Rural Call Completion, 47296-47309 [2018-20239]
Download as PDF
47296
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
PART 300—NATIONAL OIL AND
HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES
POLLUTION CONTINGENCY PLAN
1. The authority citation for part 300
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1321(d); 42 U.S.C.
9601–9657; E.O. 13626, 77 FR 56749, 3 CFR,
2013 Comp., p. 306; E.O. 12777, 56 FR 54757,
3 CFR, 1991 Comp., p. 351; E.O. 12580, 52
FR 2923, 3 CFR, 1987 Comp., p. 193.
Appendix B to Part 300 [Amended]
2. Table 1of appendix B to part 300 is
amended by removing the entry ‘‘FL’’,
‘‘Whitehouse Oil Pits’’, ‘‘Whitehouse’’.
■
[FR Doc. 2018–20390 Filed 9–18–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 64
[WC Docket No. 13–39; FCC 18–120]
Rural Call Completion
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
In this document, the
Commission continues its ongoing
efforts to ensure that calls are completed
to all Americans, including those in
rural America. This Third Report and
Order (Order) begins the Commission’s
implementation of the Improving Rural
Call Quality and Reliability Act of 2017
(RCC Act). Pursuant to the RCC Act, the
Order adopts rules to establish a registry
for intermediate providers and require
intermediate providers to register with
the Commission before offering to
transmit covered voice communications.
In addition, the Order adopts rules to
require covered providers to use only
registered intermediate providers to
transmit covered voice communications
and requires covered providers to
maintain the capability to disclose the
identities of any intermediate providers
relied on in the call path to the
Commission.
SUMMARY:
Effective October 19, 2018,
except for the addition of 47 CFR
64.2115, which requires approval by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). The Commission will publish a
document in the Federal Register
announcing approval of this
requirement and the date the rule will
become effective.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wireline Competition Bureau,
Competition Policy Division, Zach Ross,
at (202) 418–1033, or zachary.ross@
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
DATES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
fcc.gov. For further information
concerning the Paperwork Reduction
Act information collection requirements
contained in this document, send an
email to PRA@fcc.gov or contact Nicole
Ongele at (202) 418–2991.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Commission’s Third
Report and Order in WC Docket No. 13–
39, adopted on August 13, 2018 and
released on August 15, 2018. The full
text of this document, including all
Appendices, is available for public
inspection during regular business
hours in the FCC Reference Information
Center, Portals II, 445 12th Street SW,
Room CY–A257, Washington, DC 20554.
It is also available on the Commission’s
website at https://www.fcc.gov/
document/fcc-registry-boost-provideraccountability-rural-call-completion.
I. Synopsis
1. As directed by the RCC Act and
informed by the record of this
proceeding, in this Third Report and
Order we establish a registry for
intermediate providers and require
intermediate providers to register with
the Commission before offering to
transmit covered voice communications.
In addition, we adopt rules to require
covered providers to use only registered
intermediate providers to transmit
covered voice communications, and we
require covered providers to maintain
the capability to disclose the identities
of any intermediate providers relied on
in the call path to the Commission. We
also adopt a narrowly tailored exception
to our rules in instances of force
majeure. The RCC Act requires the
Commission to promulgate rules
establishing service quality standards
‘‘[n]ot later than 1 year after the date of
enactment,’’ or by February 26, 2019.
We accordingly sought comment on
proposed service quality standards in
the Third RCC FNPRM, 83 FR 21983.
We will address the RCC Act’s service
quality requirements in a subsequent
Order.
A. Establishment of Intermediate
Provider Registry
2. In accordance with the RCC Act, we
adopt our proposal to establish an
intermediate provider registry. To
‘‘ensure the integrity of the transmission
of covered voice communications to all
customers in the United States[] and
. . . prevent unjust or unreasonable
discrimination among areas of the
United States in the delivery of covered
voice communications,’’ new section
262 of the Act requires the Commission
to establish a publicly available
intermediate provider registry on the
Commission’s website. We will require
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
intermediate providers to register via a
portal on the Commission’s website
furnishing the same five categories of
information that we proposed in the
Third RCC FNPRM:
(1) The intermediate provider’s
business name(s) and primary address;
(2) the name(s), telephone number(s),
email address(es), and business
address(es) of the intermediate
provider’s regulatory contact and/or
designated agent for service of process;
(3) all business names that the
intermediate provider has used in the
past;
(4) the state(s) in which the
intermediate provider provides service;
and
(5) the name, title, business address,
telephone number, and email address of
at least one person as well as the
department within the company
responsible for addressing rural call
completion issues.
Further, this information will be made
publicly available.
3. As explained in the Third RCC
FNPRM, the first four categories of
information are similar to the
Commission’s existing registration
requirements for interconnected VoIP
and telecommunications carriers in
other contexts. For example, ‘‘a
telecommunications carrier that will
provide interstate telecommunications
service’’ is required to provide the
following information via FCC Form
499–A ‘‘under oath and penalty of
perjury’’: (1) The carrier’s business
name(s) and primary address; (2) The
names and business addresses of the
carrier’s chief executive officer,
chairman, and president, or, in the
event that a company does not have
such executives, three similarly seniorlevel officials of the company; (3) The
carrier’s regulatory contact and/or
designated agent; (4) All names that the
carrier has used in the past; and (5) The
state(s) in which the carrier provides
telecommunications service.’’ The
Commission’s rules also require
common carriers, interconnected VoIP
providers, and non-interconnected VoIP
providers to provide the contact
information, including ‘‘a name,
business address, telephone or
voicemail number, facsimile number,
and, if available, internet email
address,’’ for service of process
purposes. Such entities are also required
to ‘‘list any other names by which it is
known or under which it does business,
and, if the carrier, interconnected VoIP
provider, or non-interconnected VoIP
provider is an affiliated company, the
parent, holding, or management
company.’’ The record reflects that ‘‘the
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
burden to providers arising out of
reporting such information is minimal—
it requires no more than logging into an
account and typing in the most basic
information about a company.’’ With
respect to contact information for the
person and department responsible for
addressing rural call completion issues,
we find, based on the record before us,
that requiring this information will
facilitate inter-provider cooperation to
solve and prevent call completion
issues. We also find that this
requirement is consistent with
Congress’s mandate that our
implementing rules ensure the integrity
of the transmission of covered voice
communications to all customers in the
country and prevent unjust or
unreasonable discrimination among
areas of the United States in the delivery
of covered voice communications. The
record reflects no opposition to
requiring these five information
categories.
4. In addition to the five categories of
information we proposed, we also
require intermediate providers to
furnish the name(s), business address,
business telephone number(s), and
email address for an executive
leadership contact, such as the chief
executive officer, chief operating officer,
or owner(s) of the intermediate
provider, or person performing an
equivalent function, who directs or
manages the entity. Verizon expressed
concern that delisted intermediate
providers could regain registered status
by subsequently re-incorporating under
other names for the purpose of
circumventing Commission removal
from the intermediate provider registry.
To assist in preventing circumvention of
our rules, Verizon proposes requiring
this additional information, which ‘‘is a
common requirement across state and
foreign corporation registrations,
business licensing, and trade licensing,’’
and thus presents no additional burden
in furnishing such existing information
to the Commission. We agree with
Verizon that requiring this additional
information will ‘‘provide the
Commission . . . additional visibility
into the individuals that direct and
manage the entity,’’ and aid the
Commission in enforcing our rules and
the RCC Act. We observe, however, that
because the primary purpose of this
information is to aid the Commission in
preventing circumvention of our registry
requirements, unlike the other five
categories of information, this latter
category of information will not be
made routinely available for public
inspection.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
B. Definitions
5. As we proposed in the Third RCC
FNPRM, we adopt the definition of
‘‘intermediate provider’’ provided by
Congress in section 262(i)(3). This
definition replaces the definition of
‘‘intermediate provider’’ currently in
our rules. Thus, for purposes of our preexisting rural call completion rules and
those we adopt pursuant to the RCC Act,
we define an intermediate provider as
any entity that: ‘‘(A) enters into a
business arrangement with a covered
provider or other intermediate provider
for the specific purpose of carrying,
routing, or transmitting voice traffic that
is generated from the placement of a call
placed (i) from an end user connection
using a North American Numbering
Plan resource; or (ii) to an end user
connection using such a numbering
resource; and (B) does not itself, either
directly or in conjunction with an
affiliate, serve as a covered provider in
the context of originating or terminating
a given call.’’ We observe that in section
262(i)(1), Congress explicitly adopted
the Commission’s definition of ‘‘covered
provider,’’ suggesting that, to the extent
that section 262(i)(3) offers a different or
narrower interpretation of ‘‘intermediate
provider’’ than the current definition in
our rules, Congress intended the
definition provided in the RCC Act to
apply to our rules implementing the
RCC Act.
