Telecommunications Relay Services and Speech-to-Speech Services for Individuals With Hearing and Speech Disabilities, 54298-54300 [05-18250]
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54298
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 177 / Wednesday, September 14, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
Declaratory Ruling did not address twoline captioned telephone service, and
petitioners now seek clarification that
this type of captioned telephone service
is also a type of TRS eligible for
compensation from the Interstate TRS
Fund.
As noted in the Order, the record
reflects that two-line captioned
telephone service is simply a variation
of captioned telephone service that
offers the same functionality while also
offering the user additional features.
These additional features represent
another step forward toward functional
equivalency. Therefore, in the Order the
Commission clarifies that two-line
captioned telephone service, like oneline captioned telephone service, is a
type of TRS eligible for compensation
from the Interstate TRS Fund.
The Commission does not believe this
clarification will have a significant
economic impact; however, in the event
that it does, the Commission also notes
that there are not a substantial number
of small entities that will be affected by
our action. The SBA has developed a
small business size standard for Wired
Telecommunications Carriers, which
consists of all such firms having 1,500
or fewer employees. 13 CFR 121.201,
NAICS code 517110 changed from
513310 in October 2002. According to
Census Bureau data for 1997, there were
2,225 firms in this category which
operated for the entire year. U.S. Census
Bureau, 1997 Economic Census, Subject
Series: Information, ‘‘Establishment and
Firm Size (Including Legal Form of
Organization),’’ Table 5, NAICS code
513310 issued October 2000. Of this
total, 2,201 firms had employment of
999 or fewer employees, and an
additional 24 firms had employment of
1,000 employees or more. Thus, under
this size standard, the majority of firms
can be considered small. The census
data do not provide a more precise
estimate of the number of firms that
have employment of 1,500 or fewer
employees; the largest category
provided is ‘‘Firms with 1,000
employees or more’’. Currently, only
three providers are providing captioned
telephone service and being
compensated from the Interstate TRS
Fund: CapTel, Inc., Hamilton and
Sprint. The Commission expects that
only one of the providers noted above
may be a small entity under the SBA’s
small business size standard. In
addition, the Interstate Fund
Administrator is the only entity that
will be required to pay to eligible
providers of two-line captioned
telephone service the costs of providing
interstate service. The Commission will
send a copy of the Order, including a
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15:56 Sep 13, 2005
Jkt 205001
copy of this Regulatory Flexibility
Certification, to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the SBA. (5 U.S.C. 605(b)).
AGENCY:
impermissible financial incentive in
violation of the Financial Incentives
Declaratory Ruling. TRS providers in
violation of the Financial Incentives
Declaratory Ruling will be ineligible for
compensation from the Interstate TRS
Fund.
DATES: Effective January 12, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Thomas Chandler, Consumer &
Governmental Affairs Bureau, (202)
418–1475 (voice), (202) 418–0597
(TTY), or e-mail
Thomas.Chandler@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of Commission document DA
05–2066, adopted July 27, 2005,
released July 28, in CG Docket No. 03–
123. This document does not contain
new or modified information collections
requirements subject to the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), Public
Law 104–13. In addition, it does not
contain any New or modified
‘‘information collection burden for
small business concerns with fewer than
25 employees,’’ pursuant to the Small
Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002,
Public Law 107–198, sec 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4). Copies of any subsequently
filed documents in this matter will be
available for public inspection and
copying during regular business hours
at the FCC Reference Information
Center, Portals II, 445 12th Street, SW.,
Room CY–A257, Washington, DC 20554.
They may also be purchased from the
Commission’s duplicating contractor,
Best Copy and Printing, Inc. (BCPI),
Portals II, 12th Street, SW., Room CY–
B402, Washington, DC 20554.
Customers may contact BCPI at their
Web site: https://www.bcpiweb.com or
call 1–800–378–3160. To request
materials in accessible formats for
people with disabilities (Braille, large
print, electronic files, audio format),
send an e-mail to fcc504@fcc.gov or call
the Consumer & Governmental Affairs
Bureau at (202) 418–0530 (voice) or
(202) 418–0432 (TTY). This document
can also be downloaded in Word and
Portable Document Format (PDF) at
https://www.fcc.gov/cgb.dro.
