limits and the $250 cap per line per month, and include both the incumbent LEC and CETC [competitive eligible telecom carrier] components," said the group, which called the proposals a "carefully coordinated and unified approach" to reforming support for both wireline ILECs and mobile CETCs. General Communications backed the Alaska Plan, the company said in a filing posted Friday on a meeting with agency officials.
Level 3 pressed the FCC to resolve an intercarrier compensation fight between LECs and interexchange carriers (IXCs) over intraMTA (major trading area) wireline-wireless traffic, an issue that's sparking continued litigation. Some LECs, "encouraged by a recent district court decision that has created yet more confusion and disagreement in the industry," filed suit against Level 3, the company said in a filing posted Friday in docket 14-228 summarizing a meeting with FCC officials. While Level 3 is confident of its legal position, "there is no reason" that it and others "should be forced to litigate this matter," the company said. A federal judge last fall granted a LEC motion to dismiss Sprint and Verizon federal claims and concluded LECs can charge IXCs access fees under their federal tariffs (see 1511200070). Level 3 and other IXCs believe intraMTA traffic should be subject to lower reciprocal compensation fees under FCC precedent, but they want the commission to clarify its position (see 1512110055). Noting it also operates as a local carrier, Level 3 said it could be forced to file suit as a LEC unless its interpretation prevails. Separately, Level 3 urged the FCC to adopt the company's proposals to enhance disclosure by broadband Internet access service providers. First, ISPs capable of measuring performance across their interconnections to other networks should calculate "average performance for each destination network" and disclose their performance "with the best, median, and slowest" averages, the company said in a filing posted Friday in docket 14-28 about a meeting at the FCC. "That will help ensure consumers are not misled by reported 'average' performance figures that mask significant variations in actual performance to different parts of the Internet," Level 3 said. "In addition, ISPs should disclose a Connectivity Rating that would help consumers understand whether there is a significant likelihood that performance to some parts of the Internet could become degraded during peak hours because of a lack of adequate interconnection capacity." NCTA has opposed the requests (see 1512220033).
The FCC asked for comment on a request by five small Georgia telcos for regulatory adjustments to recover $121,774 they said they were unable to collect in 2012 from Halo Wireless, which went into Chapter 7 bankruptcy (see 1601060013). Initial comments are due Jan. 27, replies Feb. 8, a Wireline Bureau public notice said Friday.
Lifeline USF rules in a June FCC order will become effective as early as Feb. 4, said a Wireline Bureau public notice posted Friday in docket 11-42. The rules strengthen document retention requirements, ensure only Eligible Telecom Carriers directly serving low-income customers receive Lifeline reimbursement, and require ETCs to use a uniform snapshot date to request reimbursement, the PN said. Related FCC information collection requirements were modified and approved by the Office of Management and Budget Jan. 5 after a Paperwork Reduction Act review, the PN said, noting parties should expect 10 listed rules “to become effective on or after" Feb. 4. Rural telco groups recently urged the FCC to reconsider the snapshot rule that requires ETCs to report their Lifeline subscriber numbers as of the first of each month. The requirement will at times prevent rural ETCs from being reimbursed for providing Lifeline benefits, said John Staurulakis Inc., NTCA and WTA in a filing posted Wednesday. “To eliminate the need for costly billing system changes or the use of burdensome manual processes ... the Commission should allow RLEC ETCs to take a ‘snapshot’ of their number of subscribers as of their carrier-specific billing dates,” they said. Addressing the FCC’s current rulemaking to modernize Lifeline, the rural groups voiced concerns about proposed use of a third party to verify consumer low-income eligibility. Saying rural consumers were accustomed to ETCs taking care of such administrative details, they asked the commission to allow them to collect and forward eligibility documents to any third-party verifier. In a filing posted Friday, Public Knowledge repeated support for expanding Lifeline to broadband coverage and further explained why it believed the FCC has legal authority to allow service to be provided by non-ETCs. FCC officials have said they could act soon on the rulemaking. “We’re hopeful for February, and if not February, then we’re very hopeful for March,” Phillip Berenbroick, PK counsel-government affairs, told us.
Smart home device sales will nearly double over the next 12 months on wider adoption, said an ABI Research report Wednesday. Recurring service revenue is projected to be close to a quarter of total smart home revenue by 2020, driven by providers including ADT, AT&T, Comcast, Deutsche Telekom, Lowes, Staples and Vivint, ABI said. A new generation of do-it-yourself smart home devices and systems from startups and from tech giants Google and Samsung is driving recurring revenue through data collection and storage, it said. Analyst Jonathan Collins said that security providers lead in the deployment of smart home systems now, but by 2020, cable companies, telcos and retailers will share similar subscriber bases.
The FCC’s Consumer Advisory Committee plans its first meeting of the year for Feb. 5, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., at FCC headquarters, the agency said in a public notice Wednesday. “The Committee is expected to consider a recommendation regarding the modernization of the Lifeline program to include broadband services and to improve administration presented by its Universal Services Working Group,” the notice said. The committee will also be briefed by FCC staff “and/or outside speakers” on various issues, the agency said.
Garmin completed its buy of PulsedLight, a privately held optical distance measurement technology. PulsedLight’s sensor boards complement Garmin’s core competencies of location and positioning, said Garmin CEO Cliff Pemble. Garmin will retain the PulsedLight office and its design associates based in Bend, Oregon, it said. Garmin brings to PulsedLight the resources and manufacturing expertise to integrate its technology into new devices that serve multiple markets, PulsedLight President Dennis Corey said.
Applications are due March 14 for Distance Learning and Telemedicine grants offered by the Rural Utilities Service, said an agency notice in the Federal Register Tuesday. The DLT program aims to give rural Americans access to education, training and healthcare resources. The grants, which are awarded through a competitive process, seek "to encourage and improve telemedicine and distance learning services in rural areas through the use of telecommunications, computer networks, and related advanced technologies that students, teachers, medical professionals, and rural residents can use," RUS said. "Grants are intended to benefit end-users in rural areas, who are often not in the same location as the source of the educational or health care service." The minimum grant level is $50,000 and the maximum is $500,000 for this fiscal year.
The FCC Wireline Bureau authorized $569,796 to fund a Skybeam rural broadband experiment in 265 census blocks in Iowa. "The Universal Service Administrative Company (USAC) is directed and authorized to obligate and disburse from the Connect America reserve account the support amounts identified ... to Skybeam," said a bureau public notice Tuesday. "Because Skybeam elected to receive 30 percent of the total support upfront in exchange for meeting accelerated deployment obligations, USAC shall disburse 30 percent of the total support amount with the first monthly payment and disburse the remaining 70 percent of its support in 120 equal monthly installments over the 10-year term."