6. The definition of ‘‘intermediate
provider’’ in section 262(i)(3) is
substantially similar to the definition
previously applicable to our rural call
completion rules, with the added
requirement that an intermediate
provider ‘‘have a business arrangement
with a covered provider or other
intermediate provider for the specific
purpose of carrying, routing, or
transmitting voice traffic.’’ As we
observed in the Third RCC FNPRM, the
legislative history surrounding the RCC
Act suggests that Congress intended to
exclude from the definition of
‘‘intermediate provider’’ entities ‘‘that
only incidentally transmit voice traffic,
like internet Service Providers who may
carry voice traffic alongside other packet
data.’’ The additional requirement that
intermediate providers have a business
arrangement to carry voice traffic
effectuates this intent. Thus, entities
like internet Service Providers that may
carry voice traffic only incidentally,
absent any business arrangement with a
covered provider or intermediate
provider pertaining to that traffic, will
not be considered intermediate
providers subject to our registry and
service quality rules.
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
47297
7. We decline to adopt an exemption
from this definition for ‘‘facilities-based
carriers that provide backbone network
capacity’’ to mobile virtual network
operators (MVNOs), as urged by Sprint.
To the extent that such providers carry
voice traffic that originates or terminates
with a North American Numbering Plan
(NANP) resource pursuant to a specific
business relationship with a covered
provider or other intermediate provider
for said voice traffic, and does not itself
serve as a covered provider in the
context of originating or terminating a
given call, that entity is an intermediate
provider under the RCC Act and the
rules we adopt today. We agree with
NTCA’s argument that any effect of this
rule on entities that, like Sprint, supply
wholesale capacity to MVNOs is likely
to be ‘‘minimally burdensome.’’ As
USTelecom observes, the information
submission needed to comply with our
registration requirement ‘‘[is] of a highly
routine nature that should be
unproblematic for any legitimate
company to provide.’’
8. In addition, consistent with our
proposal in the Third RCC FNPRM, we
also adopt the definition of ‘‘covered
voice communication’’ provided by
Congress in the RCC Act. The RCC Act
defines ‘‘covered voice communication’’
as ‘‘a voice communication (including
any related signaling information) that
is generated—(A) from the placement of
a call from a connection using a North
American Numbering Plan resource or a
call placed to a connection using such
a numbering resource; and (B) through
any service provided by a covered
provider.’’
9. We decline to adopt the proposal
advanced by Verizon and USTelecom to
limit the definitions of ‘‘intermediate
provider’’ and ‘‘covered voice
communications’’ to ‘‘apply only to
intermediate providers that handle
covered voice communications that are
destined for rural areas.’’ We also
decline to adopt alternative suggestions
that we forebear from applying the RCC
Act and our implementing rules to nonrural areas. Forbearance is appropriate if
the Commission determines that: (1)
Enforcement of a provision or regulation
is not necessary to ensure that the
telecommunications carrier’s charges,
practices, classifications, or regulations
are just, reasonable, and not unjustly or
unreasonably discriminatory; (2)
enforcement of the provision or
regulation is not necessary to protect
consumers; and (3) forbearance from
applying such provision or regulation is
consistent with the public interest. As
we explain, the RCC Act reflects
Congress’s judgment that uniform rules
are the best means to ensure rural call
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
47298
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
completion; and limiting the RCC Act’s
registry requirements to rural areas
would undermine the newly passed
law’s effectiveness. Because forbearance
would be inconsistent with the public
interest and the Commission’s
responsibility to protect consumers, as
well as Congress’s direction in the RCC
Act that the Commission ‘‘ensure the
integrity of the transmission of covered
voice communications to all customers
in the United States,’’ we decline
USTelecom’s request that the
Commission forbear from applying the
RCC Act to non-rural areas. We disagree
with Verizon’s suggestion that ‘‘[t]he
RCC Act’s text supports construing the
statute to ensure application only to
rural areas.’’ If Congress had intended to
apply the RCC Act definitions only to
rural areas, it easily could have done so.
As Verizon itself notes, ‘‘[t]he RCC Act
on its face does not include a limitation
to rural areas.’’ Indeed, apart from the
short title of the RCC Act, the word
‘‘rural’’ appears nowhere in its text. As
enacted, section 262 is entitled
‘‘Ensuring the integrity of voice
communications,’’ and none of the law’s
provisions or definitions—including
those for ‘‘intermediate provider’’ and
‘‘covered voice communication’’—
contain the word ‘‘rural.’’ Nor is the
Commission’s definition of ‘‘covered
provider,’’ which Congress adopted by
reference in the RCC Act, limited to
providers who originate traffic destined
for rural areas.
10. Although we agree with
USTelecom’s suggestion that Congress
‘‘intended to implement measures to
ensure completion of calls to rural
areas,’’ we disagree with the argument
that we should therefore read the word
‘‘rural’’ into the RCC Act where it does
not appear. This line of reasoning fails
to differentiate between Congress’s
stated objective—to improve rural call
completion—and the specific means by
which Congress has directed the
Commission to achieve this goal.
Indeed, limitation of the RCC Act’s
provisions to traffic destined to rural
areas would appear to contravene
Congress’s explicit instructions to the
Commission in promulgating rules
pursuant to the RCC Act, which are to
‘‘ensure the integrity of the transmission
of covered voice communications to all
customers in the United States;’’ and to
‘‘prevent unjust or unreasonable
discrimination among areas of the
United States in the delivery of covered
voice communications.’’ The rules we
adopt today are designed to achieve
these ends. Despite Verizon’s and
USTelecom’s arguments to the contrary,
Congress concluded that the best way to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
address rural call completion issues is
to craft uniform rules applicable to
intermediate providers regardless of a
call’s geographic destination. As HD
Tandem argues, call completion issues
are not inherently limited to rural areas,
and limiting application of the rules we
adopt pursuant to the RCC Act to rural
areas may have the unintended
consequence of simply shifting bad
actors into new markets. Unscrupulous
providers may cause call completion
issues in non-rural areas as well, and
our construction of the registry
provisions of the RCC Act is consistent
with Congress’s explicit direction to the
Commission, as noted above. Therefore,
assuming arguendo that the Act is
ambiguous, we believe our approach is
likely to be more effective in curtailing
the use of these providers and achieving
Congress’s clearly stated objective of
improving rural call completion than
the reading of the Act suggested by
Verizon and USTelecom.
11. Nor are we persuaded that that we
should modify the plain meaning of the
RCC Act’s language to correspond with
the scope of our recently adopted
monitoring rule, which, unlike the RCC
Act, does apply only to ‘‘call attempts
to rural telephone companies.’’ The
monitoring rule adopted in the Second
RCC Order, 83 FR 21723, requires
covered providers to monitor the
performance of intermediate providers
when they direct calls to rural areas,
and to take action to address identified
problems. The RCC Act and our
implementing rules require certain
intermediate providers to register with
the Commission and abide by service
quality standards, and prevent covered
providers from using unregistered
intermediate providers to deliver
covered voice communications. The
monitoring rule and the rules adopted
pursuant to the RCC Act are
complementary, but because covered
providers and intermediate providers
are differently situated and play
different roles in the delivery of voice
traffic, we find that it is appropriate that
our rules, and the RCC Act, treat them
differently. For this reason, we also
disagree with Verizon’s suggestion that
our safe harbor, referenced in the RCC
Act in Section 262(h), compels limiting
the RCC Act to rural areas. Given the
heightened vigilance our monitoring
rule requires of covered providers, it is
appropriate that it applies more
narrowly than the RCC Act’s prohibition
on covered provider use of unregistered
intermediate providers.