SUMMARY: In this document, the
Consumer & Governmental Affairs
Bureau (the Bureau) clarifies under
delegated authority, that
telecommunications relay service (TRS)
providers offering free or discount long
distance service to TRS consumers as an
incentive to use a particular TRS
provider’s relay service, or as an
incentive for a consumer to make more
or longer TRS calls, constitutes an
Synopsis
On January 26, 2005, the Bureau,
under delegated authority, issued the
Financial Incentives Declaratory Ruling
concluding that any program that offers
any kind of financial incentive or
reward for a consumer to place a TRS
call, including minimum usage
arrangements or programs (whether or
not tied to the acceptance of
equipment), violates section 225 of the
Communications Act. See
Telecommunications Relay Services and
Congressional Review Act
The Commission will send a copy of
the Order in a report to Congress and
the Governmental Accountability Office
pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act. See 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
Ordering Clauses
Pursuant to the authority contained in
Sections 1, 2, and 225 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, and 225,
this Order is hereby adopted.
The Request for Clarification
submitted by Ultratec, Inc, Sprint
Corporation, and Hamilton Relay, Inc.,
is granted to the extent indicated herein.
The Petition for Declaratory Ruling
filed by the National Exchange Carrier
Association, Inc. (NECA), on behalf of
the Interstate Telecommunications
Relay Service Advisory Council, is
granted to the extend indicated herein.
The Order shall be effective October
14, 2005.
The Commission’s Consumer &
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
Information Center shall send a copy of
the Order, including the Regulatory
Flexibility Certification, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the U.S. Small
Business Administration.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 05–18029 Filed 9–13–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 64
[CG Docket No. 03–123; DA 05–2066]
Telecommunications Relay Services
and Speech-to-Speech Services for
Individuals With Hearing and Speech
Disabilities
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; clarification.
PO 00000
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 177 / Wednesday, September 14, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
Speech-to-Speech Services for
Individuals With Hearing and Speech
Disabilities, CC Docket No. 98–67, CG
Docket No. 03–123, Declaratory Ruling,
20 FCC Rcd 1466–1468, paragraph 4,
released January 26, 2005, published at
70 FR 9239, February 25, 2005,
(Financial Incentives Declaratory
Ruling). The Bureau explained that ‘‘in
view of the intent and nature of section
225 of the Communications Act, and the
obligation placed on entities providing
voice telephone services to also offer
TRS as an accommodation to persons
who, because of a disability, cannot
meaningfully use the voice telephone
system, the Bureau interprets section
225 of the Communications Act and the
implementing regulations to prohibit a
TRS provider’s use of any kind of
financial incentives or rewards,
including arrangements tying the receipt
of equipment to minimum TRS usage,
directed at a consumer’s use of their
TRS service.’’ The Bureau further
explained that because the Interstate
TRS Fund, and not the consumer, pays
for the cost of the TRS call, such
financial incentives are tantamount to
enticing consumers to make calls that
they might not ordinarily make. The
Bureau therefore concluded that,
effective March 1, 2005, any TRS
provider offering such incentives for the
use of any of the forms of TRS will be
ineligible for compensation from the
Interstate TRS Fund.
The Financial Incentives Declaratory
Ruling was in response to a TRS
provider’s customer loyalty program
which offered the provider’s customers
the opportunity to have their DSL or
cable modem bill reimbursed by the
provider through the accumulation of
points based on minutes of use of the
provider’s TRS service. Sprint
Corporation (Sprint) sought clarification
whether its free long distance service
promotion violated the prohibition
against TRS financial incentives set
forth in the Financial Incentives
Declaratory Ruling. See Letter from
Spring to Thomas E. Chandler, Chief,
Disability Rights Office, Consumer &
Governmental Affairs, Federal
Communications Commission, dated
February 7, 2005, regarding Declaratory
Ruling (DA 05–140) issued January 26,
2005 in CC Docket No. 98–67 and CG
Docket No. 03–123 (Ex Parte
Communication) (Sprint Letter).
