Competitive Networks, Multiunit Premises, 28049-28057 [E8-10764]
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Taney ...............
Date and name of newspaper
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Effective date of
modification
Chief Executive Officer of Community
28049
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Unincorporated
areas of Taney
County (07–07–
1909P).
March 7, 2008, March 14,
2008, Branson Daily News.
The Honorable Chuck Pennel, Presiding July 14, 2008 ..................
Commissioner, Taney County Commission, P.O. Box 383, Forsyth, MO 65653.
290435
Unincorporated
areas of Greenville
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0619P).
Unincorporated
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3534P).
Unincorporated
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1671P).
March 7, 2008, March 14,
2008, The Greenville News.
The Honorable Butch Kirven, Chairman,
Greenville County Council, 213 League
Road, Simpsonville, SC 29681.
July 11, 2008 ..................
450089
March 7, 2008, March 14,
2008, Columbia Star.
The Honorable Joseph McEachern,
Chairman, Richland County Council,
2020 Hampton Street, Suite 4069, Columbia, SC 29202.
The Honorable Joseph McEachern,
Chairman, Richland County Council,
2020 Hampton Street, Second Floor,
Columbia, SC 29202.
July 14, 2008 ..................
450170
July 14, 2008 ..................
450170
Metropolitan Government of Nashville
& Davidson County (08–04–0137P).
City of Jackson (07–
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March 6, 2008, March 13,
2008, The Tennessean.
July 11, 2008 ..................
470040
March 31, 2008 ..............
470113
Wilson ...............
City of Lebanon (08–
04–0116P).
March 7, 2008, March 14,
2008, Wilson Post.
July 21, 2008 ..................
470208
Wilson ...............
Unincorporated
areas of Wilson
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0116P).
March 7, 2008, March 14,
2008, Wilson Post.
The Honorable Bill Purcell, Mayor, Metropolitan Government of Nashville and
Davidson County, 107 Metropolitan
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The Honorable Jerry Gist, Mayor, City of
Jackson, 121 East Main Street, Suite
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The Honorable Donald W. Fox, Mayor,
City of Lebanon, 200 North Castle
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The Honorable Robert Dedman, Mayor,
Wilson County, 228 East Main Street,
Lebanon, TN 37087.
July 21, 2008 ..................
470207
Town of Prosper
(08–06–0164P).
April 3, 2008, April 10, 2008,
Allen American.
August 8, 2008 ...............
480141
Dallas ...............
City of Coppell (07–
06–2203P).
April 2, 2008, April 9, 2008,
Coppell Gazette.
April 24, 2008 .................
480170
El Paso .............
City of El Paso (07–
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April 3, 2008, April 10, 2008, El
Paso Times.
March 27, 2008 ..............
480214
Tarrant ..............
City of Bedford (08–
06–1343P).
March 7, 2008, March 14,
2008, Colleyville Courier.
June 13, 2008 ................
480585
Tarrant ..............
City of Euless (08–
06–1343P).
March 7, 2008, March 14,
2008, Colleyville Courier.
June 13, 2008 ................
480593
Tarrant ..............
City of Keller (08–
06–0002P).
March 28, 2008, April 4, 2008,
Keller Citizen.
August 4, 2008 ...............
480602
Travis ................
Unincorporated
areas of Travis
County (07–06–
1238P).
April 3, 2008, April 10, 2008,
Austin American-Statesman.
The Honorable Charles Niswanger,
Mayor, Town of Prosper, P.O. Box 307,
Prosper, TX 75078.
The Honorable Douglas N. Stover, Mayor,
City of Coppell, P.O. Box 9478,
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The Honorable John Cook, Mayor, City of
El Paso, Two Civic Center Plaza, Tenth
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The Honorable Jim Story, Mayor, City of
Bedford, 2000 Forest Ridge Drive, Bedford, TX 76021.
The Honorable Mary Lib Saleh, Mayor,
City of Euless, 201 North Ector Drive,
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of Keller, P.O. Box 770, Keller, TX
76244.
The Honorable Samuel T. Biscoe, Travis
County Judge, 314 West 11th Street,
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August 8, 2008 ...............
481026
South Carolina:
Greenville .........
Richland ...........
Richland ...........
Tennessee:
Davidson ..........
Madison ............
Texas:
Collin ................
March 7, 2008, March 14,
2008, Columbia Star.
March 7, 2008, March 14,
2008, Jackson Sun.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance No.
97.022, ‘‘Flood Insurance.’’)
Dated: May 7, 2008.
David I. Maurstad,
Federal Insurance Administrator of the
National Flood Insurance Program,
Department of Homeland Security, Federal
Emergency Management Agency.
[FR Doc. E8–10869 Filed 5–14–08; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 9110–12–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 64
[WT Docket No. 99–217; FCC 08–87]
Competitive Networks, Multiunit
Premises
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Commission adopts rules
prohibiting telecommunications carriers
from entering into contracts that would
make them the exclusive provider of
telecommunications services in
residential multiple tenant
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environments (MTEs), e.g., apartment
buildings, condominiums, and
cooperatives. The rules also prohibit
telecommunications carriers from
enforcing existing exclusivity contracts.
DATES: Effective July 14, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jon
Reel, Wireline Competition Bureau,
(202) 418–1580.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In this
Order, the Commission removes
impediments to facilities-based
competition to provide voice, video, and
data services as intended by the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended (the Act) and Commission
precedent. As it did with video service
providers (see Exclusive Service
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Contracts for Provision of Video
Services in Multiple Dwelling Units and
Other Real Estate Developments, MB
Docket No. 07–51, 72 FR 61129–01, 22
FCC Rcd 20235 (2007) (Video
Nonexclusivity Order)), the Commission
finds that the harm to competition from
exclusivity agreements outweighs any
benefit, and that such contracts are
inherently unjust and unreasonable. The
rule establishes regulatory parity
between telecommunications carriers
and cable television operators, which
are already banned from entering into or
enforcing arrangements to be the sole
provider of video services in residential
MTEs. By removing impediments to
competition, and by establishing
regulatory parity among likely
competitors, this action should bring the
benefits of competition, including
competition to provide broadband
Internet access services, to residents of
MTEs.
The Commission will send a copy of
this Report and Order in a report to be
sent to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C.
801(a)(1)(A).
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Final Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Analysis
This document does not contain new
or modified information collection(s)
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA), Public Law 104–13. In
addition, therefore, 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, see 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4).
Synopsis of Report and Order
1. On October 25, 2000, the
Commission issued the Promotion of
Competitive Networks in Local
Telecommunications Markets, First
Report and Order and Further Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, WT Docket No.
99–217, 66 FR 2322–01, 15 FCC Rcd
22983 (2000) (Competitive Networks
Order and Further NPRM) to foster local
competition pursuant to the 1996 Act,
and adopted several measures to ensure
that competing telecommunications
providers are able to provide services in
MTEs. Most notably for the purposes of
this proceeding, that order prohibited
carriers from entering into contracts that
restrict or effectively restrict owners and
managers of commercial MTEs from
permitting access by competing carriers.
The Commission also sought comment
in several areas, including whether the
prohibition on exclusive access
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contracts in commercial MTEs should
be extended to residential settings, and
whether carriers should be prohibited
from enforcing exclusive access
provisions in existing contracts in either
commercial or residential MTEs.
2. On March 28, 2007, the Wireline
Competition Bureau released a public
notice inviting interested parties to
update the record pertaining to issues
raised in the Commission’s Competitive
Networks proceeding in light of
marketplace and industry
developments. (Parties Asked to Refresh
Record Regarding Promotion of
Competitive Networks in Local
Telecommunications Markets, WT
Docket No. 99–217, CC Docket No. 96–
98, public notice, 22 FCC Rcd 5632
(2007)). Specifically, the notice sought
updates on the progress of the real estate
industry’s voluntary commitments
aimed at improving tenants’ access to
alternative telecommunications carriers,
and on intervening industry
developments such as service bundling
and integration.
3. The Commission concludes that
exclusive agreements to provide
telecommunications services to
residential customers in MTEs harm
competition and consumers without
evidence of countervailing benefits, and
the Commission thus prohibits carriers
from entering into or enforcing such
provisions. This conclusion comports
with the Commission’s decision in the
Video Nonexclusivity Order to prohibit
cable operators and others subject to the
relevant statutory provisions from
executing or enforcing existing video
exclusivity provisions in contracts to
serve residential multiunit premises. In
an environment of increasingly
competitive bundled service offerings,
the importance of regulatory parity is
particularly compelling in the
Commission’s determination to remove
this impediment to fair competition.
Moreover, nothing in the record
indicates that the competitive benefits
that commercial customers enjoy by
virtue of the Commission’s prior
prohibition of such contracts in the
commercial context should not also be
extended to residential users.
4. Scope of Residential MTEs. In the
Competitive Networks Order and
Further NPRM, the Commission
prohibited exclusivity provisions with
respect to the provision of
telecommunications services in
commercial MTEs. As it observed in
that order, however, ‘‘some premises are
used for both commercial and
residential purposes.’’ That Commission
stated that in situations ‘‘where a single
access agreement covers the entire
premises, the Commission finds it most
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consistent with the purposes of this rule
to determine its status as residential or
commercial by predominant use.’’ The
Commission has continued that
approach in subsequent decisions, for
example granting certain section 251(c)
unbundling relief for fiber deployed to
‘‘predominantly residential’’ multiunit
premises relying on the distinctions
drawn in the Competitive Networks
Order and Further NPRM. Consistent
with that precedent, the protections
against telecommunications exclusivity
provisions here extend to the tenants in
residential MTEs as determined by the
MTE’s predominant use.
5. As the Commission held in the
Competitive Networks Order and
Further NPRM, the guests of hotels or
similar establishments are not ‘‘tenants’’
covered by the exclusivity ban within
the meaning of the Commission’s rules.
Similar to the Commission’s decision in
the video context in the Video
Nonexclusivity Order, and consistent
with prior decisions in the
telecommunications context, the
Commission likewise does not find the
prohibition adopted here necessary to
protect guests in ‘‘hotels, or similar
establishments,’’ since such guests tend
to be transient users, for whom such a
prohibition likely would not bring the
same competitive benefits. For purposes
of protecting consumers in residential
MTEs, the prohibition on exclusive
arrangements for the provision of
telecommunications services does not
extend to guests in hotels or similar
establishments, as described in the
Video Nonexclusivity Order at para. 7.
6. Prohibition on Entering Into and
Enforcing Exclusivity. The Commission
finds that the record leaves no doubt of
the existence of exclusive arrangements
for the provision of telecommunications
services. These arrangements have the
same harmful effects on the provision of
triple play services and broadband
deployment as discussed in the Video
Nonexclusivity Order, and pose just as
much of a barrier to competition where
they are attached to the provision of
telecommunications services as they are
to the provision of video services. Such
provisions can ‘‘prohibit or
economically discourage consumers
from seeking alternative service
providers’’ for telecommunications
services, thereby limiting consumer
choice and competition. This not only
could adversely affect consumers’ rates,
but also quality, innovation, and
network redundancy.
7. Developments in the markets for
telecommunications, video, and
broadband services over the last several
years support the conclusion to extend
the ban on exclusivity to residential
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MTEs. At the time the Commission
issued the Competitive Networks Order
and Further NPRM, the Commission
distinguished between residential and
commercial tenants because of an
inconclusive record about the likely
competitive effects in residential MTEs,
and cited commenter concerns that ‘‘in
the residential context, potential
revenue streams from any one building
are typically not enough to attract
competitive entry without exclusive
contracts.’’ As the Commission has
discussed at length in the Video
Nonexclusivity Order and in other
recent orders, the dramatic growth of
service combinations and the ‘‘triple
play’’ reduces the concern that a sole
telecommunications service revenue
stream is insufficient to generate
additional competitive entry, even in
the residential context. The shift from
competition between stand alone
services to that between service
bundles, as well as the integration of
service providers, supports the removal
of obstacles to facilities-based entry.
Given that the same facilities used to
provide video and data services often
can readily be used to provide
telephone service, as well, denying such
providers the right to do so only serves
to reduce the entry incentives of
competing providers, and thus
competition, for each of those services.