12. Finally, we disagree with
arguments that we should apply our
rules implementing section 262 only to
rural areas to increase ‘‘[a]dministrative
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
efficiency’’ or to decrease the burdens
that the RCC Act imposes on affected
entities. In particular, we disagree with
Verizon’s argument that the burdens of
complying with the RCC Act will
‘‘vastly increase’’ absent a limitation of
section 262 to traffic destined to rural
areas. Verizon argues that without this
restriction ‘‘[t]he number of OCNs
required to be monitored would more
than triple, from the over 1,300 OCNs
required for monitoring rural
destinations, to more than 4,700 rural
and non-rural OCNs.’’ The monitoring
rule, however, remains limited to
requiring that covered providers
monitor intermediate provider
performance in the completion of call
attempts to rural telephone companies.
Further, because the RCC Act and our
implementing rules require intermediate
providers to register with the
Commission, we disagree that requiring
covered providers to only use registered
intermediate providers, without
cabining such requirements to calls to
rural areas, would be burdensome. We
therefore expect that the burdens of our
registry rules on both intermediate
providers and covered providers will be
minimal.
C. Intermediate Providers Who Must
Register With the Commission
1. Scope of Registry Requirement
13. Consistent with the text of section
262(a), we adopt our proposal in the
Third RCC FNPRM to require any
intermediate provider ‘‘that offers or
holds itself out as offering the capability
to transmit covered voice
communications from one destination to
another and that charges any rate to any
other entity (including an affiliated
entity) for the transmission’’ to register
with the Commission. In adopting this
proposal, we decline to simply apply
the registry obligations of section 262(a)
to all intermediate providers, as that
term is defined in section 262(i)(3). As
we suggested in the Third RCC FNPRM,
the RCC Act’s registry requirements and
service quality standards apply to a
subset of ‘‘intermediate providers,’’
namely those that ‘‘charge[] any rate’’
for the transmission of covered voice
communications.
14. We agree with commenters who
argue that the ‘‘charge[] any rate’’
language in section 262(a) is best
interpreted broadly. Thus, we conclude
that the application of section 262(a) is
not limited only to intermediate
providers who charge a per-call fee for
service; rather, section 262(a)
encompasses broader remuneration
agreements, as well as entities offering
service in exchange for in-kind or other,
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
non-monetary forms of consideration.
We therefore disagree with commenters
who express concern that the ‘‘charge[]
any rate’’ qualifier may exclude entities
that Congress intended to reach with the
RCC Act. To be deemed an intermediate
provider under section 262(i), an entity
must have a ‘‘business arrangement with
a covered provider or other intermediate
provider for the specific purpose of
carrying, routing, or transmitting’’ voice
traffic originating or terminating with a
NANP resource. Although section 262(a)
adds the requirement that an
intermediate provider ‘‘charge[] any
rate’’ for transmitting covered voice
communications, we find that to
‘‘charge any rate’’ in this context is
merely to demand compensation for
services based on a fixed ratio, scale, or
standard. Nothing in the language of the
RCC Act requires that the relevant
‘‘rate’’ charged be in the form of
monetary consideration. We agree with
ANI, HD Tandem, and Verizon that
relying on remuneration as a qualifier
may open the possibility for non-fee
arrangements to circumvent the RCC
Act and our implementing rules, and
thus interpret section 262(a) as applying
to any intermediate provider that
demands monetary or non-monetary
consideration for its services.
2. Registration Deadline
15. We adopt our proposal in the
Third RCC FNPRM to require
intermediate providers to submit their
registration to the Commission within
30 days after a Public Notice
announcing the approval by the Office
of Management and Budget of the final
rules establishing the registry. We find,
and the record supports, that a 30-day
timeframe will allow existing
intermediate providers adequate time to
come into compliance with our registry
rules. In addition, as we explained in
the Third RCC FNPRM, this phase-in
period is consistent with the filing
timeframe for Form 499–A, which
requires that new filers register with the
Commission within 30 days. Pursuant to
sections 262(a) and (b), upon expiration
of the initial 30-day registration
window, new intermediate providers
will be required to register with the
Commission before beginning to
transmit covered voice communications
for covered providers.
16. We require intermediate providers
to submit any necessary updates
regarding their registration to the
Commission within 10 business days.
The record reflects that our proposal to
require intermediate providers to update
their registrations within seven days
may not provide intermediate providers
sufficient time to make necessary
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
changes. As such, we permit
intermediate providers up to 10
business days to submit any necessary
registration updates. As ATIS argues,
this additional time will better enable
intermediate providers to respond to
changes related to mergers or similar
events. And, as West Telecom notes,
‘‘there should be little adverse impact
from the slightly longer compliance
period.’’ Because we agree with Verizon
that ‘‘[t]he required information should
be readily available,’’ we decline to
increase the time period for updates to
30 days, as Verizon requests. As
USTelecom notes, the information to be
collected is generally of a ‘‘routine
nature that should be unproblematic for
any legitimate company to provide.’’
Further, because covered providers and
members of the public will rely on the
information contained in the registry,
for example, in making routing
decisions or attempting to discover
point of contact information to resolve
rural call completion issues, we find
that a 30-day update period would
unnecessarily undermine the
effectiveness of the registry requirement
by increasing the likelihood that the
information contained within the
registry is out-of-date.
3. Enforcement
17. Intermediate providers that fail to
register with the Commission on a
timely basis, as required by our rules,
shall be subject to enforcement under
the Act and our rules, including
forfeiture. For the Commission to
exercise its forfeiture authority for
violations of the Act and the
Commission’s rules without first issuing
a citation, the wrongdoer must hold (or
be an applicant for) some form of
license, permit, certificate, or other
authorization from the Commission, or
be engaged in an activity for which such
a license, permit, certificate, or other
authorization is required. Because
intermediate providers that provide
service to covered providers are
required, under section 262(a)(1), to
register with the Commission, we
conclude that an intermediate provider
offering such services is engaged in an
activity for which Commission license
or authorization is required under
sections 503(b)(5) and 262(a)(1) of the
Act.
18. We disagree with Verizon’s
unsupported assertion that the
Commission ‘‘should not interpret the
act of registration itself as a grant of
authorization to exercise its forfeiture
authority without first issuing a
citation.’’ We note that no other parties
commented our proposal to ‘‘interpret
the act of registration itself as a grant of
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
47299
Commission authorization to
intermediate providers and allow us to
exercise our forfeiture authority against
registered providers without first
issuing a citation.’’ The RCC Act makes
clear that Congress intended the
intermediate provider registry to
function as a qualification for entry into
the intermediate provider market, and,
as such, the requirements to register and
subsequently maintain that registration
in good standing serve as Commission
license or authorization to function as
an intermediate provider transmitting
covered voice communications in the
United States. Consistent with the
Administrative Procedure Act’s
definition of ‘‘license,’’ which includes
‘‘whole or part of an agency . . .
registration,’’ the Commission has found
that the term ‘‘license’’ encompasses
registrations.