As Sprint explained, it provides
traditional TRS in a state (California)
that has more than one provider of this
service (i.e., a ‘‘multi-vendor’’) state. See
Sprint Letter at 1–2. Therefore, a TRS
consumer in that state can choose which
available TRS provider he or she wants
to handle his or her TRC call. To give
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Jkt 205001
the consumers an incentive to use
Sprint’s relay service, Sprint adopted a
promotion whereby long distance calls
would be free to consumers who select
Sprint as their provider of both relay
and long distance services. See Sprint
Letter at 1. Providers of traditional TRS
may not charge consumers for the cost
of the TRS service; the may, however,
charge the consumer for long distance
service. The Commission’s rules require
providers of traditional TRS to offer
their consumers access to the
consumer’s long distance carrier of
choice. See 47 CFR 64.604(b)(3). In
other words, TRS consumers must be
afforded the same opportunity given to
non-TRS consumers to use whichever
long distance service they choose when
making a long distance call. See
generally Telecommunications Relay
Services and Speech-to-Speech Services
for Individuals with Hearing and Speech
Disabilities, CC Docket No. 98–67, CG
Docket No. 03–123, Second Report and
Order, Order on Reconsideration, and
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 18 FCC
Rcd 12375, 12412–12415, paragraphs
54–61, released June 17, 2003,
published at 69 FR 53346, September 1,
2004, (2004 TRS Report & Order). (The
Bureau notes that the carrier of choice
rule is presently waived for the
provision of Internet Protocol Relay
Service (IP Relay) and Video Relay
Service (VRS). See, e.g., 2004 TRS
Report & Order, 19 FCC Rcd 12594,
Appendix E.) Sprint asserted that is free
long distance program is distinguishable
from the kind of financial incentive
programs prohibited by the Financial
Incentives Declaratory Ruling, and
therefore should be permissible. Sprint
asserted that, unlike customer loyalty
programs, the free long distance
program does not provide any benefits
independent of the calls themselves,
and therefore there is no incentive to
make unnecessary TRS calls. Sprint also
noted that discounts from standard rates
have long been characteristic of the
super-competitive long distance market.
Finally, Sprint noted that even if the
Bureau found that Sprint’s free long
distance program violated the Financial
Incentives Declaratory Ruling, the
Bureau should make clear that the
prohibition applies only to interstate
long distance service, and not intrastate
long distance service. See Sprint Letter
at 2, note 1. On March 11, 2005, Nordia,
Inc., another provider of traditional TRS
in California, addressed by letter the
provision of free long distance service
along with traditional TRS service. See
letter from Vinson & Elkins (Counsel for
Nordia, Inc.) to Thomas E. Chandler,
Chief, Disability Rights Office,
PO 00000
Frm 00065
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54299
Consumer & Governmental Affairs,
Federal Communications Commission,
dated March 11, 2005, regarding
Declaratory Ruling Regarding Hands-On
Video Relay Services, Inc., CC Docket
No. 98–67 and CG Docket No. 03–123.
Discussion
The Bureau finds that offering free or
discount long distance service (subject
to the exceptions noted below) to TRS
consumers as an incentive to use a
particular TRS provider’s relay service,
or as an incentive for a consumer to
make more or longer TRS calls,
constitutes an impermissible financial
incentive in violation of the Financial
Incentive Declaratory Ruling. When
customers receive either free or heavily
discounted long distance service, they
have an incentive to make more or
longer calls than they would make in
the absence of such a program.
Consequently, the Interstate TRS Fund,
which compensates providers on a perminute basis, is bill for minutes the
customers might not have generated but
for the incentive program. Although
Sprint raises this issue in the context of
a multi-vendor state, we note that our
conclusion applies to TRS providers
whether or not they are the only
provider in a state. Free or discount long
distance programs for traditional TRS
consumers run afoul of the
Commission’s financial incentives
prohibition not because they might
cause a consumer to select one
provider’s service instead of another
provider’s service, but because such
programs may have the effect of causing
a TRS consumer to make more or longer
TRS calls than be or she would
otherwise make.
This document shall be effective
January 12, 2006. The record reflects
that some providers may not be able to
immediately change their automated
billing system. See Letter from MCI to
Marlene H. Dortch, Secretary, Federal
Communications Commission, dated
June 10, 2005, regarding CC Docket No.
98–67 and CG Docket No. 03–123
(indicating that MCI would need 45
days to comply with ruling proscribing
free long distance); Letter from Vinson
& Elkins (Counsel for Nordia, Inc.) to
Thomas E. Chandler, Chief, Disability
Rights Office, Consumer &
Governmental Affairs, Federal
Communications Commission, dated
June 16, 2005, regarding Nordia Billing
for Interstate Calls (indicating company
would require 9 to 12 months to
implement billing system). The Bureau
believes that 120 days is a reasonable
time for providers to come into
compliance.