8. In addition, section 706 of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996 (1996
Act) and the goal of regulatory parity
support this decision. When the
Commission last addressed this issue in
2000, the Commission indicated its
hope that the growth of facilities-based
competition would increase the
availability of advanced services. While
providers have deployed broadband
facilities to a tremendous degree since
then, the Commission believes that its
actions here will further promote that
goal. Because allowing the imposition of
restrictions on competitive offerings to
residents in a multiunit premise would
deter competitors from offering
broadband service in combination with
video, voice, or other
telecommunications services, the
Commission also finds that prohibiting
carriers from entering into exclusivity
contracts for the provision of
telecommunications services furthers
section 706’s mandate to ‘‘encourage the
deployment on a reasonable and timely
basis of advanced telecommunications
capability to all Americans’’ as a basis
for expanding the prohibition on
contractual exclusivity.
9. The Commission is not persuaded
by arguments that the Commission
should refrain from taking any action
with regard to residential MTEs. In
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response to the issues raised in the
Competitive Networks proceeding, the
real estate industry made a commitment
to the Commission to develop model
contracts and ‘‘best practices’’ to
facilitate negotiations for building
access, which include a firm policy not
to enter into exclusive contracts. While
this approach is commendable and pro
competitive, the Commission does not
find on this record that the effects of
this voluntary commitment are not
widespread, nor does it find such an
unenforceable commitment sufficient to
ensure the necessary competitive access.
10. The Commission previously found
no evidence of benefits to competition
or consumer welfare from the use of
exclusive contracts in commercial
settings, and the record in residential
settings similarly lacks such evidence.
Although the data cited in the
comments recently refreshing the
Competitive Networks proceeding are
not detailed, that does not render the
anticompetitive impact of exclusivity
provisions inconsequential. Qwest
reports that it is increasingly
encountering residential buildings
where it is prohibited to sell its voice
services. Indeed, no party disputes that
carriers and MTE representatives
continue to enter into these contracts,
and even in arguing against a
prohibition, RAA introduces a survey of
property owners and managers showing
that two percent of the respondents
admit to having at least one exclusive
agreement for building access. The
Commission is mindful of the concerns
of some that ‘‘community-based
arrangements’’ allow competitive
providers some assurance of a steady
revenue stream to justify their initial
development, but, for the reasons
described above, the Commission is not
persuaded by such concerns in the
present marketplace environment. Thus,
the Commission concludes that the
perpetuation of exclusivity contracts is
not in the public interest. Just as the
Commission concluded in the context of
video programming services, the
Commission finds that the benefits do
not outweigh the harms, and it acts
accordingly for telecommunications
services. The exclusive provision of
telecommunications services in
residential MTEs bars competitive and
new entry in the telecommunications
services market and triple play market,
and discourages the deployment of
broadband facilities to the American
public. This in turn results in higher
prices and fewer competitive choices for
consumers. Such limitations are
inconsistent with the pro-competitive
goals of the 1996 Act, and therefore
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28051
such contracts are unjust and
unreasonable practices.
11. The Commission finds that
immediately prohibiting the
enforcement of such provisions is more
appropriate than phasing them out or
waiting until contracts expire and are
replaced by contracts without
exclusivity provisions. The Commission
agrees with commenters that such
approaches would only serve to further
delay the entry of competition to
customers in the buildings at issue. To
leave existing exclusivity contracts in
effect would allow the competitive
harms identified to continue for some
time, even years, and the Commission
believes it is in the public interest to
prohibit such contracts from being
enforced. Further, to the extent that
exclusivity provisions prevent
incumbent local exchange carriers
(LECs) from serving a building, they
could be at odds with applicable carrier
of last resort obligations. In addition,
nothing in the record suggests that small
carriers are particularly disadvantaged
by exclusivity prohibitions, or that the
cost/benefit analysis for consumers
differs when small carriers are involved.
Finally, the Commission notes that the
validity of exclusivity provisions in
contracts for the provision of
telecommunications services to
residential MTEs has been subject to
question for some time. In the
Competitive Networks Order and
Further NPRM, the Commission found
such provisions unreasonable in the
context of commercial MTEs, and
sought comment on the propriety of a
similar prohibition for residential MTEs,
including the prohibition on
enforcement of existing exclusivity
provisions. Thus, carriers have been on
notice for more than seven years that the
Commission might prohibit both their
entering, and enforcement of, such
provisions.
12. As the Commission found in the
Competitive Networks Order and
Further NPRM, it has ample authority to
prohibit exclusivity provisions in
agreements for the provision of
telecommunications service to
residential MTEs. There, the
Commission specifically found that
‘‘exclusive contracts for
telecommunications service in
commercial settings impede the procompetitive purposes of the 1996 Act
and appear to confer no substantial
countervailing public benefits,’’ and
thus ‘‘a carrier’s agreement to such a
contract is an unreasonable practice’’
under section 201(b) of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended (Act).
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13. The same conclusion is applicable
here because just as in the commercial
MTE context, the prohibition of
exclusive contracts in the provision of
telecommunications services to
residential MTEs furthers the same
policy goals—facilitating competitive
entry, lower prices, and more broadband
deployment. Thus, the Commission
finds that a carrier’s execution or
enforcement of such an exclusive access
provision is an unreasonable practice
and implicates the Commission’s
authority under section 201(b) of the
Act to prohibit unreasonable practices.
As with video contracts, the
Commission does not limit this
prohibition to future exclusivity
contracts for the provision of
telecommunications services, but also
prohibits the enforcement of such
existing contracts. In the Competitive
Networks Order and Further NPRM, the
Commission sought comment on
whether to prohibit carriers from
enforcing exclusive access provisions in
existing contracts in either commercial
or residential multiunit premises,
including the extent of the
Commission’s authority to do so. The
Commission concludes that it has such
authority, and that it is in the public
interest to prohibit the enforcement of
exclusive contracts for the provision of
telecommunications services to
residential MTEs.
14. The Commission has authority to
‘‘modify * * * provisions of private
contracts when necessary to serve the
public interest.’’ See, e.g., Expanded
Interconnection with Local Telephone
Company Facilities, CC Docket No.
91–141, Memorandum Opinion and
Order, 9 FCC Rcd 5154, 5207–10, paras.
197–208 (1994). The Commission has
exercised this authority previously
when private contracts violate sections
201 through 205 of the Act. As the
Commission found in the Competitive
Networks Order and Further NPRM, the
exclusive access provisions at issue here
‘‘perpetuate the very ‘barriers to
facilities-based competition’ that the
1996 Act was designed to eliminate,’’
and appear to confer no substantial
countervailing public benefits. Having
for the same reasons found such
exclusive contracts violate section 201
of the Act, and given the adverse
competitive effects of such contracts,
the Commission finds it necessary in the
public interest to prohibit enforcement
of such existing contracts.
15. In addition, the Commission
concludes that its prohibition on the
enforcement of telecommunications
exclusivity contracts here does not
violate the Fifth Amendment for the
same reasons discussed in the Video
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Nonexclusivity Order in the context of
video exclusivity provisions. In
particular, such action is not a per se
taking, nor does it represent a regulatory
taking under the Supreme Court’s
framework. As is true in the video
context, the prohibition on exclusivity
arrangements does not prevent
telecommunications carriers from
utilizing the facilities they own to
provide services to MTEs, nor does it
prohibit other types of arrangements
such as exclusive marketing
arrangements. Exclusive
telecommunications contracts have been
under scrutiny for years, and have been
prohibited by the Commission and
states in certain contexts. To the extent
that carriers have used exclusivity to
obstruct competition, any underlying
investment-backed expectations are not
sufficiently longstanding or procompetitive in nature to warrant
immunity from regulation. In addition,
the prohibition on enforcement of the
exclusivity provisions at issue
substantially advances the government
interest in preventing unreasonable
practices reflected in section 201(b) of
the Act, and is based on weighing of the
relative costs and benefits of such
provisions. Moreover, the Commission
notes that this action applies only to
carriers seeking to enter or enforce
telecommunications exclusivity
contracts—the Commission is not
hereby mandating access to residential
or other MTEs. Thus, it finds that it has
ample authority to regulate
telecommunications carriers’
contractual conduct even though it may
have a tangential effect on MTE owners.
16. In sum, the Commission
concludes that it has both a sufficient
policy basis and legal authority to
prohibit carriers from entering or
enforcing exclusivity provisions on
contracts to provide
telecommunications services to
residential MTEs. By adopting such a
prohibition here, it furthers the
competitive goals of the 1996 Act, and
continues efforts to ensure that
consumers in MTEs enjoy the benefits of
increased competition in both telephone
and video service offerings.
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis,
WC Docket No. 99–217 (Competitive
Networks)
17. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in the
Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(Further NPRM) to this proceeding. The
Commission sought written public
comment on the proposals in the
Further NPRM, including comment on
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the IRFA. The Commission received one
comment on the IRFA, from the Real
Access Alliance. This Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) conforms to
the RFA.
A. Need for, and Objectives of, the
Report and Order
18. This Report and Order adopts
rules and provides guidance to
implement sections 1, 2(a), 4(i), 4(j),
201, 202, 205, and 405 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended (the Act) and section 706 of
the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
Those sections of the Act authorize the
Commission to prohibit any
telecommunications carrier from
enforcing or executing contracts with
premises owners for provision of
telecommunications service alone or in
combination with other services in
predominantly residential multiple
tenant environments (MTEs). The
Commission has found that existing and
future exclusive contracts constitute an
unreasonable barrier to entry for
competitive entrants that would impede
competition and accelerated broadband
deployment, and that they constitute an
unfair method of competition. The
measures adopted in this Report and
Order ensure that, in furtherance of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996,
certain contractual exclusivity
provisions no longer serve as an
obstacle to competitive access in the
telecommunications market.
B. Summary of Significant Issues Raised
by Public Comments in Response to the
IRFA
19. Only one commenter, RAA,
submitted a comment that specifically
responded to the IRFA. RAA asserts that
the IRFA was defective because it did
not address the effects of possible
outcomes on apartment building
owners.
20. We disagree with RAA’s assertion.
In fact, the IRFA discussed apartment
building owners specifically in
paragraph 15. Moreover, an IRFA need
only address the concerns of entities
directly regulated by the Commission.
The Commission does not directly
regulate apartment building operators.
Accordingly, even if the IRFA had not
addressed the concerns of apartment
building owners, it would not be
defective. When an agency finds that
there is no direct impact on a
substantial number of small entities that
are subject to the requirements of the
rule, then no discussion of alternatives,
less costly than the proposed rule, is
required.
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C. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities To Which the
Rules Will Apply
21. The RFA directs agencies to
provide a description of and, where
feasible, an estimate of the number of
small entities that may be affected by
the rules adopted herein. The RFA
generally defines the term ‘‘small
entity’’ as having the same meaning as
the terms ‘‘small business,’’ ‘‘small
organization,’’ and ‘‘small governmental
jurisdiction.’’ In addition, the term
‘‘small business’’ has the same meaning
as the term ‘‘small business concern’’
under the Small Business Act. A small
business concern is one which: (1) Is
independently owned and operated; (2)
is not dominant in its field of operation;
and (3) satisfies any additional criteria
established by the SBA.
22. The rules and guidance adopted
by this Report and Order will ease the
entry of providers of
telecommunications services, including
those providing the ‘‘triple play’’ of
voice, video, and broadband Internet
access service. The Commission has
determined that the group of small
entities directly affected by the rules
adopted herein consists of wireline and
wireless telecommunications carriers.
Therefore, in the Report and Order, the
Commission considers the impact of the
rules on carriers. A description of such
small entities, as well as an estimate of
the number of such small entities, is
provided below.
23. Small Businesses. Nationwide,
there are a total of approximately 22.4
million small businesses according to
SBA data.
24. Small Organizations. Nationwide,
there are approximately 1.6 million
small organizations. Small
Governmental Jurisdictions. The term
‘‘small governmental jurisdiction’’ is
defined generally as ‘‘governments of
cities, towns, townships, villages,
school districts, or special districts, with
a population of less than fifty
thousand.’’ Census Bureau data for 2002
indicate that there were 87,525 local
governmental jurisdictions in the
United States. The Commission
estimates that, of this total, 84,377
entities were ‘‘small governmental
jurisdictions.’’ Thus, the Commission
estimates that most governmental
jurisdictions are small.