19. Accordingly, we conclude that,
under our rules, we may exercise our
forfeiture authority against intermediate
providers that fail to register, without
first issuing a citation. When
determining the amount of a forfeiture,
we will consider ‘‘the nature,
circumstances, extent, and gravity of the
violation and, with respect to the
violator, the degree of culpability, any
history of prior offenses, ability to pay,
and such other matters as justice may
require.’’ To the extent that an
intermediate provider is a common
carrier, the intermediate provider may
be assessed a forfeiture of up to
$196,387 per violation or each day of a
continuing violation and up to a
statutory maximum of $1,963,870 for
any single act or failure to act. These
amounts reflect inflation adjustments to
the forfeitures specified in section
503(b)(2)(B) of the Act ($100,000 per
violation or per day of a continuing
violation and $1,000,000 per any single
act or failure to act). The Federal Civil
Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act
Improvement Act of 2015 (2015
Inflation Adjustment Act) requires the
Commission to amend its forfeiture
penalty rules to reflect annual
adjustments for inflation in order to
improve their effectiveness and
maintain their deterrent effect. Further,
the 2015 Inflation Adjustment Act
provides that the new penalty levels
shall apply to penalties assessed after
the effective date of the increase,
including when the violations
associated with the penalties predate
the increase. An intermediate provider
that is not a common carrier is subject
to a forfeiture of up to $19,639 per
violation or each day of a continuing
violation and up to a statutory
maximum of $147,290 for any single act
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
47300
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
or failure to act. These same penalties
also apply to an entity that does not
hold (and is not required to hold) a
Commission license, permit, certificate,
or other instrument of authorization.
20. In addition, we decline to apply
the Commission’s ‘‘red-light’’ rule prior
to intermediate providers’ registration
with the Commission. In the Third RCC
FNPRM, we sought comment on
whether intermediate providers should
be prohibited from registering with the
Commission if they are ‘‘red-lighted’’ by
the Commission for unpaid debts or
other reasons. Under the red light rule,
the Commission will not process
applications and other requests for
benefits by parties that owe non-tax debt
to the Commission. In the context of our
rules implementing the Debt Collection
Improvement Act, the Commission has
noted that ‘‘[i]n some instances . . .
filings with the Commission go into
effect immediately (or within one day),
thus precluding a check to determine if
the filer is a delinquent debtor before
the request goes into effect.’’ The
Commission noted that in such
situations, the Commission has the
ability to take appropriate action after
the fact for noncompliance with any of
the Commission’s rules. Because we
will make registrations immediately
effective upon receipt, this is a situation
which precludes a check to determine if
the intermediate provider is a
delinquent debtor before the registration
goes into effect. As a result, any
applicable red-light check will be
conducted after intermediate provider
registration; appropriate action, if any,
will be taken against intermediate
providers who are later discovered to be
delinquent debtors, including deregistration.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
D. Covered Providers May Not Use
Unregistered Intermediate Providers
1. Covered Providers Must Take Steps
Reasonably Calculated To Prevent Use
of Unregistered Intermediate Providers
Anywhere in the Call Path
21. We find that section 262(b)
requires a covered provider to ensure
that all intermediate providers involved
in the transmission of its covered voice
communications are registered with the
Commission. The definition of
‘‘intermediate provider’’ contained in
section 262(i) broadly refers to providers
at all intermediate points in the call
chain, excluding covered providers who
originate or terminate a given call; and,
section 262(a) requires any of these
entities that offer to transmit covered
voice communications for a rate to
register with the Commission and meet
our service quality standards. We note,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
however, that some intermediate
providers may be exempted from our
service quality standards pursuant to
section 262(h) and our safe harbor
provisions. Thus, we conclude that
Congress’s requirement that covered
providers ‘‘may not use’’ an
unregistered intermediate provider to
transmit traffic is best understood to
mean that a covered provider may not
rely on any unregistered intermediate
providers in the path of a given call.
Consistent with our recently-adopted
monitoring rule, we allow covered
providers to use contractual restrictions
that flow down the entire intermediate
provider call path to fulfill their
obligations under section 262(b).
22. We conclude that this
interpretation best supports Congress’s
aims in enacting the RCC Act by placing
responsibility for compliance with
section 262(b) with a single, easily
identifiable entity. Our construction of
section 262(b) is supported by the
record in this proceeding, and is
consistent with the rules adopted in the
Second RCC Order, which highlighted
the importance of ‘‘hold[ing] a central
party responsible for call completion
issues.’’ As we found in the Second RCC
Order, because ‘‘covered providers
select the initial long-distance path and
therefore can choose how to route a
call,’’ it is ‘‘appropriate that they should
have responsibility for monitoring rural
call completion performance’’ along the
entire path of a given call.
23. We agree with arguments
advanced by NTCA that limiting the
application of section 262(b) only to the
first contracted intermediate provider
would ‘‘defeat the spirit and intent of
[the RCC Act]’’ and potentially allow
‘‘unscrupulous carriers or intermediate
providers to circumvent their ultimate
responsibility to complete calls.’’ As we
have explained, a call often travels
through a chain of multiple
intermediate providers before reaching
its destination. Because nothing in our
rules or section 262 requires
intermediate providers to use other
registered intermediate providers to
transmit covered voice communications,
interpreting the restrictions of section
262(b) to apply only to the first
contracted intermediate provider would
substantially undermine the purpose of
the RCC Act, which is to improve rural
call completion by, among other things,
requiring any intermediate provider
involved in the transmission of covered
voice communications to register (and
maintain a registration) with the
Commission. Section 262(b) would do
little to improve call completion if it
was construed only to require that the
first of many intermediate providers in
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
a call path register with the
Commission.
24. We disagree with commenters
who argue in favor of such a narrow
reading of section 262(b). In particular,
we disagree with Comcast’s claims that
covered providers ‘‘lack . . . control
over intermediate providers with which
they have no direct contractual
relationship.’’ To the contrary, we have
found that as the first party in the call
path, covered providers have significant
ability to affect the behavior of
downstream providers—including those
with which there is no direct
relationship—through the use of
contractual provisions that travel along
the entire chain of providers.
25. Consistent with the monitoring
rule for covered providers, pursuant to
section 262(b) we require covered
providers to (i) ensure that any directly
contracted intermediate provider is
registered with the Commission; and (ii)
implement ‘‘contractual restrictions . . .
that are reasonably calculated to
ensure’’ that any subsequent
intermediate providers with which the
covered provider does not directly
contract are registered under section
262(a). As with the monitoring rule,
covered providers must ‘‘ensure that
these [contractual] restrictions flow
down the entire intermediate provider
call path.’’ For example, covered
providers may require that, as a
condition of accepting traffic, (i) any
directly contracted intermediate
providers must agree to not hand off
traffic to any unregistered intermediate
providers; and (ii) that they will impose
this same restriction on any
subsequently contracted intermediate
providers.
26. Because we allow covered
providers to use indirect contractual
restrictions to satisfy their obligations
under section 262(b), we disagree with
arguments that our interpretation of
section 262(b) to encompass all
intermediate providers in the call path
will be impractical, inefficient, or
excessively burdensome. As West
Telecom notes, ‘‘[n]egotiated
arrangements, when combined with
active monitoring procedures, are an
accepted and proven industry approach
to ensuring satisfactory performance by
downstream providers.’’ We disagree
with ITTA’s assertions that construing
section 262(b) ‘‘to mean that the covered
provider must ‘ensure’ only that the first
intermediate provider in the call path is
registered is far more consistent with
the principles of privity applied by the
Commission in the Second RCC Order.’’
To the contrary, as we have explained,
the construction of section 262(b) we
adopt today uses the same notion of
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
privity as that which formed the basis
of our monitoring rule. As NTCA notes,
ITTA’s argument ‘‘ignores the fact that
covered providers have contractual
relationships with the first Intermediate
Provider in the call path, [which is]
capable of then contractually binding
downstream providers to only use
registered providers from an identified
list.’’ Instead, as NTCA and HD Tandem
argue, because covered providers are
responsible for monitoring the entire
call path pursuant to our monitoring
rule, it is reasonable to require them to
ensure through contractual provisions
that all intermediate providers in the
call path are registered with the
Commission. Indeed, as we have
explained, this construction of section
262(b) most reasonably gives effect to
Congress’s intent in passing the RCC
Act.
27. We require covered providers to
use the intermediate provider registry to
ensure that the intermediate providers
with which they contract are registered
with the Commission at the time any
agreement for the transmission of
covered voice communications is
finalized. We agree with West Telecom,
however, that it is unnecessary to
require covered providers to repeatedly
check the registry to confirm the
registration status of all intermediate
providers in the chain of a call.