E:\FR\FM\14SER1.SGM
14SER1
54300
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 177 / Wednesday, September 14, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
There are, however, two important
limitations to the Bureau’s conclusion
with respect to free or discount long
distance service to TRS consumers.
First, the Financial Incentives
Declaratory Ruling and this document
apply only with respect to free or
discount interstate long distance
service, not intrastate long distance
service. Second, the Bureau recognizes
that provider have long offered discount
long distance service to TRS consumers
who use a TTY under the rationale that,
given the nature of traditional TRS, it
take substantially longer for parties to a
traditional TRS call to have a
conversation than it would for two
hearing parties to have the same
conversation. Therefore, providers have
been permitted to offer discount long
distance service to TRS consumers so,
long as the discounts reasonably relate,
under the functional equivalency
principle, to equalizing the cost of the
call based on the added length of a TRS
call. The Bureau prohibits only those
long distance discounts for TRS
consumers that go beyond ensuring that
the long distance service cost of the TRS
call is equivalent to what that cost
would have been for hearing parties.
Programs directed at giving the
consumer an incentive to make a TRS
call in the first place, or to place a
longer TRS call than consumer might
otherwise make, are prohibited under
this document.
Nothing in the Financial Incentives
Declaratory Ruling or this document
precludes interstate TRS providers that
also offer long distance service from
offering discounts to all of their
consumer when the same discount
applies to both voice and TRS calls. The
Bureau addresses herein only the
situation where TRS consumers, but not
other consumers, are given free long
distance service (or discount long
distance service) as incentive for the
consumer to use the particular TRS
provider that also offer the long distance
service, or to make more or longer TRS
calls.
Ordering Clauses
Pursuant to the authority contained in
section 225 of the communications Act
of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 225, and
§§ 0.141, 0.361, and 1.3 of the
Communication Rules, 47 CFR 0.141,
0.361, 1.3, this document is hereby
adopted.
Any TRS provider offering to TRS
consumers financial incentives relating
to free or discount long distance service,
as set forth above, shall be eligible for
compensation from the Interstate TRS
Fund.
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15:56 Sep 13, 2005
Jkt 205001
This document shall be effective
January 12, 2006.
Federal Communications Commission.
Monica Desai,
Chief, Consumer & Governmental Affairs
Bureau.
[FR Doc. 05–18250 Filed 9–13–05; 8:45 am]
§ 64.4002
BILLING CODE 6712–01–M
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 64
[CG Docket No. 02–386; FCC 05–29]
Rules and Regulations Implementing
Minimum Customer Account Record
Exchange Obligations on All Local and
Interexchange Carriers; Correction
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; correction.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: On June 2, 2005 (70 FR
32258), the Commission published a
final rule in the Federal Register, which
adopted new rules to facilitate the
exchange of customer account
information between Local Exchange
Carriers (LECs) and Interexchange
Carriers (IXCs) and to establish carriers’
responsibilities with respect to such
exchanges. This document corrects the
instances in the Federal Register which
an IXC-initiated PIC Order is referred to
as a Report and Order.
DATES: The rules in this document
contain information collection
requirements that have not been
approved by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB). The Commission
will publish a document in the Federal
Register announcing the effective date
for these rules. Written comments by the
public on the new and modified
information collections are due October
14, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lisa
Boehley, Consumer & Governmental
Affairs Bureau at (202) 418–2512
(voice), or e-mail Lisa.Boehley@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Federal Communications Commission
published a document adopting new
rules to facilitate the exchange of
customer account information between
Local Exchange Carriers (LECs) and
Interexchange Carriers (IXCs). In the
Federal Register document 05–10974
published on June 2, 2005 (70 FR 32258)
make the following corrections:
1. On page 32259, under the
Supplementary Information in the first
column on line 30, PIC Report and
Order is corrected to read as PIC Order
PO 00000
Frm 00066
Fmt 4700
and wherever it appears in the
Supplementary Information.
2. In § 64.4002, the introductory text,
paragraphs (a) introductory text, (b)
introductory text, (b) (6), (c)
introductory text; and (d) introductory
text are corrected to read as follows:
Sfmt 4700
Notification obligations of LECs.
To the extent that the information is
reasonably available to a LEC, the LEC
shall provide to an IXC the customer
account information described in this
section consistent with § 64.4004.