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1. Wireline Carriers and Service
Providers
25. The Commission has included
small incumbent local exchange carriers
(LECs) in this present RFA analysis. As
noted above, a ‘‘small business’’ under
the RFA is one that, inter alia, meets the
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pertinent small business size standard
(e.g., a telephone communications
business having 1,500 or fewer
employees) and ‘‘is not dominant in its
field of operation.’’ The SBA’s Office of
Advocacy contends that, for RFA
purposes, small incumbent LECs are not
dominant in their field of operation
because any such dominance is not
‘‘national’’ in scope. The Commission
has therefore included small incumbent
LECs in this RFA analysis, although the
Commission emphasizes that this RFA
action has no effect on Commission
analyses and determinations in other,
non-RFA contexts.
26. Incumbent LECs. Neither the
Commission nor the SBA has developed
a small business size standard
specifically for incumbent LECs. The
appropriate size standard under SBA
rules is for the category Wired
Telecommunications Carriers. Under
that size standard, such a business is
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
According to Commission data, 1,303
carriers have reported that they are
engaged in the provision of incumbent
local exchange services. Of these 1,303
carriers, an estimated 1,020 have 1,500
or fewer employees and 283 have more
than 1,500 employees. Consequently,
the Commission estimates that most
providers of incumbent local exchange
service are small businesses that may be
affected by the Commission’s action.
27. Competitive LECs, Competitive
Access Providers (CAPs), ‘‘SharedTenant Service Providers,’’ and ‘‘Other
Local Service Providers.’’ Neither the
Commission nor the SBA has developed
a small business size standard
specifically for these service providers.
The appropriate size standard under
SBA rules is for the category Wired
Telecommunications Carriers. Under
that size standard, such a business is
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
According to Commission data, 859
carriers have reported that they are
engaged in the provision of either
competitive access provider services or
competitive LEC services. Of these 859
carriers, an estimated 741 have 1,500 or
fewer employees and 118 have more
than 1,500 employees. In addition, 16
carriers have reported that they are
‘‘Shared-Tenant Service Providers,’’ and
all 16 are estimated to have 1,500 or
fewer employees. In addition, 44
carriers have reported that they are
‘‘Other Local Service Providers.’’ Of the
44, an estimated 43 have 1,500 or fewer
employees and one has more than 1,500
employees. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that most
providers of competitive local exchange
service, competitive access providers,
‘‘Shared-Tenant Service Providers,’’ and
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‘‘Other Local Service Providers’’ are
small entities.
28. Interexchange Carriers (IXCs).
Neither the Commission nor the SBA
has developed a small business size
standard specifically for providers of
interexchange services. The appropriate
size standard under SBA rules is for the
category Wired Telecommunications
Carriers. Under that size standard, such
a business is small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. According to
Commission data, 330 carriers have
reported that they are engaged in the
provision of interexchange service. Of
these, an estimated 309 have 1,500 or
fewer employees and 21 have more than
1,500 employees. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that the majority
of IXCs are small entities that may be
affected by the Commission’s action.
2. Wireless Telecommunications Service
Providers
29. Below, for those services subject
to auctions, the Commission notes that,
as a general matter, the number of
winning bidders that qualify as small
businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the
number of small businesses currently in
service. Also, the Commission does not
generally track subsequent business size
unless, in the context of assignments or
transfers, unjust enrichment issues are
implicated.
30. Wireless Service Providers. The
SBA has developed a small business
size standard for wireless firms within
the two broad economic census
categories of ‘‘Paging’’ and ‘‘Cellular and
Other Wireless Telecommunications.’’
Under both SBA categories, a wireless
business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. For the census category of
Paging, Census Bureau data for 2002
show that there were 807 firms in this
category that operated for the entire
year. Of this total, 804 firms had
employment of 999 or fewer employees,
and three firms had employment of
1,000 employees or more. Thus, under
this category and associated small
business size standard, the majority of
firms can be considered small. For the
census category of Cellular and Other
Wireless Telecommunications, Census
Bureau data for 2002 show that there
were 1,397 firms in this category that
operated for the entire year. Of this
total, 1,378 firms had employment of
999 or fewer employees, and 19 firms
had employment of 1,000 employees or
more. Thus, under this second category
and size standard, the majority of firms
can, again, be considered small.
31. Cellular Licensees. The SBA has
developed a small business size
standard for wireless firms within the
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broad economic census category
‘‘Cellular and Other Wireless
Telecommunications.’’ Under this SBA
category, a wireless business is small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. For the
census category of Cellular and Other
Wireless Telecommunications, Census
Bureau data for 2002 show that there
were 1,397 firms in this category that
operated for the entire year. Of this
total, 1,378 firms had employment of
999 or fewer employees, and 19 firms
had employment of 1,000 employees or
more. Thus, under this category and size
standard, the majority of firms can be
considered small. Also, according to
Commission data, 437 carriers reported
that they were engaged in the provision
of cellular service, Personal
Communications Service (PCS), or
Specialized Mobile Radio (SMR)
Telephony services, which are placed
together in the data. The Commission
has estimated that 260 of these are small
under the SBA small business size
standard.
32. Paging. The SBA has developed a
small business size standard for the
broad economic census category of
‘‘Paging.’’ Under this category, the SBA
deems a wireless business to be small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. Census
Bureau data for 2002 show that there
were 807 firms in this category that
operated for the entire year. Of this
total, 804 firms had employment of 999
or fewer employees, and three firms had
employment of 1,000 employees or
more. In addition, according to
Commission data, 365 carriers have
reported that they are engaged in the
provision of ‘‘Paging and Messaging
Service.’’ Of this total, the Commission
estimates that 360 have 1,500 or fewer
employees, and five have more than
1,500 employees. Thus, in this category
the majority of firms can be considered
small.
33. We also note that, in the Paging
Second Report and Order, the
Commission adopted a size standard for
‘‘small businesses’’ for purposes of
determining their eligibility for special
provisions such as bidding credits and
installment payments. In this context, a
small business is an entity that, together
with its affiliates and controlling
principals, has average gross revenues
not exceeding $15 million for the
preceding three years. The SBA has
approved this definition. An auction of
Metropolitan Economic Area (MEA)
licenses commenced on February 24,
2000, and closed on March 2, 2000. Of
the 2,499 licenses auctioned, 985 were
sold. Fifty-seven companies claiming
small business status won 440 licenses.
An auction of MEA and Economic Area
(EA) licenses commenced on October
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30, 2001, and closed on December 5,
2001. Of the 15,514 licenses auctioned,
5,323 were sold. One hundred thirtytwo companies claiming small business
status purchased 3,724 licenses. A third
auction, consisting of 8,874 licenses in
each of 175 EAs and 1,328 licenses in
all but three of the 51 MEAs
commenced on May 13, 2003, and
closed on May 28, 2003. Seventy-seven
bidders claiming small or very small
business status won 2,093 licenses. The
Commission also notes that, currently,
there are approximately 74,000
Common Carrier Paging licenses.
34. Wireless Communications
Services. This service can be used for
fixed, mobile, radiolocation, and digital
audio broadcasting satellite uses. The
Commission established small business
size standards for the wireless
communications services (WCS)
auction. A ‘‘small business’’ is an entity
with average gross revenues of $40
million or less for each of the three
preceding years, and a ‘‘very small
business’’ is an entity with average gross
revenues of $15 million or less for each
of the three preceding years. The SBA
has approved these small business size
standards. The Commission auctioned
geographic area licenses in the WCS
service. In the auction, there were seven
winning bidders that qualified as ‘‘very
small business’’ entities, and one that
qualified as a ‘‘small business’’ entity.
35. Wireless Telephony. Wireless
telephony includes cellular, personal
communications services (PCS), and
specialized mobile radio (SMR)
telephony carriers. As noted earlier, the
SBA has developed a small business
size standard for ‘‘Cellular and Other
Wireless Telecommunications’’ services.
Under that SBA small business size
standard, a business is small if it has
1,500 or fewer employees. According to
Commission data, 432 carriers reported
that they were engaged in the provision
of wireless telephony. The Commission
has estimated that 221 of these are small
under the SBA small business size
standard.
36. Broadband Personal
Communications Service. The
broadband Personal Communications
Service (PCS) spectrum is divided into
six frequency blocks designated A
through F, and the Commission has held
auctions for each block. The
Commission defined ‘‘small entity’’ for
Blocks C and F as an entity that has
average gross revenues of $40 million or
less in the three previous calendar
years. For Block F, an additional
classification for ‘‘very small business’’
was added and is defined as an entity
that, together with its affiliates, has
average gross revenues of not more than
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$15 million for the preceding three
calendar years. These standards
defining ‘‘small entity’’ in the context of
broadband PCS auctions have been
approved by the SBA. No small
businesses, within the SBA-approved
small business size standards bid
successfully for licenses in Blocks A
and B. There were 90 winning bidders
that qualified as small entities in the
Block C auctions. A total of 93 small
and very small business bidders won
approximately 40 percent of the 1,479
licenses for Blocks D, E, and F. On
March 23, 1999, the Commission reauctioned 347 C, D, E, and F Block
licenses. There were 48 small business
winning bidders. On January 26, 2001,
the Commission completed the auction
of 422 C and F Broadband PCS licenses
in Auction No. 35. Of the 35 winning
bidders in this auction, 29 qualified as
‘‘small’’ or ‘‘very small’’ businesses.
Subsequent events, concerning Auction
35, including judicial and agency
determinations, resulted in a total of 163
C and F Block licenses being available
for grant.
37. Narrowband Personal
Communications Services. The
Commission held an auction for
Narrowband PCS licenses that
commenced on July 25, 1994, and
closed on July 29, 1994. A second
auction commenced on October 26,
1994 and closed on November 8, 1994.
For purposes of the first two
Narrowband PCS auctions, ‘‘small
businesses’’ were entities with average
gross revenues for the prior three
calendar years of $40 million or less.
Through these auctions, the
Commission awarded a total of 41
licenses, 11 of which were obtained by
four small businesses. To ensure
meaningful participation by small
business entities in future auctions, the
Commission adopted a two-tiered small
business size standard in the
Narrowband PCS Second Report and
Order. A ‘‘small business’’ is an entity
that, together with affiliates and
controlling interests, has average gross
revenues for the three preceding years of
not more than $40 million. A ‘‘very
small business’’ is an entity that,
together with affiliates and controlling
interests, has average gross revenues for
the three preceding years of not more
than $15 million. The SBA has
approved these small business size
standards. A third auction commenced
on October 3, 2001 and closed on
October 16, 2001. Here, five bidders
won 317 (Metropolitan Trading Areas
and nationwide) licenses. Three of these
claimed status as a small or very small
entity and won 311 licenses.
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38. 220 MHz Radio Service—Phase I
Licensees. The 220 MHz service has
both Phase I and Phase II licenses. Phase
I licensing was conducted by lotteries in
1992 and 1993. There are approximately
1,515 such non-nationwide licensees
and four nationwide licensees currently
authorized to operate in the 220 MHz
band. The Commission has not
developed a small business size
standard for small entities specifically
applicable to such incumbent 220 MHz
Phase I licensees. To estimate the
number of such licensees that are small
businesses, the Commission applies the
small business size standard under the
SBA rules applicable to ‘‘Cellular and
Other Wireless Telecommunications’’
companies. This category provides that
a small business is a wireless company
employing no more than 1,500 persons.
For the census category Cellular and
Other Wireless Telecommunications,
Census Bureau data for 1997 show that
there were 977 firms in this category,
total, that operated for the entire year.
Of this total, 965 firms had employment
of 999 or fewer employees, and an
additional 12 firms had employment of
1,000 employees or more. Thus, under
this second category and size standard,
the majority of firms can, again, be
considered small. Assuming this general
ratio continues in the context of Phase
I 220 MHz licensees, the Commission
estimates that nearly all such licensees
are small businesses under the SBA’s
small business size standard. In
addition, limited preliminary census
data for 2002 indicate that the total
number of cellular and other wireless
telecommunications carriers increased
approximately 321 percent from 1997 to
2002.