Therefore, once an agreement for the
transmission of covered voice
communications is effective, we allow
covered providers to use contractual
restrictions to ensure that all
intermediate providers in the call path
maintain an active registration with the
Commission. As West Telecom notes, it
may be more effective and cost-efficient
to require downstream providers to
promptly report de-registrations to the
upstream provider, rather than forcing
the upstream provider to repeatedly
recheck the registry to verify the
continued registration of downstream
providers. Notwithstanding any
contractual provisions, however, if a
covered provider gains actual
knowledge that it is using an
unregistered intermediate provider
anywhere in its call routing, it must
cease that practice.
28. We agree with NCTA that
‘‘covered provider[s] should be afforded
a reasonable period of time to transition
to alternative providers without penalty
or threat of enforcement.’’ As NCTA
notes, ‘‘[i]t takes time for covered
providers to restructure their call routes,
renegotiate their relationships with
intermediate providers, or make the
appropriate contractual arrangements to
transition to alternative providers.’’
Without a transition period, covered
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
providers might be left with no option
other than to decline to complete calls
on an affected route. Therefore we grant
covered providers a reasonable period of
time, but no more than 45 days, in
which to adjust their call routing
practices to avoid use of an unregistered
intermediate provider after gaining
knowledge of its deregistration or lack
of registration. We remind covered
providers that, with respect to rural
destinations that a provider knows or
should know are experiencing call
completion problems, the Second RCC
Order requires covered providers to
‘‘promptly resolve[ ] any anomalies or
problems and take[ ] action to ensure
they do not recur.’’ Our experience
investigating individual call completion
complaints has shown that two weeks
from reporting is ample time for a
provider to resolve a specific call
completion problem. Although we find,
based upon our experience, that 45 days
will provide covered providers with
sufficient time to adjust their call
routing practices, covered providers
should remove deregistered or
unregistered intermediate providers as
soon as reasonably practicable.
29. Exception for Force Majeure. We
adopt a limited exception to our rules
and exempt covered providers from the
prohibition on the use of unregistered
intermediate providers in circumstances
where, due to force majeure for which
the covered provider invokes a disaster
recovery plan, no registered
intermediate providers are available to
transmit covered voice communications
to their destination. This limited
exemption that we adopt today is
similar in nature to exemptions found in
our copper retirement rules. Under
those provisions, incumbent local
exchange carriers (LECs) are exempted
from certain provisions of our copper
retirement rules in the case of a force
majeure for which the incumbent LEC
invokes a disaster recovery plan. For the
purposes of this exemption, we give the
terms ‘‘force majeure’’ and ‘‘disaster
recovery plan’’ the definitions contained
in 47 CFR 51.333(g). As with our copper
retirement notification rules, allowing
an exception in response to force
majeure will ensure that service
providers are able ‘‘to restore their
networks and service to consumers as
quickly as possible rather than jump
through regulatory hoops.’’
30. We believe that the language of
the RCC Act provides sufficient
authority for us to create a narrow and
time-limited exemption of the statutory
prohibition on covered provider use of
unregistered intermediate providers. In
directing the Commission to promulgate
rules to implement the RCC Act,
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
47301
Congress specifically instructed the
Commission to ‘‘ensure the integrity of
the transmission of covered voice
communications to all customers in the
United States.’’ We conclude that
permitting covered providers to use
unregistered intermediate providers to
deliver covered voice communications
in the case of force majeure, as
described above, for a limited period of
time while the provider has invoked a
disaster recovery plan is necessary to
help ‘‘ensure the integrity’’ of covered
voice communications to all customers
in the United States.
31. We find that carving out this
limited exception provides regulatory
certainty to covered providers in these
limited circumstances where strict
compliance with our rules would not be
possible or in the public interest. We
have found that ‘‘it is vital that we do
everything we can to facilitate rapid
restoration of communications networks
in the face of natural disasters and other
unforeseen events.’’ By codifying an
exception to our rules implementing
section 262(b) for circumstances under
which covered providers would
otherwise need to seek a waiver, we
ensure that our rules enable covered
providers to restore service as quickly as
possible following force majeure.
32. Therefore, in circumstances
where, due to force majeure, no
registered intermediate providers are
available to transmit covered voice
communications to their destination, we
exempt covered providers from the
prohibition on use of unregistered
intermediate providers. To obtain relief
under this provision, we require
covered providers to submit to the
Commission a certification explaining
the circumstances justifying an
exemption as soon as practicable. The
certification must be signed by a
corporate officer or official with
authority to bind the corporation, and
knowledge of the details of the covered
provider’s inability to comply with our
rules. The exemption period will last a
period of 180 days, after which time a
covered provider will be required to
submit a request for an extension of the
exemption period, which must include
a status report on the covered provider’s
attempts to come into compliance with
section 262(b), including a statement of
how the covered provider intends to
ensure that calls are completed
notwithstanding the lack of available
registered intermediate providers.
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
47302
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
2. Covered Providers Must Be Capable
of Disclosing to the Commission the
Identity of All Intermediate Providers in
the Call Path
33. Consistent with our proposal in
the Third RCC FNPRM, we require
covered providers to know, or be
capable of knowing, the identity of all
intermediate providers in the path of a
given call. We further require covered
providers to disclose this information to
the Commission upon request. As we
explained in the Second RCC Order, this
requirement is a natural outgrowth of
section 262(b), which prohibits covered
providers from using unregistered
intermediate providers anywhere in the
call path.
34. We agree with HD Tandem that
‘‘[a] registration process without this
oversight mechanism will likely be very
ineffective.’’ Permitting covered
providers to route calls without any
means of determining which
intermediate providers participate in
delivery of covered voice
communications would render the
requirements in section 262(b), and the
registry scheme of the RCC Act,
meaningless. As we noted in the Second
RCC Order, ‘‘allowing covered providers
to not know the identities of their
intermediates amounts to allowing
willful ignorance: i.e., it would allow
covered providers to circumvent their
duties by employing unknown or
anonymous intermediate providers in a
call path.’’
35. We disagree with commenters
who suggest that this requirement
should be limited to apply only to
intermediate providers with which a
covered provider shares a direct
contractual relationship. As NTCA
observes, the requirement ‘‘that
intermediate providers be contractually
bound and identifiable’’ is essential to
enforcing the registry and service
quality standards imposed by the RCC
Act. Furthermore, as we have explained,
our rural call completion rules are
premised on the fact that a central
party—covered providers—must be
responsible for ensuring that calls are
completed. The RCC Act complements
this scheme by making covered
providers responsible for preventing the
use of unregistered intermediate
providers anywhere in the path of a
given call.
36. We therefore disagree with the
proposal advanced by Comcast that
would put the onus on the Commission
to assemble this information by making
separate inquiries of a covered provider
and each of its individual intermediate
providers in order to obtain a full
picture of the routing of a given call.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
Requiring covered providers to know
and disclose to the Commission only the
identities of the intermediate providers
with which they immediately contract
would be administratively inefficient,
insofar as it would require the
Commission to expend scarce resources
in an effort to piece together the
identities of all parties in the path of a
given call. Pursuant to the
Commission’s rural call completion
rules and section 262(b), it is covered
providers, and not the Commission, that
are ultimately responsible for ensuring
that calls are completed using only
registered intermediates. Moreover,
covered providers, as the party initiating
calls and making the initial routing
decisions for covered voice
communications, are the most logical
and efficient party to bear the
responsibility for obtaining the
identities of their intermediate
providers and relaying this information
to the Commission. As HD Tandem
observes, ‘‘since covered providers are
accountable for exercising oversight
regarding the performance of all
intermediate providers (in the path of
calls for which the covered provider
makes the initial long-distance call path
choice), they must be responsible for
obtaining and retaining this
information.’’