Nothing in this section shall prevent a
LEC from providing additional customer
account information to an IXC to the
extent that such additional information
is necessary for billing purposes or to
properly execute a customer’s PIC
Order.
(a) Customer-submitted PIC Order.
Upon receiving and processing a PIC
selection submitted by a customer and
placing the customer on the network of
the customer’s preferred interexchange
carrier at the LEC’s local switch, the
LEC must notify the IXC of this event.
The notification provided by the LEC to
the IXC must contain all of the customer
account information necessary to allow
for proper billing of the customer by the
IXC including but not limited to:
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Confirmation of IXC-submitted PIC
Order. When a LEC has placed a
customer on an IXC’s network at the
local switch in response to an IXCsubmitted PIC Order, the LEC must send
a confirmation to the submitting IXC.
The confirmation provided by the LEC
to the IXC must include:
*
*
*
*
*
(6) The carrier identification code of
the submitting LEC. If the PIC Order at
issue originally was submitted by an
underlying IXC on behalf of a toll
reseller, the confirmation provided by
the LEC to the IXC must indicate, to the
extent that this information is known, a
statement indicating that the customer’s
PIC is a toll reseller.
(c) Rejection of IXC-submitted PIC
Order. When a LEC rejects or otherwise
does not act upon a PIC Report and
Order submitted to it by an IXC, the LEC
must notify the IXC and provide the
reason(s) why the PIC Order could not
be processed. The notification provided
by the LEC to the IXC must state that it
has rejected the IXC-submitted PIC
Order and specify the reason(s) for the
rejection (e.g., due to a lack of
information, incorrect information, or a
PIC freeze on the customer’s account).
The notification must contain the
identical data elements that were
provided to the LEC in the original IXC-
E:\FR\FM\14SER1.SGM
14SER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 177 (Wednesday, September 14, 2005)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 54298-54300]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-18250]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 64
[CG Docket No. 03-123; DA 05-2066]
Telecommunications Relay Services and Speech-to-Speech Services
for Individuals With Hearing and Speech Disabilities
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; clarification.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this document, the Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau
(the Bureau) clarifies under delegated authority, that
telecommunications relay service (TRS) providers offering free or
discount long distance service to TRS consumers as an incentive to use
a particular TRS provider's relay service, or as an incentive for a
consumer to make more or longer TRS calls, constitutes an impermissible
financial incentive in violation of the Financial Incentives
Declaratory Ruling. TRS providers in violation of the Financial
Incentives Declaratory Ruling will be ineligible for compensation from
the Interstate TRS Fund.
DATES: Effective January 12, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Thomas Chandler, Consumer &
Governmental Affairs Bureau, (202) 418-1475 (voice), (202) 418-0597
(TTY), or e-mail Thomas.Chandler@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of Commission document DA
05-2066, adopted July 27, 2005, released July 28, in CG Docket No. 03-
123. This document does not contain new or modified information
collections requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), Public Law 104-13. In addition, it does not contain any New or
modified ``information collection burden for small business concerns
with fewer than 25 employees,'' pursuant to the Small Business
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198, sec 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4). Copies of any subsequently filed documents in this matter
will be available for public inspection and copying during regular
business hours at the FCC Reference Information Center, Portals II, 445
12th Street, SW., Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. They may also be
purchased from the Commission's duplicating contractor, Best Copy and
Printing, Inc. (BCPI), Portals II, 12th Street, SW., Room CY-B402,
Washington, DC 20554. Customers may contact BCPI at their Web site:
https://www.bcpiweb.com or call 1-800-378-3160. To request materials in
accessible formats for people with disabilities (Braille, large print,
electronic files, audio format), send an e-mail to fcc504@fcc.gov or
call the Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530
(voice) or (202) 418-0432 (TTY). This document can also be downloaded
in Word and Portable Document Format (PDF) at https://www.fcc.gov/
cgb.dro.