39. 220 MHz Radio Service—Phase II
Licensees. The 220 MHz service has
both Phase I and Phase II licenses. The
Phase II 220 MHz service is a new
service and is subject to spectrum
auctions. The 220 MHz Third Report
and Order adopted a small business size
standard for ‘‘small’’ and ‘‘very small’’
businesses for purposes of determining
their eligibility for special provisions
such as bidding credits and installment
payments. This small business size
standard indicates that a ‘‘small
business’’ is an entity that, together with
its affiliates and controlling principals,
has average gross revenues not
exceeding $15 million for the preceding
three years. A ‘‘very small business’’ is
an entity that, together with its affiliates
and controlling principals, has average
gross revenues that do not exceed $3
million for the preceding three years.
The SBA has approved these small
business size standards. Auctions of
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Phase II licenses commenced on
September 15, 1998, and closed on
October 22, 1998. In the first auction,
908 licenses were auctioned in three
different-sized geographic areas: Three
nationwide licenses, 30 Regional
Economic Area Group (EAG) Licenses,
and 875 Economic Area (EA) Licenses.
Of the 908 licenses auctioned, 693 were
sold. Thirty-nine small businesses won
licenses in the first 220 MHz auction.
The second auction included 225
licenses: 216 EA licenses and 9 EAG
licenses. Fourteen companies claiming
small business status won 158 licenses.
40. 800 MHz and 900 MHz
Specialized Mobile Radio Licenses. The
Commission awards ‘‘small entity’’ and
‘‘very small entity’’ bidding credits in
auctions for Specialized Mobile Radio
(SMR) geographic area licenses in the
800 MHz and 900 MHz bands to firms
that had revenues of no more than $15
million in each of the three previous
calendar years, or that had revenues of
no more than $3 million in each of the
previous calendar years, respectively.
These bidding credits apply to SMR
providers in the 800 MHz and 900 MHz
bands that either hold geographic area
licenses or have obtained extended
implementation authorizations. The
Commission does not know how many
firms provide 800 MHz or 900 MHz
geographic area SMR service pursuant
to extended implementation
authorizations, nor how many of these
providers have annual revenues of no
more than $15 million. One firm has
over $15 million in revenues. The
Commission assumes, for purposes here,
that all of the remaining existing
extended implementation
authorizations are held by small
entities, as that term is defined by the
SBA. The Commission has held
auctions for geographic area licenses in
the 800 MHz and 900 MHz SMR bands.
There were 60 winning bidders that
qualified as small or very small entities
in the 900 MHz SMR auctions. Of the
1,020 licenses won in the 900 MHz
auction, bidders qualifying as small or
very small entities won 263 licenses. In
the 800 MHz auction, 38 of the 524
licenses won were won by small and
very small entities.
41. 700 MHz Guard Band Licensees.
The 700 MHz Guard Band Order
adopted a small business size standard
for ‘‘small businesses’’ and ‘‘very small
businesses’’ for purposes of determining
their eligibility for special provisions
such as bidding credits and installment
payments. A ‘‘small business’’ as an
entity that, together with its affiliates
and controlling principals, has average
gross revenues not exceeding $15
million for the preceding three years.
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Additionally, a ‘‘very small business’’ is
an entity that, together with its affiliates
and controlling principals, has average
gross revenues that are not more than $3
million for the preceding three years.
An auction of 52 Major Economic Area
(MEA) licenses commenced on
September 6, 2000, and closed on
September 21, 2000. Of the 104 licenses
auctioned, 96 licenses were sold to nine
bidders. Five of these bidders were
small businesses that won a total of 26
licenses. A second auction of 700 MHz
Guard Band licenses commenced on
February 13, 2001 and closed on
February 21, 2001. All eight of the
licenses auctioned were sold to three
bidders. One of these bidders was a
small business that won a total of two
licenses.
42. 39 GHz Service. The Commission
created a special small business size
standard for 39 GHz licenses—an entity
that has average gross revenues of $40
million or less in the three previous
calendar years. An additional size
standard for ‘‘very small business’’ is: an
entity that, together with affiliates, has
average gross revenues of not more than
$15 million for the preceding three
calendar years. The SBA has approved
these small business size standards. The
auction of the 2,173 39 GHz licenses
began on April 12, 2000 and closed on
May 8, 2000. The 18 bidders who
claimed small business status won 849
licenses. Consequently, the Commission
estimates that 18 or fewer 39 GHz
licensees are small entities that may be
affected by the rules and policies
adopted herein.
43. Wireless Cable Systems. Wireless
cable systems use 2 GHz band
frequencies of the Broadband Radio
Service (‘‘BRS’’), formerly Multipoint
Distribution Service (‘‘MDS’’), and the
Educational Broadband Service (‘‘EBS’’),
formerly Instructional Television Fixed
Service (‘‘ITFS’’), to transmit video
programming and provide broadband
services to residential subscribers.
These services were originally designed
for the delivery of multichannel video
programming, similar to that of
traditional cable systems, but over the
past several years licensees have
focused their operations instead on
providing two-way high-speed Internet
access services. The Commission
estimates that the number of wireless
cable subscribers is approximately
100,000, as of March 2005. Local
Multipoint Distribution Service
(‘‘LMDS’’) is a fixed broadband point-tomultipoint microwave service that
provides for two-way video
telecommunications. As described
below, the SBA small business size
standard for the broad census category
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of Cable and Other Program
Distribution, which consists of such
entities generating $13.5 million or less
in annual receipts, appears applicable to
MDS, ITFS and LMDS. Other standards
also apply, as described.
44. The Commission has defined
small MDS (now BRS) and LMDS
entities in the context of Commission
license auctions. In the 1996 MDS
auction, the Commission defined a
small business as an entity that had
annual average gross revenues of less
than $40 million in the previous three
calendar years. This definition of a
small entity in the context of MDS
auctions has been approved by the SBA.
In the MDS auction, 67 bidders won 493
licenses. Of the 67 auction winners, 61
claimed status as a small business. At
this time, the Commission estimates that
of the 61 small business MDS auction
winners, 48 remain small business
licensees. In addition to the 48 small
businesses that hold BTA
authorizations, there are approximately
392 incumbent MDS licensees that have
gross revenues that are not more than
$40 million and are thus considered
small entities. MDS licensees and
wireless cable operators that did not
receive their licenses as a result of the
MDS auction fall under the SBA small
business size standard for Cable and
Other Program Distribution. Information
available to us indicates that there are
approximately 850 of these licensees
and operators that do not generate
revenue in excess of $13.5 million
annually. Therefore, the Commission
estimates that there are approximately
850 small entity MDS (or BRS)
providers, as defined by the SBA and
the Commission’s auction rules.
45. Educational institutions are
included in this analysis as small
entities; however, the Commission has
not created a specific small business
size standard for ITFS (now EBS). The
Commission estimates that there are
currently 2,032 ITFS (or EBS) licensees,
and all but 100 of the licenses are held
by educational institutions. Thus, the
Commission estimates that at least 1,932
ITFS licensees are small entities.
46. In the 1998 and 1999 LMDS
auctions, the Commission defined a
small business as an entity that has
annual average gross revenues of less
than $40 million in the previous three
calendar years. Moreover, the
Commission added an additional
classification for a ‘‘very small
business,’’ which was defined as an
entity that had annual average gross
revenues of less than $15 million in the
previous three calendar years. These
definitions of ‘‘small business’’ and
‘‘very small business’’ in the context of
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the LMDS auctions have been approved
by the SBA. In the first LMDS auction,
104 bidders won 864 licenses. Of the
104 auction winners, 93 claimed status
as small or very small businesses. In the
LMDS re-auction, 40 bidders won 161
licenses. Based on this information, the
Commission believes that the number of
small LMDS licenses will include the 93
winning bidders in the first auction and
the 40 winning bidders in the reauction, for a total of 133 small entity
LMDS providers as defined by the SBA
and the Commission’s auction rules.
47. Local Multipoint Distribution
Service. Local Multipoint Distribution
Service (LMDS) is a fixed broadband
point-to-multipoint microwave service
that provides for two-way video
telecommunications. The auction of the
1,030 LMDS licenses began on February
18, 1998 and closed on March 25, 1998.
The Commission established a small
business size standard for LMDS
licensees as an entity that has average
gross revenues of less than $40 million
in the three previous calendar years. An
additional small business size standard
for ‘‘very small business’’ was added as
an entity that, together with its affiliates,
has average gross revenues of not more
than $15 million for the preceding three
calendar years. The SBA has approved
these small business size standards in
the context of LMDS auctions. There
were 93 winning bidders that qualified
as small entities in the LMDS auctions.
A total of 93 small and very small
business bidders won approximately
277 A Block licenses and 387 B Block
licenses. On March 27, 1999, the
Commission re-auctioned 161 licenses;
there were 40 winning bidders. Based
on this information, the Commission
concludes that the number of small
LMDS licenses consists of the 93
winning bidders in the first auction and
the 40 winning bidders in the reauction, for a total of 133 small entity
LMDS providers.
48. 218–219 MHz Service. The first
auction of 218–219 MHz spectrum
resulted in 170 entities winning licenses
for 594 Metropolitan Statistical Area
(MSA) licenses. Of the 594 licenses, 557
were won by entities qualifying as a
small business. For that auction, the
small business size standard was an
entity that, together with its affiliates,
has no more than a $6 million net worth
and, after federal income taxes
(excluding any carryover losses), has no
more than $2 million in annual profits
each year for the previous two years.
The 218–219 MHz Report and Order
and Memorandum Opinion and Order
established a small business size
standard for a ‘‘small business’’ as an
entity that, together with its affiliates
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and persons or entities that hold
interests in such an entity and their
affiliates, has average annual gross
revenues not to exceed $15 million for
the preceding three years. A ‘‘very small
business’’ is defined as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and persons
or entities that hold interests in such an
entity and its affiliates, has average
annual gross revenues not to exceed $3
million for the preceding three years.
The Commission cannot estimate,
however, the number of licenses that
will be won by entities qualifying as
small or very small businesses under the
rules in future auctions of 218–219 MHz
spectrum.
49. 24 GHz—Incumbent Licensees.
This analysis may affect incumbent
licensees who were relocated to the 24
GHz band from the 18 GHz band and
applicants who wish to provide services
in the 24 GHz band. The applicable SBA
small business size standard is that of
‘‘Cellular and Other Wireless
Telecommunications’’ companies. This
category provides that such a company
is small if it employs no more than
1,500 persons. According to Census
Bureau data for 1997, there were 977
firms in this category, total, that
operated for the entire year. Of this
total, 965 firms had employment of 999
or fewer employees, and an additional
12 firms had employment of 1,000
employees or more. Thus, under this
size standard, the great majority of firms
can be considered small. These broader
census data notwithstanding, the
Commission believes that there are only
two licensees in the 24 GHz band that
were relocated from the 18 GHz band,
Teligent and TRW, Inc. It is the
Commission’s understanding that
Teligent and its related companies have
less than 1,500 employees, though this
may change in the future. TRW is not a
small entity. Thus, only one incumbent
licensee in the 24 GHz band is a small
business entity.
50. 24 GHz—Future Licensees. With
respect to new applicants in the 24 GHz
band, the small business size standard
for ‘‘small business’’ is an entity that,
together with controlling interests and
affiliates, has average annual gross
revenues for the three preceding years
not in excess of $15 million. ‘‘Very
small business’’ in the 24 GHz band is
an entity that, together with controlling
interests and affiliates, has average gross
revenues not exceeding $3 million for
the preceding three years. The SBA has
approved these small business size
standards. These size standards will
apply to the future auction, if held.
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D. Description of Projected Reporting,
Record Keeping and Other Compliance
Requirements
51. The rule adopted in the Report
and Order will require no additional
reporting, record keeping, and other
compliance requirements.
E. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant
Impact on Small Entities, and
Significant Alternatives Considered
52. The RFA requires an agency to
describe any significant alternatives that
it has considered in reaching its
proposed approach, which may include
the following four alternatives (among
others): (1) The establishment of
differing compliance or reporting
requirements or timetables that take into
account the resources available to small
entities; (2) the clarification,
consolidation, or simplification of
compliance or reporting requirements
under the rule for small entities; (3) the
use of performance, rather than design,
standards; and (4) an exemption from
coverage of the rule, or any part thereof,
for small entities.