37. We agree with West Telecom that
it is not necessary under section 262 to
require covered providers to ‘‘know at
all times ‘the identity of all intermediate
providers in a call path,’ ’’ and that it is
sufficient that ‘‘such information be
promptly obtainable when there is a call
completion problem requiring
investigation or a request from
regulatory authorities.’’ Several
commenters express concern that
requiring covered providers to maintain
a current list of every intermediate
provider participating in every
transmission of covered voice
communications would be excessively
burdensome relative to the benefits of
such a rule. For this reason, as with our
monitoring rule and the prohibition on
covered provider use of unregistered
intermediaries, we allow covered
providers to satisfy their obligations
through the use of contractual
restrictions that permit the discovery
within two weeks of the identities of
any intermediate providers in the path
of a given call. We note that we
currently allow a provider two weeks to
investigate a rural call competition
complaint and file a write written report
with the Commission’s Enforcement
Bureau on the results of its investigation
and how it resolved the problem. As
West Telecom argues, this will permit
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
the Commission to access necessary
information related to rural call
completion failures, while avoiding the
costs and burdens associated with
unnecessary monitoring efforts.
3. Compliance Deadline
38. We require covered providers to
comply with our rules requiring the use
of registered intermediate providers
within 90 days after the date by which
intermediate providers must register
with the Commission. As Comcast
notes, ‘‘most contracts in place today do
not obligate intermediate providers to
disclose the names of other service
providers to which the intermediate
providers deliver traffic further
downstream.’’ A number of commenters
expressed concern that our proposed 60day phase-in period would be
insufficient for covered providers to
renegotiate their contracts for routing
voice traffic in order to come into
compliance with the prohibition on use
of unregistered intermediates. We find,
based on the record before us, that a 90day phase-in period following the date
by which intermediate providers must
register with the Commission will
permit covered providers adequate time
to make adjustments to existing
contractual arrangements.
39. We disagree with commenters
who suggest that a longer, or shorter,
timeframe is appropriate. Waiting for a
period of a year or more to require
covered providers to comply with their
obligations under section 262 and our
rules would frustrate the purpose of the
RCC Act by needlessly delaying its
implementation. A shorter time period,
however, could prove unnecessarily
difficult for providers to comply with.
As several commenters note, a 90-day
phase-in period following the date by
which intermediate providers must
register with the Commission will
provide an appropriate period of
adjustment, allowing covered providers
to renegotiate contracts with registered
intermediate providers. Furthermore,
because our registry requires OMB
approval and contains its own 30-day
implementation period, covered
providers should have approximately
six-months, if not more, to come into
compliance, which is about the same as
the six-month phase-in period recently
adopted by the Commission for the
monitoring rule, which similarly
required covered providers to ‘‘evaluate
and renegotiate contracts with
intermediate providers.’’ The
prohibition on use of unregistered
intermediate providers will therefore go
into effect 90 days after the date by
which intermediate providers must
register with the Commission. Once our
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
registry rules are approved by OMB,
intermediate providers will have 30
days to register with the Commission.
Our rules regarding covered provider
use of registered intermediate providers
will take effect 90 days after the
expiration of this 30-day initial
registration period.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
E. Denial of USTelecom Petition for Stay
40. USTelecom filed a petition to stay
aspects of the April 17, 2018 Second
RCC Order, specifically the covered
provider monitoring requirements
adopted in the Second RCC Order,
pending completion of the rulemaking
process to implement the RCC Act.
USTelecom argues that absent a stay,
covered providers will ‘‘unnecessarily
be forced to incur the cost of
renegotiating their vendor contracts
multiple times, or be placed in a
position where they risk . . .
noncompliance with [section] 64.2111.’’
NTCA filed an opposition to the Petition
for Stay, while ITTA filed comments in
support. For the reasons discussed
below, we find that USTelecom has
failed to meet its burden for a grant of
a stay and accordingly deny its petition.
41. To qualify for the extraordinary
remedy of a stay, a petitioner must show
that: (1) It is likely to prevail on the
merits; (2) it will suffer irreparable harm
absent the grant of preliminary relief; (3)
other interested parties will not be
harmed if the stay is granted; and (4) the
public interest would favor grant of the
stay. The Commission’s consideration of
each factor is weighed against the
others, and no single factor is
dispositive. USTelecom has not
introduced arguments into the record
regarding the first factor, therefore we
do not consider it here. Because we find
that USTelecom has not shown that any
of the remaining three factors weigh in
favor of a stay, we conclude that
USTelecom has failed to meet the test
for this extraordinary remedy.
1. USTelecom Has Failed To
Demonstrate Irreparable Injury
42. We find that USTelecom’s claims
that it ‘‘will be irreparably injured
absent grant of the requested stay’’ are
unsupported by the record. USTelecom
rests its claims regarding irreparable
injury on the theory that covered
providers ‘‘will unnecessarily be forced
to incur the cost of renegotiating their
vendor contracts multiple times’’ if
section 64.2111 becomes effective before
we have established registry and service
quality standards for intermediate
providers pursuant to of the RCC Act.
43. The record reflects disagreement
as to whether multiple rounds of
contractual negotiations will be required
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
as a result of the monitoring rule coming
into effect prior to full implementation
of the RCC Act. ITTA argues that
covered provider contracts with
intermediate providers ‘‘cannot be
renegotiated or amended until all
parties in the call chain have an
understanding of the service quality
standards to which intermediate
providers will be subject.’’ As NTCA
points out, however, there are steps that
covered providers can take in
negotiating contracts to implement the
monitoring requirement that could help
to mitigate the need for re-negotiation
and its attendant costs, including, for
example, incorporating an express
‘‘change of law’’ provision to import
whatever standards may thereafter be
adopted by the Commission for
intermediate providers.
44. Even assuming covered providers
will in fact be required to undergo
separate rounds of contractual
negotiations with intermediate
providers absent a stay, as USTelecom
asserts, USTelecom has failed to meet
the high bar required to demonstrate
irreparable injury. USTelecom makes no
attempt to quantify the costs associated
with multiple rounds of contractual
negotiations; it merely offers
unsupported assertions that such an
outcome would be ‘‘highly disruptive
and burdensome.’’ As a form of
equitable relief, a stay generally is
granted only where petitioners show
that remedies at law—for example, the
award of monetary damages—are
insufficient. For this reason, according
to well-established judicial precedent,
‘‘economic loss does not, in and of
itself, constitute irreparable harm,’’ and
‘‘[m]ere injuries, however substantial, in
terms of money, time and energy
necessarily expended in the absence of
a stay are not enough.’’ Recoverable
monetary loss may constitute an
irreparable injury in narrow
circumstances where ‘‘the loss threatens
the very existence of the movant’s
business;’’ however, USTelecom makes
no assertions to this effect.
45. Moreover, to justify a stay of the
Commission’s Second RCC Order, the
alleged injury ‘‘must be both certain and
great; it must be actual and not
theoretical.’’ A stay is warranted only if
‘‘[t]he injury complained of is of such
imminence that there is a clear and
present need for equitable relief to
prevent irreparable harm.’’ USTelecom
asserts that absent a stay, covered
providers will be forced to ‘‘incur the
cost of renegotiating their vendor
contracts multiple times,’’ and that
these costs, ‘‘which need not be
incurred, could potentially result in
higher rates for end users.’’ We find that
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
47303
the speculative potential incurrence of
an unquantified amount of costs to
renegotiate contracts does not rise to the
level of a ‘‘certain and great’’ injury. For
these reasons, we find that USTelecom
has failed to demonstrate irreparable
injury.
2. USTelecom Has Failed To
Demonstrate That a Stay Is in the Public
Interest and Will Not Harm Other
Parties
46. We also find that USTelecom has
failed to demonstrate that granting a
stay is in the public interest and will not
harm other parties to the proceeding.
Indeed, we find that staying the
effectiveness of section 64.2111 would
be contrary to the public interest and
would threaten harm to consumers by
needlessly undermining the
effectiveness of our rural call
completion rules.
47. We disagree with USTelecom’s
suggestion that any compliance costs
associated with prompt enforcement of
our covered provider monitoring rule
are ‘‘unnecessary in light of the fact that
rural call completion complaints
continue to fall.’’ Even assuming this
were correct, rural call completion
issues continue to have significant
ramifications for affected consumers, as
we have repeatedly observed. Although
USTelecom cites the Second RCC Order
in support of this assertion, it
misconstrues our findings. As the
Second RCC Order observes, ‘‘[t]rends
in [rural call completion] complaints are
mixed.’’ While carrier complaints have
indeed fallen in the last several years,
consumer complaints have increased,
on a yearly basis, for much of this time.