Synopsis
On January 26, 2005, the Bureau, under delegated authority, issued
the Financial Incentives Declaratory Ruling concluding that any program
that offers any kind of financial incentive or reward for a consumer to
place a TRS call, including minimum usage arrangements or programs
(whether or not tied to the acceptance of equipment), violates section
225 of the Communications Act. See Telecommunications Relay Services
and
[[Page 54299]]
Speech-to-Speech Services for Individuals With Hearing and Speech
Disabilities, CC Docket No. 98-67, CG Docket No. 03-123, Declaratory
Ruling, 20 FCC Rcd 1466-1468, paragraph 4, released January 26, 2005,
published at 70 FR 9239, February 25, 2005, (Financial Incentives
Declaratory Ruling). The Bureau explained that ``in view of the intent
and nature of section 225 of the Communications Act, and the obligation
placed on entities providing voice telephone services to also offer TRS
as an accommodation to persons who, because of a disability, cannot
meaningfully use the voice telephone system, the Bureau interprets
section 225 of the Communications Act and the implementing regulations
to prohibit a TRS provider's use of any kind of financial incentives or
rewards, including arrangements tying the receipt of equipment to
minimum TRS usage, directed at a consumer's use of their TRS service.''
The Bureau further explained that because the Interstate TRS Fund, and
not the consumer, pays for the cost of the TRS call, such financial
incentives are tantamount to enticing consumers to make calls that they
might not ordinarily make. The Bureau therefore concluded that,
effective March 1, 2005, any TRS provider offering such incentives for
the use of any of the forms of TRS will be ineligible for compensation
from the Interstate TRS Fund.
The Financial Incentives Declaratory Ruling was in response to a
TRS provider's customer loyalty program which offered the provider's
customers the opportunity to have their DSL or cable modem bill
reimbursed by the provider through the accumulation of points based on
minutes of use of the provider's TRS service. Sprint Corporation
(Sprint) sought clarification whether its free long distance service
promotion violated the prohibition against TRS financial incentives set
forth in the Financial Incentives Declaratory Ruling. See Letter from
Spring to Thomas E. Chandler, Chief, Disability Rights Office, Consumer
& Governmental Affairs, Federal Communications Commission, dated
February 7, 2005, regarding Declaratory Ruling (DA 05-140) issued
January 26, 2005 in CC Docket No. 98-67 and CG Docket No. 03-123 (Ex
Parte Communication) (Sprint Letter).
As Sprint explained, it provides traditional TRS in a state
(California) that has more than one provider of this service (i.e., a
``multi-vendor'') state. See Sprint Letter at 1-2. Therefore, a TRS
consumer in that state can choose which available TRS provider he or
she wants to handle his or her TRC call. To give the consumers an
incentive to use Sprint's relay service, Sprint adopted a promotion
whereby long distance calls would be free to consumers who select
Sprint as their provider of both relay and long distance services. See
Sprint Letter at 1. Providers of traditional TRS may not charge
consumers for the cost of the TRS service; the may, however, charge the
consumer for long distance service. The Commission's rules require
providers of traditional TRS to offer their consumers access to the
consumer's long distance carrier of choice. See 47 CFR 64.604(b)(3). In
other words, TRS consumers must be afforded the same opportunity given
to non-TRS consumers to use whichever long distance service they choose
when making a long distance call. See generally Telecommunications
Relay Services and Speech-to-Speech Services for Individuals with
Hearing and Speech Disabilities, CC Docket No. 98-67, CG Docket No. 03-
123, Second Report and Order, Order on Reconsideration, and Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, 18 FCC Rcd 12375, 12412-12415, paragraphs 54-61,
released June 17, 2003, published at 69 FR 53346, September 1, 2004,
(2004 TRS Report & Order). (The Bureau notes that the carrier of choice
rule is presently waived for the provision of Internet Protocol Relay
Service (IP Relay) and Video Relay Service (VRS). See, e.g., 2004 TRS
Report & Order, 19 FCC Rcd 12594, Appendix E.) Sprint asserted that is
free long distance program is distinguishable from the kind of
financial incentive programs prohibited by the Financial Incentives
Declaratory Ruling, and therefore should be permissible. Sprint
asserted that, unlike customer loyalty programs, the free long distance
program does not provide any benefits independent of the calls
themselves, and therefore there is no incentive to make unnecessary TRS
calls. Sprint also noted that discounts from standard rates have long
been characteristic of the super-competitive long distance market.