53. Because the Report and Order
imposes no compliance or reporting
requirements on any entity, only the last
of the foregoing alternatives is material.
The Report and Order takes note in
paragraph 13 above that nothing in the
record suggests that small carriers are
particularly disadvantaged by
exclusivity prohibitions, or that the
cost/benefit analysis for consumers
differs when small carriers are involved.
yshivers on PROD1PC66 with RULES
F. Report to Congress
54. The Commission will send a copy
of the Order, including this FRFA, in a
report to be sent to Congress and the
Government Accountability Office
pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act. A copy of the Order and FRFA (or
summaries thereof) will also be
published in the Federal Register.
Final Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Analysis
This document does not contain new
or modified information collection(s)
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA), Public Law 104–13. In
addition, therefore, 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, see 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4).
Congressional Review Act
The Commission will send a copy of
this Report and Order and Order on
Remand in a report to be sent to
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:14 May 14, 2008
Jkt 214001
Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C.
801(a)(1)(A).
Ordering Clauses
55. Accordingly, It is ordered,
pursuant to sections 1, 2(a), 4(j), 4(i),
201, 202, 205, and 405 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i),
154(j), 201, 202, 205, and 405, and
pursuant to section 706 of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, 47
U.S.C. 157 nt., that the Report and Order
in WT Docket No. 99–217 is adopted,
and that Part 64 of the Commission’s
Rules, 47 CFR part 64, is amended as set
forth in Appendix B of the order. It is
the Commission’s intention in adopting
these rule changes that, if any provision
of the rules is held invalid by any court
of competent jurisdiction, the remaining
provisions shall remain in effect to the
fullest extent permitted by law.
56. It is further ordered that the rules
and the requirements of this Report and
Order shall become effective July 14,
2008.
57. It is further ordered that the
Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
Information Center, shall send a copy of
this Report and Order, including the
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 64
Communications common carriers,
telecommunications, telephone.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
Final Rules
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission amends 47 CFR part 64 as
follows:
I
PART 64—MISCELLANEOUS RULES
RELATING TO COMMON CARRIERS
1. The authority citation for part 64
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i),
154(j), 201, 202, 205, 405, and 157 nt.
2. Section 64.2500 is revised to read
as follows:
I
§ 64.2500
Prohibited agreements.
(a) No common carrier shall enter into
any contract, written or oral, that would
in any way restrict the right of any
commercial multiunit premises owner,
or any agent or representative thereof, to
permit any other common carrier to
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
28057
access and serve commercial tenants on
that premises.
(b) No common carrier shall enter into
or enforce any contract, written or oral,
that would in any way restrict the right
of any residential multiunit premises
owner, or any agent or representative
thereof, to permit any other common
carrier to access and serve residential
tenants on that premises.
2. Section 64.2501 is revised to read
as follows:
I
§ 64.2501
Scope of limitation.
For the purposes of this subpart, a
multiunit premises is any contiguous
area under common ownership or
control that contains two or more
distinct units. A commercial multiunit
premises is any multiunit premises that
is predominantly used for nonresidential purposes, including forprofit, non-profit, and governmental
uses. A residential multiunit premises is
any multiunit premises that is
predominantly used for residential
purposes.
[FR Doc. E8–10764 Filed 5–14–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 64
[WC Docket No. 04–36; WT Docket No. 96–
198; CG Docket No. 03–123 and CC Docket
No. 92–105; DA 08–821]
IP–Enabled Services; Implementation
of Sections 255 and 251(a)(2) of The
Communications Act of 1934, as
Enacted by The Telecommunications
Act of 1996: Access to
Telecommunications Service,
Telecommunications Equipment and
Customer Premises Equipment by
Persons With Disabilities;
Telecommunications Relay Services
and Speech-to-Speech Services for
Individuals With Hearing and Speech
Disabilities; the Use of N11 Codes and
Other Abbreviated Dialing
Arrangements
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; extension of waiver.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: In this document, the
Consumer and Governmental Affairs
Bureau (Bureau) grants interconnected
voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
providers an extension of time to route
711-dialed calls to an appropriate
telecommunications relay service (TRS)
center in the context of 711-dialed calls
in which the calling party’s telephone
E:\FR\FM\15MYR1.SGM
15MYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 95 (Thursday, May 15, 2008)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 28049-28057]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-10764]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 64
[WT Docket No. 99-217; FCC 08-87]
Competitive Networks, Multiunit Premises
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Commission adopts rules prohibiting telecommunications
carriers from entering into contracts that would make them the
exclusive provider of telecommunications services in residential
multiple tenant environments (MTEs), e.g., apartment buildings,
condominiums, and cooperatives. The rules also prohibit
telecommunications carriers from enforcing existing exclusivity
contracts.
DATES: Effective July 14, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jon Reel, Wireline Competition Bureau,
(202) 418-1580.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In this Order, the Commission removes
impediments to facilities-based competition to provide voice, video,
and data services as intended by the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended (the Act) and Commission precedent. As it did with video
service providers (see Exclusive Service
[[Page 28050]]
Contracts for Provision of Video Services in Multiple Dwelling Units
and Other Real Estate Developments, MB Docket No. 07-51, 72 FR 61129-
01, 22 FCC Rcd 20235 (2007) (Video Nonexclusivity Order)), the
Commission finds that the harm to competition from exclusivity
agreements outweighs any benefit, and that such contracts are
inherently unjust and unreasonable. The rule establishes regulatory
parity between telecommunications carriers and cable television
operators, which are already banned from entering into or enforcing
arrangements to be the sole provider of video services in residential
MTEs. By removing impediments to competition, and by establishing
regulatory parity among likely competitors, this action should bring
the benefits of competition, including competition to provide broadband
Internet access services, to residents of MTEs.
The Commission will send a copy of this Report and Order in a
report to be sent to Congress and the Government Accountability Office
pursuant to the Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
Final Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 Analysis
This document does not contain new or modified information
collection(s) subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA),
Public Law 104-13. In addition, therefore, 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, see 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4).
Synopsis of Report and Order
1. On October 25, 2000, the Commission issued the Promotion of
Competitive Networks in Local Telecommunications Markets, First Report
and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, WT Docket No. 99-
217, 66 FR 2322-01, 15 FCC Rcd 22983 (2000) (Competitive Networks Order
and Further NPRM) to foster local competition pursuant to the 1996 Act,
and adopted several measures to ensure that competing
telecommunications providers are able to provide services in MTEs. Most
notably for the purposes of this proceeding, that order prohibited
carriers from entering into contracts that restrict or effectively
restrict owners and managers of commercial MTEs from permitting access
by competing carriers. The Commission also sought comment in several
areas, including whether the prohibition on exclusive access contracts
in commercial MTEs should be extended to residential settings, and
whether carriers should be prohibited from enforcing exclusive access
provisions in existing contracts in either commercial or residential
MTEs.
2. On March 28, 2007, the Wireline Competition Bureau released a
public notice inviting interested parties to update the record
pertaining to issues raised in the Commission's Competitive Networks
proceeding in light of marketplace and industry developments. (Parties
Asked to Refresh Record Regarding Promotion of Competitive Networks in
Local Telecommunications Markets, WT Docket No. 99-217, CC Docket No.
96-98, public notice, 22 FCC Rcd 5632 (2007)). Specifically, the notice
sought updates on the progress of the real estate industry's voluntary
commitments aimed at improving tenants' access to alternative
telecommunications carriers, and on intervening industry developments
such as service bundling and integration.
3. The Commission concludes that exclusive agreements to provide
telecommunications services to residential customers in MTEs harm
competition and consumers without evidence of countervailing benefits,
and the Commission thus prohibits carriers from entering into or
enforcing such provisions. This conclusion comports with the
Commission's decision in the Video Nonexclusivity Order to prohibit
cable operators and others subject to the relevant statutory provisions
from executing or enforcing existing video exclusivity provisions in
contracts to serve residential multiunit premises. In an environment of
increasingly competitive bundled service offerings, the importance of
regulatory parity is particularly compelling in the Commission's
determination to remove this impediment to fair competition. Moreover,
nothing in the record indicates that the competitive benefits that
commercial customers enjoy by virtue of the Commission's prior
prohibition of such contracts in the commercial context should not also
be extended to residential users.
4. Scope of Residential MTEs. In the Competitive Networks Order and
Further NPRM, the Commission prohibited exclusivity provisions with
respect to the provision of telecommunications services in commercial
MTEs. As it observed in that order, however, ``some premises are used
for both commercial and residential purposes.'' That Commission stated
that in situations ``where a single access agreement covers the entire
premises, the Commission finds it most consistent with the purposes of
this rule to determine its status as residential or commercial by
predominant use.'' The Commission has continued that approach in
subsequent decisions, for example granting certain section 251(c)
unbundling relief for fiber deployed to ``predominantly residential''
multiunit premises relying on the distinctions drawn in the Competitive
Networks Order and Further NPRM. Consistent with that precedent, the
protections against telecommunications exclusivity provisions here
extend to the tenants in residential MTEs as determined by the MTE's
predominant use.
5. As the Commission held in the Competitive Networks Order and
Further NPRM, the guests of hotels or similar establishments are not
``tenants'' covered by the exclusivity ban within the meaning of the
Commission's rules. Similar to the Commission's decision in the video
context in the Video Nonexclusivity Order, and consistent with prior
decisions in the telecommunications context, the Commission likewise
does not find the prohibition adopted here necessary to protect guests
in ``hotels, or similar establishments,'' since such guests tend to be
transient users, for whom such a prohibition likely would not bring the
same competitive benefits. For purposes of protecting consumers in
residential MTEs, the prohibition on exclusive arrangements for the
provision of telecommunications services does not extend to guests in
hotels or similar establishments, as described in the Video
Nonexclusivity Order at para. 7.
6. Prohibition on Entering Into and Enforcing Exclusivity. The
Commission finds that the record leaves no doubt of the existence of
exclusive arrangements for the provision of telecommunications
services. These arrangements have the same harmful effects on the
provision of triple play services and broadband deployment as discussed
in the Video Nonexclusivity Order, and pose just as much of a barrier
to competition where they are attached to the provision of
telecommunications services as they are to the provision of video
services. Such provisions can ``prohibit or economically discourage
consumers from seeking alternative service providers'' for
telecommunications services, thereby limiting consumer choice and
competition. This not only could adversely affect consumers' rates, but
also quality, innovation, and network redundancy.
7. Developments in the markets for telecommunications, video, and
broadband services over the last several years support the conclusion
to extend the ban on exclusivity to residential
[[Page 28051]]
MTEs. At the time the Commission issued the Competitive Networks Order
and Further NPRM, the Commission distinguished between residential and
commercial tenants because of an inconclusive record about the likely
competitive effects in residential MTEs, and cited commenter concerns
that ``in the residential context, potential revenue streams from any
one building are typically not enough to attract competitive entry
without exclusive contracts.'' As the Commission has discussed at
length in the Video Nonexclusivity Order and in other recent orders,
the dramatic growth of service combinations and the ``triple play''
reduces the concern that a sole telecommunications service revenue
stream is insufficient to generate additional competitive entry, even
in the residential context. The shift from competition between stand
alone services to that between service bundles, as well as the
integration of service providers, supports the removal of obstacles to
facilities-based entry. Given that the same facilities used to provide
video and data services often can readily be used to provide telephone
service, as well, denying such providers the right to do so only serves
to reduce the entry incentives of competing providers, and thus
competition, for each of those services.
8. In addition, section 706 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996
(1996 Act) and the goal of regulatory parity support this decision.
When the Commission last addressed this issue in 2000, the Commission
indicated its hope that the growth of facilities-based competition
would increase the availability of advanced services. While providers
have deployed broadband facilities to a tremendous degree since then,
the Commission believes that its actions here will further promote that
goal. Because allowing the imposition of restrictions on competitive
offerings to residents in a multiunit premise would deter competitors
from offering broadband service in combination with video, voice, or
other telecommunications services, the Commission also finds that
prohibiting carriers from entering into exclusivity contracts for the
provision of telecommunications services furthers section 706's mandate
to ``encourage the deployment on a reasonable and timely basis of
advanced telecommunications capability to all Americans'' as a basis
for expanding the prohibition on contractual exclusivity.