Further, we note that rural carrier
complaints filed with the Commission
have increased significantly over this
time last year. Call completion problems
in rural areas ‘‘have serious
repercussions, imposing needless
economic and personal costs, and
potentially threatening public safety in
local communities.’’ In enacting the
RCC Act, Congress and the President
have clearly signaled that they agree
with this assessment. For these reasons,
solving rural call completion issues has
been, and remains, a pressing concern
for the Commission.
48. Despite its claims that ‘‘the public
interest strongly favors a stay of [section
64.2111],’’ USTelecom offers little
evidence in support of its argument.
USTelecom rests its claims that a stay
would not harm other parties, including
consumers, on the basis that the cost of
multiple rounds of contract
renegotiation ‘‘could potentially result
in higher rates for end users.’’ As NTCA
observes, however, both the existence of
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
47304
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
these costs, and their ultimate impact on
consumers in the form of higher prices,
are speculative. As noted above,
USTelecom fails to attempt to quantify
these costs.
49. We find that the significant public
interest benefits resulting from effective
rural call completion rules outweigh the
hypothetical financial harms suggested
by USTelecom. As NTCA observes, the
public has a clear interest in rules that
address rural call completion issues.
Rural carriers, too, have a substantial
interest in prompt enforcement of our
rules, as their business interests are
harmed when calls initiated elsewhere
fail to reach their intended destination.
The monitoring rule is a critical
component of our rural call completion
regulatory regime. In adopting the
Second RCC Order, we considered, but
declined to adopt, a longer phase-in
period for section 64.2111, finding that
‘‘the monitoring requirement addresses
the ongoing call completion problems
faced by rural Americans, and delay
only postpones when rural Americans
will see the fruit of this solution.’’ The
monitoring rule is an obligation of
covered providers to ensure that calls
they initiate to rural areas are in fact
completed. This obligation
complements, but exists independently
of, the registry and service quality
obligations contained in the RCC Act
and any rules the Commission adopts to
implement that Act. For the foregoing
reasons, we deny USTelecom’s request
for a stay of section 64.2111 pending
full implementation of the RCC Act.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
II. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
50. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated into
the Third RCC FNRPM for the Rural Call
Completion proceeding. The
Commission sought written public
comment on the proposals in the Third
RCC FNRPM, including comment on the
IRFA. The Commission received no
comments on the IRFA. Because the
Commission amends its rules in this
Order, the Commission has included
this Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (FRFA). This present FRFA
conforms to the RFA.
A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Rules
51. In this Order, we revise our rules
to better address ongoing problems in
the completion of long-distance
telephone calls to rural areas.
Specifically, we require intermediate
providers to register in a publicly
available intermediate provider registry,
maintained by the Commission. We also
require that covered providers not use
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
unregistered providers to carry, route, or
otherwise transmit covered voice
communications, except in cases of
force majeure. The requirements we
adopt today implement the Improving
Rural Call Quality and Reliability Act of
2017 (RCC Act). The RCC Act directs us
to (1) promulgate registration
requirements for intermediate providers
within 180 days of enactment, and
create a registry for such providers on
our website; and (2) establish service
quality standards for intermediate
providers within one year of enactment.
52. In implementing the RCC Act,
first, we adopt a new rule requiring
‘‘intermediate providers’’ to provide and
update as needed the following
information on a publicly available
online registry maintained by the
Commission: (1) The intermediate
provider’s business name(s) and
primary address; (2) the name(s),
telephone number(s), email address(es),
and business address(es) of the
intermediate provider’s regulatory
contact and/or designated agent for
service of process; (3) all business
names that the intermediate provider
has used in the past; (4) the state(s) in
which the intermediate provider
provides service; (5) the name, title,
business address, telephone number,
and email address of at least one person
as well as the department within the
company responsible for addressing
rural call completion issues a telephone
number and email address for the
express purpose of receiving and
responding promptly to any rural call
completion issues, and; (6) the name(s),
business address, and business
telephone number(s) for an executive
leadership contact, such as the chief
executive officer, chief operating officer,
or owner(s) of the intermediate
provider, or persons performing an
equivalent function, who directs or
manages the entity.
53. This Order also requires
intermediate providers to register in our
publicly available intermediate provider
registry within 30 days after a Public
Notice announcing the approval by the
Office of Management and Budget of the
final rules establishing the registry;
prohibits covered providers from using
any unregistered intermediate providers
in the path of a given call; and requires
covered providers to be responsible for
knowing or obtaining knowledge of the
identity of all intermediate providers in
a call path. To ease burdens covered
providers may experience during force
majeure, covered providers are
exempted from the prohibition on
unregistered providers during such
events, for an initial period of up to 180
days. Covered providers may seek an
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
extension of this exemption period
upon submission of a status report on
the covered provider’s attempts to
comply with our rules, and a statement
detailing how the covered provider
intends to ensure that calls are
completed notwithstanding the
unavailability of registered intermediate
providers.
54. We conclude these rules and
procedures are necessary to inject
transparency and accountability into the
call routing system, ‘‘to ensure the
integrity of voice communications and
to prevent unjust or unreasonable
discrimination among areas of the
United States in the delivery of such
communications.’’
B. Summary of Significant Issues Raised
by Public Comments in Response to the
IRFA
55. The Commission did not receive
comments specifically addressing the
rules and policies proposed in the IRFA.
C. Response to Comments by the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration
56. The Chief Counsel did not file any
comments in response to this
proceeding.
D. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to Which the
Rules Will Apply
57. The RFA directs agencies to
provide a description and, where
feasible, an estimate of the number of
small entities that may be affected by
the final rules adopted pursuant to the
Third RCC FNPRM. 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.
58. Small Businesses, Small
Organizations, Small Governmental
Jurisdictions. Our actions, over time,
may affect small entities that are not
easily categorized at present. We
therefore describe here, at the outset,
three comprehensive small entity size
standards that could be directly affected
herein. First, while there are industry
specific size standards for small
businesses that are used in the
regulatory flexibility analysis, according
to data from the SBA’s Office of
Advocacy, in general a small business is
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
an independent business having fewer
than 500 employees. These types of
small businesses represent 99.9 percent
of all businesses in the United States
which translates to 28.8 million
businesses.
59. Next, the type of small entity
described as a ‘‘small organization’’ is
generally ‘‘any not-for-profit enterprise
which is independently owned and
operated and is not dominant in its
field.’’ Nationwide, as of Aug 2016,
there were approximately 356,494 small
organizations based on registration and
tax data filed by nonprofits with the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
60. Finally, the small entity described
as a ‘‘small governmental jurisdiction’’
is defined generally as ‘‘governments of
cities, counties, towns, townships,
villages, school districts, or special
districts, with a population of less than
fifty thousand.’’ U.S. Census Bureau
data from the 2012 Census of
Governments indicates that there were
90,056 local governmental jurisdictions
consisting of general purpose
governments and special purpose
governments in the United States. Of
this number there were 37, 132 General
purpose governments (county,
municipal and town or township) with
populations of less than 50,000 and
12,184 Special purpose governments
(independent school districts and
special districts) with populations of
less than 50,000. The 2012 U.S. Census
Bureau data for most types of
governments in the local government
category show that the majority of these
governments have populations of less
than 50,000. Based on these data we
estimate that at least 49,316 local
government jurisdictions fall in the
category of ‘‘small governmental
jurisdictions.’’
61. Wired Telecommunications
Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau
defines this industry as ‘‘establishments
primarily engaged in operating and/or
providing access to transmission
facilities and infrastructure that they
own and/or lease for the transmission of
voice, data, text, sound, and video using
wired communications networks.
Transmission facilities may be based on
a single technology or a combination of
technologies. Establishments in this
industry use the wired
telecommunications network facilities
that they operate to provide a variety of
services, such as wired telephony
services, including VoIP services, wired
(cable) audio and video programming
distribution, and wired broadband
internet services. By exception,
establishments providing satellite
television distribution services using
facilities and infrastructure that they
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
operate are included in this industry.’’