Finally, Sprint noted that even if the Bureau found that Sprint's free
long distance program violated the Financial Incentives Declaratory
Ruling, the Bureau should make clear that the prohibition applies only
to interstate long distance service, and not intrastate long distance
service. See Sprint Letter at 2, note 1. On March 11, 2005, Nordia,
Inc., another provider of traditional TRS in California, addressed by
letter the provision of free long distance service along with
traditional TRS service. See letter from Vinson & Elkins (Counsel for
Nordia, Inc.) to Thomas E. Chandler, Chief, Disability Rights Office,
Consumer & Governmental Affairs, Federal Communications Commission,
dated March 11, 2005, regarding Declaratory Ruling Regarding Hands-On
Video Relay Services, Inc., CC Docket No. 98-67 and CG Docket No. 03-
123.
Discussion
The Bureau finds that offering free or discount long distance
service (subject to the exceptions noted below) to TRS consumers as an
incentive to use a particular TRS provider's relay service, or as an
incentive for a consumer to make more or longer TRS calls, constitutes
an impermissible financial incentive in violation of the Financial
Incentive Declaratory Ruling. When customers receive either free or
heavily discounted long distance service, they have an incentive to
make more or longer calls than they would make in the absence of such a
program. Consequently, the Interstate TRS Fund, which compensates
providers on a per-minute basis, is bill for minutes the customers
might not have generated but for the incentive program. Although Sprint
raises this issue in the context of a multi-vendor state, we note that
our conclusion applies to TRS providers whether or not they are the
only provider in a state. Free or discount long distance programs for
traditional TRS consumers run afoul of the Commission's financial
incentives prohibition not because they might cause a consumer to
select one provider's service instead of another provider's service,
but because such programs may have the effect of causing a TRS consumer
to make more or longer TRS calls than be or she would otherwise make.
This document shall be effective January 12, 2006. The record
reflects that some providers may not be able to immediately change
their automated billing system. See Letter from MCI to Marlene H.
Dortch, Secretary, Federal Communications Commission, dated June 10,
2005, regarding CC Docket No. 98-67 and CG Docket No. 03-123
(indicating that MCI would need 45 days to comply with ruling
proscribing free long distance); Letter from Vinson & Elkins (Counsel
for Nordia, Inc.) to Thomas E. Chandler, Chief, Disability Rights
Office, Consumer & Governmental Affairs, Federal Communications
Commission, dated June 16, 2005, regarding Nordia Billing for
Interstate Calls (indicating company would require 9 to 12 months to
implement billing system). The Bureau believes that 120 days is a
reasonable time for providers to come into compliance.
[[Page 54300]]
There are, however, two important limitations to the Bureau's
conclusion with respect to free or discount long distance service to
TRS consumers. First, the Financial Incentives Declaratory Ruling and
this document apply only with respect to free or discount interstate
long distance service, not intrastate long distance service. Second,
the Bureau recognizes that provider have long offered discount long
distance service to TRS consumers who use a TTY under the rationale
that, given the nature of traditional TRS, it take substantially longer
for parties to a traditional TRS call to have a conversation than it
would for two hearing parties to have the same conversation. Therefore,
providers have been permitted to offer discount long distance service
to TRS consumers so, long as the discounts reasonably relate, under the
functional equivalency principle, to equalizing the cost of the call
based on the added length of a TRS call. The Bureau prohibits only
those long distance discounts for TRS consumers that go beyond ensuring
that the long distance service cost of the TRS call is equivalent to
what that cost would have been for hearing parties. Programs directed
at giving the consumer an incentive to make a TRS call in the first
place, or to place a longer TRS call than consumer might otherwise
make, are prohibited under this document.
Nothing in the Financial Incentives Declaratory Ruling or this
document precludes interstate TRS providers that also offer long
distance service from offering discounts to all of their consumer when
the same discount applies to both voice and TRS calls. The Bureau
addresses herein only the situation where TRS consumers, but not other
consumers, are given free long distance service (or discount long
distance service) as incentive for the consumer to use the particular
TRS provider that also offer the long distance service, or to make more
or longer TRS calls.
Ordering Clauses
Pursuant to the authority contained in section 225 of the
communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 225, and Sec. Sec.
0.141, 0.361, and 1.3 of the Communication Rules, 47 CFR 0.141, 0.361,
1.3, this document is hereby adopted.
Any TRS provider offering to TRS consumers financial incentives
relating to free or discount long distance service, as set forth above,
shall be eligible for compensation from the Interstate TRS Fund.
This document shall be effective January 12, 2006.
Federal Communications Commission.
Monica Desai,
Chief, Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau.
[FR Doc. 05-18250 Filed 9-13-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-M