9. The Commission is not persuaded by arguments that the Commission
should refrain from taking any action with regard to residential MTEs.
In response to the issues raised in the Competitive Networks
proceeding, the real estate industry made a commitment to the
Commission to develop model contracts and ``best practices'' to
facilitate negotiations for building access, which include a firm
policy not to enter into exclusive contracts. While this approach is
commendable and pro competitive, the Commission does not find on this
record that the effects of this voluntary commitment are not
widespread, nor does it find such an unenforceable commitment
sufficient to ensure the necessary competitive access.
10. The Commission previously found no evidence of benefits to
competition or consumer welfare from the use of exclusive contracts in
commercial settings, and the record in residential settings similarly
lacks such evidence. Although the data cited in the comments recently
refreshing the Competitive Networks proceeding are not detailed, that
does not render the anticompetitive impact of exclusivity provisions
inconsequential. Qwest reports that it is increasingly encountering
residential buildings where it is prohibited to sell its voice
services. Indeed, no party disputes that carriers and MTE
representatives continue to enter into these contracts, and even in
arguing against a prohibition, RAA introduces a survey of property
owners and managers showing that two percent of the respondents admit
to having at least one exclusive agreement for building access. The
Commission is mindful of the concerns of some that ``community-based
arrangements'' allow competitive providers some assurance of a steady
revenue stream to justify their initial development, but, for the
reasons described above, the Commission is not persuaded by such
concerns in the present marketplace environment. Thus, the Commission
concludes that the perpetuation of exclusivity contracts is not in the
public interest. Just as the Commission concluded in the context of
video programming services, the Commission finds that the benefits do
not outweigh the harms, and it acts accordingly for telecommunications
services. The exclusive provision of telecommunications services in
residential MTEs bars competitive and new entry in the
telecommunications services market and triple play market, and
discourages the deployment of broadband facilities to the American
public. This in turn results in higher prices and fewer competitive
choices for consumers. Such limitations are inconsistent with the pro-
competitive goals of the 1996 Act, and therefore such contracts are
unjust and unreasonable practices.
11. The Commission finds that immediately prohibiting the
enforcement of such provisions is more appropriate than phasing them
out or waiting until contracts expire and are replaced by contracts
without exclusivity provisions. The Commission agrees with commenters
that such approaches would only serve to further delay the entry of
competition to customers in the buildings at issue. To leave existing
exclusivity contracts in effect would allow the competitive harms
identified to continue for some time, even years, and the Commission
believes it is in the public interest to prohibit such contracts from
being enforced. Further, to the extent that exclusivity provisions
prevent incumbent local exchange carriers (LECs) from serving a
building, they could be at odds with applicable carrier of last resort
obligations. In addition, nothing in the record suggests that small
carriers are particularly disadvantaged by exclusivity prohibitions, or
that the cost/benefit analysis for consumers differs when small
carriers are involved. Finally, the Commission notes that the validity
of exclusivity provisions in contracts for the provision of
telecommunications services to residential MTEs has been subject to
question for some time. In the Competitive Networks Order and Further
NPRM, the Commission found such provisions unreasonable in the context
of commercial MTEs, and sought comment on the propriety of a similar
prohibition for residential MTEs, including the prohibition on
enforcement of existing exclusivity provisions. Thus, carriers have
been on notice for more than seven years that the Commission might
prohibit both their entering, and enforcement of, such provisions.
12. As the Commission found in the Competitive Networks Order and
Further NPRM, it has ample authority to prohibit exclusivity provisions
in agreements for the provision of telecommunications service to
residential MTEs. There, the Commission specifically found that
``exclusive contracts for telecommunications service in commercial
settings impede the pro-competitive purposes of the 1996 Act and appear
to confer no substantial countervailing public benefits,'' and thus ``a
carrier's agreement to such a contract is an unreasonable practice''
under section 201(b) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended
(Act).
[[Page 28052]]
13. The same conclusion is applicable here because just as in the
commercial MTE context, the prohibition of exclusive contracts in the
provision of telecommunications services to residential MTEs furthers
the same policy goals--facilitating competitive entry, lower prices,
and more broadband deployment. Thus, the Commission finds that a
carrier's execution or enforcement of such an exclusive access
provision is an unreasonable practice and implicates the Commission's
authority under section 201(b) of the Act to prohibit unreasonable
practices. As with video contracts, the Commission does not limit this
prohibition to future exclusivity contracts for the provision of
telecommunications services, but also prohibits the enforcement of such
existing contracts. In the Competitive Networks Order and Further NPRM,
the Commission sought comment on whether to prohibit carriers from
enforcing exclusive access provisions in existing contracts in either
commercial or residential multiunit premises, including the extent of
the Commission's authority to do so. The Commission concludes that it
has such authority, and that it is in the public interest to prohibit
the enforcement of exclusive contracts for the provision of
telecommunications services to residential MTEs.
14. The Commission has authority to ``modify * * * provisions of
private contracts when necessary to serve the public interest.'' See,
e.g., Expanded Interconnection with Local Telephone Company Facilities,
CC Docket No. 91-141, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 9 FCC Rcd 5154,
5207-10, paras. 197-208 (1994). The Commission has exercised this
authority previously when private contracts violate sections 201
through 205 of the Act. As the Commission found in the Competitive
Networks Order and Further NPRM, the exclusive access provisions at
issue here ``perpetuate the very `barriers to facilities-based
competition' that the 1996 Act was designed to eliminate,'' and appear
to confer no substantial countervailing public benefits. Having for the
same reasons found such exclusive contracts violate section 201 of the
Act, and given the adverse competitive effects of such contracts, the
Commission finds it necessary in the public interest to prohibit
enforcement of such existing contracts.
15. In addition, the Commission concludes that its prohibition on
the enforcement of telecommunications exclusivity contracts here does
not violate the Fifth Amendment for the same reasons discussed in the
Video Nonexclusivity Order in the context of video exclusivity
provisions. In particular, such action is not a per se taking, nor does
it represent a regulatory taking under the Supreme Court's framework.
As is true in the video context, the prohibition on exclusivity
arrangements does not prevent telecommunications carriers from
utilizing the facilities they own to provide services to MTEs, nor does
it prohibit other types of arrangements such as exclusive marketing
arrangements. Exclusive telecommunications contracts have been under
scrutiny for years, and have been prohibited by the Commission and
states in certain contexts. To the extent that carriers have used
exclusivity to obstruct competition, any underlying investment-backed
expectations are not sufficiently longstanding or pro-competitive in
nature to warrant immunity from regulation. In addition, the
prohibition on enforcement of the exclusivity provisions at issue
substantially advances the government interest in preventing
unreasonable practices reflected in section 201(b) of the Act, and is
based on weighing of the relative costs and benefits of such
provisions. Moreover, the Commission notes that this action applies
only to carriers seeking to enter or enforce telecommunications
exclusivity contracts--the Commission is not hereby mandating access to
residential or other MTEs. Thus, it finds that it has ample authority
to regulate telecommunications carriers' contractual conduct even
though it may have a tangential effect on MTE owners.
16. In sum, the Commission concludes that it has both a sufficient
policy basis and legal authority to prohibit carriers from entering or
enforcing exclusivity provisions on contracts to provide
telecommunications services to residential MTEs. By adopting such a
prohibition here, it furthers the competitive goals of the 1996 Act,
and continues efforts to ensure that consumers in MTEs enjoy the
benefits of increased competition in both telephone and video service
offerings.
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, WC Docket No. 99-217
(Competitive Networks)
17. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was
incorporated in the Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (Further
NPRM) to this proceeding. The Commission sought written public comment
on the proposals in the Further NPRM, including comment on the IRFA.
The Commission received one comment on the IRFA, from the Real Access
Alliance. This Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) conforms to
the RFA.
A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Report and Order
18. This Report and Order adopts rules and provides guidance to
implement sections 1, 2(a), 4(i), 4(j), 201, 202, 205, and 405 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as amended (the Act) and section 706 of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996. Those sections of the Act authorize the
Commission to prohibit any telecommunications carrier from enforcing or
executing contracts with premises owners for provision of
telecommunications service alone or in combination with other services
in predominantly residential multiple tenant environments (MTEs). The
Commission has found that existing and future exclusive contracts
constitute an unreasonable barrier to entry for competitive entrants
that would impede competition and accelerated broadband deployment, and
that they constitute an unfair method of competition. The measures
adopted in this Report and Order ensure that, in furtherance of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, certain contractual exclusivity
provisions no longer serve as an obstacle to competitive access in the
telecommunications market.
B. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response
to the IRFA
19. Only one commenter, RAA, submitted a comment that specifically
responded to the IRFA. RAA asserts that the IRFA was defective because
it did not address the effects of possible outcomes on apartment
building owners.
20. We disagree with RAA's assertion. In fact, the IRFA discussed
apartment building owners specifically in paragraph 15. Moreover, an
IRFA need only address the concerns of entities directly regulated by
the Commission. The Commission does not directly regulate apartment
building operators. Accordingly, even if the IRFA had not addressed the
concerns of apartment building owners, it would not be defective. When
an agency finds that there is no direct impact on a substantial number
of small entities that are subject to the requirements of the rule,
then no discussion of alternatives, less costly than the proposed rule,
is required.
[[Page 28053]]
C. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities To Which
the Rules Will Apply
21. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of and, where
feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be
affected by the rules adopted herein. The RFA generally defines the
term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the terms ``small
business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small governmental
jurisdiction.'' In addition, the term ``small business'' has the same
meaning as the term ``small business concern'' under the Small Business
Act. A small business concern is one which: (1) Is independently owned
and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and (3)
satisfies any additional criteria established by the SBA.
22. The rules and guidance adopted by this Report and Order will
ease the entry of providers of telecommunications services, including
those providing the ``triple play'' of voice, video, and broadband
Internet access service. The Commission has determined that the group
of small entities directly affected by the rules adopted herein
consists of wireline and wireless telecommunications carriers.
Therefore, in the Report and Order, the Commission considers the impact
of the rules on carriers. A description of such small entities, as well
as an estimate of the number of such small entities, is provided below.
23. Small Businesses. Nationwide, there are a total of
approximately 22.4 million small businesses according to SBA data.
24. Small Organizations. Nationwide, there are approximately 1.6
million small organizations. Small Governmental Jurisdictions. The term
``small governmental jurisdiction'' is defined generally as
``governments of cities, towns, townships, villages, school districts,
or special districts, with a population of less than fifty thousand.''
Census Bureau data for 2002 indicate that there were 87,525 local
governmental jurisdictions in the United States. The Commission
estimates that, of this total, 84,377 entities were ``small
governmental jurisdictions.'' Thus, the Commission estimates that most
governmental jurisdictions are small.
1. Wireline Carriers and Service Providers
25. The Commission has included small incumbent local exchange
carriers (LECs) in this present RFA analysis. As noted above, a ``small
business'' under the RFA is one that, inter alia, meets the pertinent
small business size standard (e.g., a telephone communications business
having 1,500 or fewer employees) and ``is not dominant in its field of
operation.'' The SBA's Office of Advocacy contends that, for RFA
purposes, small incumbent LECs are not dominant in their field of
operation because any such dominance is not ``national'' in scope. The
Commission has therefore included small incumbent LECs in this RFA
analysis, although the Commission emphasizes that this RFA action has
no effect on Commission analyses and determinations in other, non-RFA
contexts.
26. Incumbent LECs. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has
developed a small business size standard specifically for incumbent
LECs. The appropriate size standard under SBA rules is for the category
Wired Telecommunications Carriers. Under that size standard, such a
business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. According to
Commission data, 1,303 carriers have reported that they are engaged in
the provision of incumbent local exchange services. Of these 1,303
carriers, an estimated 1,020 have 1,500 or fewer employees and 283 have
more than 1,500 employees. Consequently, the Commission estimates that
most providers of incumbent local exchange service are small businesses
that may be affected by the Commission's action.
27. Competitive LECs, Competitive Access Providers (CAPs),
``Shared-Tenant Service Providers,'' and ``Other Local Service
Providers.'' Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a small
business size standard specifically for these service providers. The
appropriate size standard under SBA rules is for the category Wired
Telecommunications Carriers. Under that size standard, such a business
is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. According to Commission
data, 859 carriers have reported that they are engaged in the provision
of either competitive access provider services or competitive LEC
services. Of these 859 carriers, an estimated 741 have 1,500 or fewer
employees and 118 have more than 1,500 employees. In addition, 16
carriers have reported that they are ``Shared-Tenant Service
Providers,'' and all 16 are estimated to have 1,500 or fewer employees.
In addition, 44 carriers have reported that they are ``Other Local
Service Providers.'' Of the 44, an estimated 43 have 1,500 or fewer
employees and one has more than 1,500 employees. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that most providers of competitive local exchange
service, competitive access providers, ``Shared-Tenant Service
Providers,'' and ``Other Local Service Providers'' are small entities.
28. Interexchange Carriers (IXCs). Neither the Commission nor the
SBA has developed a small business size standard specifically for
providers of interexchange services. The appropriate size standard
under SBA rules is for the category Wired Telecommunications Carriers.
Under that size standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. According to Commission data, 330 carriers have
reported that they are engaged in the provision of interexchange
service. Of these, an estimated 309 have 1,500 or fewer employees and
21 have more than 1,500 employees. Consequently, the Commission
estimates that the majority of IXCs are small entities that may be
affected by the Commission's action.
2. Wireless Telecommunications Service Providers
29. Below, for those services subject to auctions, the Commission
notes that, as a general matter, the number of winning bidders that
qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction does not
necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently in
service. Also, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
30. Wireless Service Providers. The SBA has developed a small
business size standard for wireless firms within the two broad economic
census categories of ``Paging'' and ``Cellular and Other Wireless
Telecommunications.'' Under both SBA categories, a wireless business is
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. For the census category of
Paging, Census Bureau data for 2002 show that there were 807 firms in
this category that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 804
firms had employment of 999 or fewer employees, and three firms had
employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus, under this category and
associated small business size standard, the majority of firms can be
considered small. For the census category of Cellular and Other
Wireless Telecommunications, Census Bureau data for 2002 show that
there were 1,397 firms in this category that operated for the entire
year. Of this total, 1,378 firms had employment of 999 or fewer
employees, and 19 firms had employment of 1,000 employees or more.
Thus, under this second category and size standard, the majority of
firms can, again, be considered small.
31. Cellular Licensees. The SBA has developed a small business size
standard for wireless firms within the
[[Page 28054]]
broad economic census category ``Cellular and Other Wireless
Telecommunications.'' Under this SBA category, a wireless business is
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. For the census category of
Cellular and Other Wireless Telecommunications, Census Bureau data for
2002 show that there were 1,397 firms in this category that operated
for the entire year. Of this total, 1,378 firms had employment of 999
or fewer employees, and 19 firms had employment of 1,000 employees or
more. Thus, under this category and size standard, the majority of
firms can be considered small. Also, according to Commission data, 437
carriers reported that they were engaged in the provision of cellular
service, Personal Communications Service (PCS), or Specialized Mobile
Radio (SMR) Telephony services, which are placed together in the data.
The Commission has estimated that 260 of these are small under the SBA
small business size standard.
32. Paging. The SBA has developed a small business size standard
for the broad economic census category of ``Paging.'' Under this
category, the SBA deems a wireless business to be small if it has 1,500
or fewer employees. Census Bureau data for 2002 show that there were
807 firms in this category that operated for the entire year. Of this
total, 804 firms had employment of 999 or fewer employees, and three
firms had employment of 1,000 employees or more. In addition, according
to Commission data, 365 carriers have reported that they are engaged in
the provision of ``Paging and Messaging Service.'' Of this total, the
Commission estimates that 360 have 1,500 or fewer employees, and five
have more than 1,500 employees. Thus, in this category the majority of
firms can be considered small.
33. We also note that, in the Paging Second Report and Order, the
Commission adopted a size standard for ``small businesses'' for
purposes of determining their eligibility for special provisions such
as bidding credits and installment payments. In this context, a small
business is an entity that, together with its affiliates and
controlling principals, has average gross revenues not exceeding $15
million for the preceding three years. The SBA has approved this
definition. An auction of Metropolitan Economic Area (MEA) licenses
commenced on February 24, 2000, and closed on March 2, 2000. Of the
2,499 licenses auctioned, 985 were sold. Fifty-seven companies claiming
small business status won 440 licenses. An auction of MEA and Economic
Area (EA) licenses commenced on October 30, 2001, and closed on
December 5, 2001. Of the 15,514 licenses auctioned, 5,323 were sold.
One hundred thirty-two companies claiming small business status
purchased 3,724 licenses. A third auction, consisting of 8,874 licenses
in each of 175 EAs and 1,328 licenses in all but three of the 51 MEAs
commenced on May 13, 2003, and closed on May 28, 2003. Seventy-seven
bidders claiming small or very small business status won 2,093
licenses. The Commission also notes that, currently, there are
approximately 74,000 Common Carrier Paging licenses.
34. Wireless Communications Services. This service can be used for
fixed, mobile, radiolocation, and digital audio broadcasting satellite
uses. The Commission established small business size standards for the
wireless communications services (WCS) auction. A ``small business'' is
an entity with average gross revenues of $40 million or less for each
of the three preceding years, and a ``very small business'' is an
entity with average gross revenues of $15 million or less for each of
the three preceding years. The SBA has approved these small business
size standards. The Commission auctioned geographic area licenses in
the WCS service. In the auction, there were seven winning bidders that
qualified as ``very small business'' entities, and one that qualified
as a ``small business'' entity.
35. Wireless Telephony. Wireless telephony includes cellular,
personal communications services (PCS), and specialized mobile radio
(SMR) telephony carriers. As noted earlier, the SBA has developed a
small business size standard for ``Cellular and Other Wireless
Telecommunications'' services. Under that SBA small business size
standard, a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
According to Commission data, 432 carriers reported that they were
engaged in the provision of wireless telephony. The Commission has
estimated that 221 of these are small under the SBA small business size
standard.
36. Broadband Personal Communications Service. The broadband
Personal Communications Service (PCS) spectrum is divided into six
frequency blocks designated A through F, and the Commission has held
auctions for each block. The Commission defined ``small entity'' for
Blocks C and F as an entity that has average gross revenues of $40
million or less in the three previous calendar years. For Block F, an
additional classification for ``very small business'' was added and is
defined as an entity that, together with its affiliates, has average
gross revenues of not more than $15 million for the preceding three
calendar years. These standards defining ``small entity'' in the
context of broadband PCS auctions have been approved by the SBA. No
small businesses, within the SBA-approved small business size standards
bid successfully for licenses in Blocks A and B. There were 90 winning
bidders that qualified as small entities in the Block C auctions. A
total of 93 small and very small business bidders won approximately 40
percent of the 1,479 licenses for Blocks D, E, and F. On March 23,
1999, the Commission re-auctioned 347 C, D, E, and F Block licenses.
There were 48 small business winning bidders. On January 26, 2001, the
Commission completed the auction of 422 C and F Broadband PCS licenses
in Auction No. 35. Of the 35 winning bidders in this auction, 29
qualified as ``small'' or ``very small'' businesses. Subsequent events,
concerning Auction 35, including judicial and agency determinations,
resulted in a total of 163 C and F Block licenses being available for
grant.
37. Narrowband Personal Communications Services. The Commission
held an auction for Narrowband PCS licenses that commenced on July 25,
1994, and closed on July 29, 1994. A second auction commenced on
October 26, 1994 and closed on November 8, 1994. For purposes of the
first two Narrowband PCS auctions, ``small businesses'' were entities
with average gross revenues for the prior three calendar years of $40
million or less. Through these auctions, the Commission awarded a total
of 41 licenses, 11 of which were obtained by four small businesses. To
ensure meaningful participation by small business entities in future
auctions, the Commission adopted a two-tiered small business size
standard in the Narrowband PCS Second Report and Order. A ``small
business'' is an entity that, together with affiliates and controlling
interests, has average gross revenues for the three preceding years of
not more than $40 million. A ``very small business'' is an entity that,
together with affiliates and controlling interests, has average gross
revenues for the three preceding years of not more than $15 million.
The SBA has approved these small business size standards. A third
auction commenced on October 3, 2001 and closed on October 16, 2001.
Here, five bidders won 317 (Metropolitan Trading Areas and nationwide)
licenses. Three of these claimed status as a small or very small entity
and won 311 licenses.
[[Page 28055]]
38. 220 MHz Radio Service--Phase I Licensees. The 220 MHz service
has both Phase I and Phase II licenses. Phase I licensing was conducted
by lotteries in 1992 and 1993. There are approximately 1,515 such non-
nationwide licensees and four nationwide licensees currently authorized
to operate in the 220 MHz band. The Commission has not developed a
small business size standard for small entities specifically applicable
to such incumbent 220 MHz Phase I licensees. To estimate the number of
such licensees that are small businesses, the Commission applies the
small business size standard under the SBA rules applicable to
``Cellular and Other Wireless Telecommunications'' companies. This
category provides that a small business is a wireless company employing
no more than 1,500 persons. For the census category Cellular and Other
Wireless Telecommunications, Census Bureau data for 1997 show that
there were 977 firms in this category, total, that operated for the
entire year. Of this total, 965 firms had employment of 999 or fewer
employees, and an additional 12 firms had employment of 1,000 employees
or more. Thus, under this second category and size standard, the
majority of firms can, again, be considered small. Assuming this
general ratio continues in the context of Phase I 220 MHz licensees,
the Commission estimates that nearly all such licensees are small
businesses under the SBA's small business size standard. In addition,
limited preliminary census data for 2002 indicate that the total number
of cellular and other wireless telecommunications carriers increased
approximately 321 percent from 1997 to 2002.
39. 220 MHz Radio Service--Phase II Licensees. The 220 MHz service
has both Phase I and Phase II licenses. The Phase II 220 MHz service is
a new service and is subject to spectrum auctions. The 220 MHz Third
Report and Order adopted a small business size standard for ``small''
and ``very small'' businesses for purposes of determining their
eligibility for special provisions such as bidding credits and
installment payments. This small business size standard indicates that
a ``small business'' is an entity that, together with its affiliates
and controlling principals, has average gross revenues not exceeding
$15 million for the preceding three years. A ``very small business'' is
an entity that, together with its affiliates and controlling
principals, has average gross revenues that do not exceed $3 million
for the preceding three years. The SBA has approved these small
business size standards. Auctions of Phase II licenses commenced on
September 15, 1998, and closed on October 22, 1998. In the first
auction, 908 licenses were auctioned in three different-sized
geographic areas: Three nationwide licenses, 30 Regional Economic Area
Group (EAG) Licenses, and 875 Economic Area (EA) Licenses. Of the 908
licenses auctioned, 693 were sold. Thirty-nine small businesses won
licenses in the first 220 MHz auction. The second auction included 225
licenses: 216 EA licenses and 9 EAG licenses. Fourteen companies
claiming small business status won 158 licenses.
40. 800 MHz and 900 MHz Specialized Mobile Radio Licenses. The
Commission awards ``small entity'' and ``very small entity'' bidding
credits in auctions for Specialized Mobile Radio (SMR) geographic area
licenses in the 800 MHz and 900 MHz bands to firms that had revenues of
no more than $15 million in each of the three previous calendar years,
or that had revenues of no more than $3 million in each of the previous
calendar years, respectively. These bidding credits apply to SMR
providers in the 800 MHz and 900 MHz bands that either hold geographic
area licenses or have obtained extended implementation authorizations.
The Commission does not know how many firms provide 800 MHz or 900 MHz
geographic area SMR service pursuant to extended implementation
authorizations, nor how many of these providers have annual revenues of
no more than $15 million. One firm has over $15 million in revenues.
The Commission assumes, for purposes here, that all of the remaining
existing extended implementation authorizations are held by small
entities, as that term is defined by the SBA. The Commission has held
auctions for geographic area licenses in the 800 MHz and 900 MHz SMR
bands. There were 60 winning bidders that qualified as small or very
small entities in the 900 MHz SMR auctions. Of the 1,020 licenses won
in the 900 MHz auction, bidders qualifying as small or very small
entities won 263 licenses. In the 800 MHz auction, 38 of the 524
licenses won were won by small and very small entities.
41. 700 MHz Guard Band Licensees. The 700 MHz Guard Band Order
adopted a small business size standard for ``small businesses'' and
``very small businesses'' for purposes of determining their eligibility
for special provisions such as bidding credits and installment
payments. A ``small business'' as an entity that, together with its
affiliates and controlling principals, has average gross revenues not
exceeding $15 million for the preceding three years. Additionally, a
``very small business'' is an entity that, together with its affiliates
and controlling principals, has average gross revenues that are not
more than $3 million for the preceding three years. An auction of 52
Major Economic Area (MEA) licenses commenced on September 6, 2000, and
closed on September 21, 2000. Of the 104 licenses auctioned, 96
licenses were sold to nine bidders. Five of these bidders were small
businesses that won a total of 26 licenses. A second auction of 700 MHz
Guard Band licenses commenced on February 13, 2001 and closed on
February 21, 2001. All eight of the licenses auctioned were sold to
three bidders. One of these bidders was a small business that won a
total of two licenses.
42. 39 GHz Service. The Commission created a special small business
size standard for 39 GHz licenses--an entity that has average gross
revenues of $40 million or less in the three previous calendar years.
An additional size standard for ``very small business'' is: an entity
that, together with affiliates, has average gross revenues of not more
than $15 million for the preceding three calendar years. The SBA has
approved these small business size standards. The auction of the 2,173
39 GHz licenses began on April 12, 2000 and closed on May 8, 2000. The
18 bidders who claimed small business status won 849 licenses.
Consequently, the Commission estimates that 18 or fewer 39 GHz
licensees are small entities that may be affected by the rules and
policies adopted herein.
43. Wireless Cable Systems. Wireless cable systems use 2 GHz band
frequencies of the Broadband Radio Service (``BRS''), formerly
Multipoint Distribution Service (``MDS''), and the Educational
Broadband Service (``EBS''), formerly Instructional Television Fixed
Service (``ITFS''), to transmit video programming and provide broadband
services to residential subscribers. These services were originally
designed for the delivery of multichannel video programming, similar to
that of traditional cable systems, but over the past several years
licensees have focused their operations instead on providing two-way
high-speed Internet access services. The Commission estimates that the
number of wireless cable subscribers is approximately 100,000, as of
March 2005. Local Multipoint Distribution Service (``LMDS'') is a fixed
broadband point-to-multipoint microwave service that provides for two-
way video telecommunications. As described below, the SBA small
business size standard for the broad census category
[[Page 28056]]
of Cable and Other Program Distribution, which consists of such
entities generating $13.5 million or less in annual receipts, appears
applicable to MDS, ITFS and LMDS. Other standards also apply, as
described.
44. The Commission has defined small MDS (now BRS) and LMDS
entities in the context of Commission license auctions. In the 1996 MDS
auction, the Commission defined a small business as an entity that had
annual average gross revenues of less than $40 million in the previous
three calendar years. This definition of a small entity in the context
of MDS auctions has been approved by the SBA. In the MDS auction, 67
bidders won 493 licenses. Of the 67 auction winners, 61 claimed status
as a small business. At this time, the Commission estimates that of the
61 small business MDS auction winners, 48 remain small business
licensees. In addition to the 48 small businesses that hold BTA
authorizations, there are approximately 392 incumbent MDS licensees
that have gross revenues that are not more than $40 million and are
thus considered small entities. MDS licensees and wireless cable
operators that did not receive their licenses as a result of the MDS
auction fall under the SBA small business size standard for Cable and
Other Program Distribution. Information available to us indicates that
there are approximately 850 of these licensees and operators that do
not generate revenue in excess of $13.5 million annually. Therefore,
the Commission estimates that there are approximately 850 small entity
MDS (or BRS) providers, as defined by the SBA and the Commission's
auction rules.
45. Educational institutions are included in this analysis as small
entities; however, the Commission has not created a specific small
business size standard for ITFS (now EBS). The Commission estimates
that there are currently 2,032 ITFS (or EBS) licensees, and all but 100
of the licenses are held by educational institutions. Thus, the
Commission estimates that at least 1,932 ITFS licensees are small
entities.
46. In the 1998 and 1999 LMDS auctions, the Commission defined a
small business as an entity that has annual average gross revenues of
less than $40 million in the previous three calendar years. Moreover,
the Commission added an additional classification for a ``very small
business,'' which was defined as an entity that had annual average
gross revenues of less than $15 million in the previous three calendar
years. These definitions of ``small business'' and ``very small
business'' in the context of the LMDS auctions have been approved by
the SBA. In the first LMDS auction, 104 bidders won 864 licenses. Of
the 104 auction winners, 93 claimed status as small or very small
businesses. In the LMDS re-auction, 40 bidders won 161 licenses. Based
on this information, the Commission believes that the number of small
LMDS licenses will include the 93 winning bidders in the first auction
and the 40 winning bidders in the re-auction, for a total of 133 small
entity LMDS providers as defined by the SBA and the Commission's
auction rules.
47. Local Multipoint Distribution Service. Local Multipoint
Distribution Service (LMDS) is a fixed broadband point-to-multipoint
microwave service that provides for two-way video telecommunications.
The auction of the 1,030 LMDS licenses began on February 18, 1998 and
closed on March 25, 1998. The Commission established a small business
size standard for LMDS licensees as an entity that has average gross
revenues of less than $40 million in the three previous calendar years.
An additional small business size standard for ``very small business''
was added as an entity that, together with its affiliates, has average
gross revenues of not more than $15 million for the preceding three
calendar years. The SBA has approved these small business size
standards in the context of LMDS auctions. There were 93 winning
bidders that qualified as small entities in the LMDS auctions. A total
of 93 small and very small business bidders won approximately 277 A
Block licenses and 387 B Block licenses. On March 27, 1999, the
Commission re-auctioned 161 licenses; there were 40 winning bidders.
Based on this information, the Commission concludes that the number of
small LMDS licenses consists of the 93 winning bidders in the first
auction and the 40 winning bidders in the re-auction, for a total of
133 small entity LMDS providers.
48. 218-219 MHz Service. The first auction of 218-219 MHz spectrum
resulted in 170 entities winning licenses for 594 Metropolitan
Statistical Area (MSA) licenses. Of the 594 licenses, 557 were won by
entities qualifying as a small business. For that auction, the small
business size standard was an entity that, together with its
affiliates, has no more than a $6 million net worth and, after federal
income taxes (excluding any carryover losses), has no more than $2
million in annual profits each year for the previous two years. The
218-219 MHz Report and Order and Memorandum Opinion and Order
established a small business size standard for a ``small business'' as
an entity that, together with its affiliates and persons or entities
that hold interests in such an entity and their affiliates, has average
annual gross revenues not to exceed $15 million for the preceding three
years. A ``very small business'' is defined as an entity that, together
with its affiliates and persons or entities that hold interests in such
an entity and its affiliates, has average annual gross revenues not to
exceed $3 million for the preceding three years. The Commission cannot
estimate, however, the number of licenses that will be won by entities
qualifying as small or very small businesses under the rules in future
auctions of 218-219 MHz spectrum.
49. 24 GHz--Incumbent Licensees. This analysis may affect incumbent
licensees who were relocated to the 24 GHz band from the 18 GHz band
and applicants who wish to provide services in the 24 GHz band. The
applicable SBA small business size standard is that of ``Cellular and
Other Wireless Telecommunications'' companies. This category provides
that such a company is small if it employs no more than 1,500 persons.
According to Census Bureau data for 1997, there were 977 firms in this
category, total, that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 965
firms had employment of 999 or fewer employees, and an additional 12
firms had employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus, under this size
standard, the great majority of firms can be considered small. These
broader census data notwithstanding, the Commission believes that there
are only two licensees in the 24 GHz band that were relocated from the
18 GHz band, Teligent and TRW, Inc. It is the Commission's
understanding that Teligent and its related companies have less than
1,500 employees, though this may change in the future. TRW is not a
small entity. Thus, only one incumbent licensee in the 24 GHz band is a
small business entity.
50. 24 GHz--Future Licensees. With respect to new applicants in the
24 GHz band, the small business size standard for ``small business'' is
an entity that, together with controlling interests and affiliates, has
average annual gross revenues for the three preceding years not in
excess of $15 million. ``Very small business'' in the 24 GHz band is an
entity that, together with controlling interests and affiliates, has
average gross revenues not exceeding $3 million for the preceding three
years. The SBA has approved these small business size standards. These
size standards will apply to the future auction, if held.
[[Page 28057]]
D. Description of Projected Reporting, Record Keeping and Other
Compliance Requirements
51. The rule adopted in the Report and Order will require no
additional reporting, record keeping, and other compliance
requirements.
E. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant Impact on Small Entities, and
Significant Alternatives Considered
52. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant
alternatives that it has considered in reaching its proposed approach,
which may include the following four alternatives (among others): (1)
The establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or
timetables that take into account the resources available to small
entities; (2) the clarification, consolidation, or simplification of
compliance or reporting requirements under the rule for small entities;
(3) the use of performance, rather than design, standards; and (4) an
exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part thereof, for small
entities.
53. Because the Report and Order imposes no compliance or reporting
requirements on any entity, only the last of the foregoing alternatives
is material. The Report and Order takes note in paragraph 13 above that
nothing in the record suggests that small carriers are particularly
disadvantaged by exclusivity prohibitions, or that the cost/benefit
analysis for consumers differs when small carriers are involved.
F. Report to Congress
54. The Commission will send a copy of the Order, including this
FRFA, in a report to be sent to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional Review Act. A copy
of the Order and FRFA (or summaries thereof) will also be published in
the Federal Register.
Final Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 Analysis
This document does not contain new or modified information
collection(s) subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA),
Public Law 104-13. In addition, therefore, 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, see 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4).
Congressional Review Act
The Commission will send a copy of this Report and Order and Order
on Remand in a report to be sent to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional Review Act, see 5
U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
Ordering Clauses
55. Accordingly, It is ordered, pursuant to sections 1, 2(a), 4(j),
4(i), 201, 202, 205, and 405 of the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i), 154(j), 201, 202, 205, and 405,
and pursuant to section 706 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, 47
U.S.C. 157 nt., that the Report and Order in WT Docket No. 99-217 is
adopted, and that Part 64 of the Commission's Rules, 47 CFR part 64, is
amended as set forth in Appendix B of the order. It is the Commission's
intention in adopting these rule changes that, if any provision of the
rules is held invalid by any court of competent jurisdiction, the
remaining provisions shall remain in effect to the fullest extent
permitted by law.
56. It is further ordered that the rules and the requirements of
this Report and Order shall become effective July 14, 2008.
57. It is further ordered that the Commission's Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference Information Center, shall send a
copy of this Report and Order, including the Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 64
Communications common carriers, telecommunications, telephone.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
Final Rules
0
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission amends 47 CFR part 64 as follows:
PART 64--MISCELLANEOUS RULES RELATING TO COMMON CARRIERS
0
1. The authority citation for part 64 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i), 154(j), 201, 202, 205,
405, and 157 nt.
0
2. Section 64.2500 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 64.2500 Prohibited agreements.
(a) No common carrier shall enter into any contract, written or
oral, that would in any way restrict the right of any commercial
multiunit premises owner, or any agent or representative thereof, to
permit any other common carrier to access and serve commercial tenants
on that premises.
(b) No common carrier shall enter into or enforce any contract,
written or oral, that would in any way restrict the right of any
residential multiunit premises owner, or any agent or representative
thereof, to permit any other common carrier to access and serve
residential tenants on that premises.
0
2. Section 64.2501 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 64.2501 Scope of limitation.
For the purposes of this subpart, a multiunit premises is any
contiguous area under common ownership or control that contains two or
more distinct units. A commercial multiunit premises is any multiunit
premises that is predominantly used for non-residential purposes,
including for-profit, non-profit, and governmental uses. A residential
multiunit premises is any multiunit premises that is predominantly used
for residential purposes.
[FR Doc. E8-10764 Filed 5-14-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P