The SBA has developed a small
business size standard for Wired
Telecommunications Carriers, which
consists of all such companies having
1,500 or fewer employees. Census data
for 2012 show that there were 3,117
firms that operated that year. Of this
total, 3,083 operated with fewer than
1,000 employees. Thus, under this size
standard, the majority of firms in this
industry can be considered small.
62. Local Exchange Carriers (LECs).
Neither the Commission nor the SBA
has developed a size standard for small
businesses specifically applicable to
local exchange services. The closest
applicable NAICS Code category is for
Wired Telecommunications Carriers, as
defined in paragraph 11 of this FRFA.
Under that size standard, such a
business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. Census data for 2012 show
that there were 3,117 firms that operated
that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated
with fewer than 1,000 employees. The
Commission therefore estimates that
most providers of local exchange carrier
service are small entities that may be
affected by the rules adopted.
63. Incumbent Local Exchange
Carriers (incumbent LECs). Neither the
Commission nor the SBA has developed
a small business size standard
specifically for incumbent local
exchange services. The closest
applicable NAICS Code category is
Wired Telecommunications Carriers as
defined in paragraph 11 of this FRFA.
Under that size standard, such a
business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. According to Commission
data, 3,117 firms operated in that year.
Of this total, 3,083 operated with fewer
than 1,000 employees. Consequently,
the Commission estimates that most
providers of incumbent local exchange
service are small businesses that may be
affected by the rules and policies
adopted. One thousand three hundred
and seven (1,307) Incumbent Local
Exchange Carriers reported that they
were incumbent local exchange service
providers. Of this total, an estimated
1,006 have 1,500 or fewer employees.
64. Competitive Local Exchange
Carriers (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 NAICS Code category is
Wired Telecommunications Carriers, as
defined in paragraph 11 of this FRFA.
Under that size standard, such a
business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census data for 2012
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
47305
indicate that 3,117 firms operated
during that year. Of that number, 3,083
operated with fewer than 1,000
employees. Based on this data, the
Commission concludes that the majority
of Competitive LECs, CAPs, SharedTenant Service Providers, and Other
Local Service Providers are small
entities. According to Commission data,
1,442 carriers reported that they were
engaged in the provision of either
competitive local exchange services or
competitive access provider services. Of
these 1,442 carriers, an estimated 1,256
have 1,500 or fewer employees. In
addition, 17 carriers have reported that
they are Shared-Tenant Service
Providers, and all 17 are estimated to
have 1,500 or fewer employees. In
addition, 72 carriers have reported that
they are Other Local Service Providers.
Of this total, 70 have 1,500 or fewer
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 that may be affected by the
adopted rules.
65. Interexchange Carriers (IXCs).
Neither the Commission nor the SBA
has developed a definition for
Interexchange Carriers. The closest
NAICS Code category is Wired
Telecommunications Carriers as defined
in paragraph 11 of this FRFA. The
applicable size standard under SBA
rules is that such a business is small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
According to Commission data, 359
companies reported that their primary
telecommunications service activity was
the provision of interexchange services.
Of this total, an estimated 317 have
1,500 or fewer employees and 42 have
more than 1,500 employees.
Consequently, the Commission
estimates that the majority of
interexchange service providers are
small entities that may be affected by
rules adopted.
66. Local Resellers. The SBA has
developed a small business size
standard for the category of
Telecommunications Resellers. The
Telecommunications Resellers industry
comprises establishments engaged in
purchasing access and network capacity
from owners and operators of
telecommunications networks and
reselling wired and wireless
telecommunications services (except
satellite) to businesses and households.
Establishments in this industry resell
telecommunications; they do not
operate transmission facilities and
infrastructure. Mobile virtual network
operators (MVNOs) are included in this
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
47306
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
industry. Under that size standard, such
a business is small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. Census data for 2012
show that 1,341 firms provided resale
services during that year. Of that
number, all operated with fewer than
1,000 employees. Thus, under this
category and the associated small
business size standard, the majority of
these prepaid calling card providers can
be considered small entities.
67. Toll Resellers. The Commission
has not developed a definition for Toll
Resellers. The closest NAICS Code
Category is Telecommunications
Resellers. The Telecommunications
Resellers industry comprises
establishments engaged in purchasing
access and network capacity from
owners and operators of
telecommunications networks and
reselling wired and wireless
telecommunications services (except
satellite) to businesses and households.
Establishments in this industry resell
telecommunications; they do not
operate transmission facilities and
infrastructure. Mobile virtual network
operators (MVNOs) are included in this
industry. The SBA has developed a
small business size standard for the
category of Telecommunications
Resellers. Under that size standard, such
a business is small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. Census data for 2012
show that 1,341 firms provided resale
services during that year. Of that
number, 1,341 operated with fewer than
1,000 employees. Thus, under this
category and the associated small
business size standard, the majority of
these resellers can be considered small
entities. According to Commission data,
881 carriers have reported that they are
engaged in the provision of toll resale
services. Of this total, an estimated 857
have 1,500 or fewer employees.
Consequently, the Commission
estimates that the majority of toll
resellers are small entities.
68. Other Toll Carriers. Neither the
Commission nor the SBA has developed
a definition for small businesses
specifically applicable to Other Toll
Carriers. This category includes toll
carriers that do not fall within the
categories of interexchange carriers,
operator service providers, prepaid
calling card providers, satellite service
carriers, or toll resellers. The closest
applicable NAICS Code category is for
Wired Telecommunications Carriers as
defined above. Under the applicable
SBA size standard, such a business is
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
Census data for 2012 show that there
were 3,117 firms that operated that year.
Of this total, 3,083 operated with fewer
than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
category and the associated small
business size standard, the majority of
Other Toll Carriers can be considered
small. According to internally
developed Commission data, 284
companies reported that their primary
telecommunications service activity was
the provision of other toll carriage. Of
these, an estimated 279 have 1,500 or
fewer employees. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that most Other
Toll Carriers are small entities that may
be affected by rules adopted pursuant to
the Third RCC FNRPM.
69. Prepaid Calling Card Providers.
The SBA has developed a definition for
small businesses within the category of
Telecommunications Resellers. Under
that SBA definition, such a business is
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
According to the Commission’s Form
499 Filer Database, 500 companies
reported that they were engaged in the
provision of prepaid calling cards. The
Commission does not have data
regarding how many of these 500
companies have 1,500 or fewer
employees. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that there are 500
or fewer prepaid calling card providers
that may be affected by the rules.
70. Wireless Telecommunications
Carriers (except Satellite). This industry
comprises establishments engaged in
operating and maintaining switching
and transmission facilities to provide
communications via the airwaves, such
as cellular services, paging services,
wireless internet access, and wireless
video services. The appropriate size
standard under SBA rules is that such
a business is small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. For this industry,
Census data for 2012 show that there
were 967 firms that operated for the
entire year. Of this total, 955 firms had
fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus
under this category and the associated
size standard, the Commission estimates
that the majority of wireless
telecommunications carriers (except
satellite) are small entities. Similarly,
according to internally developed
Commission data, 413 carriers reported
that they were engaged in the provision
of wireless telephony, including cellular
service, Personal Communications
Service (PCS), and Specialized Mobile
Radio (SMR) services. Of this total, an
estimated 261 have 1,500 or fewer
employees. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that
approximately half of these firms can be
considered small. Thus, using available
data, we estimate that the majority of
wireless firms can be considered small.
71. Wireless Communications
Services. This service can be used for
fixed, mobile, radiolocation, and digital
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
audio broadcasting satellite uses. The
Commission defined ‘‘small business’’
for the wireless communications
services (WCS) auction as an entity with
average gross revenues of $40 million
for each of the three preceding years,
and a ‘‘very small business’’ as an entity
with average gross revenues of $15
million for each of the three preceding
years. The SBA has approved these
definitions.
72. Wireless Telephony. Wireless
telephony includes cellular, personal
communications services, and
specialized mobile radio telephony
carriers. As noted, the SBA has
developed a small business size
standard for Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite). Under the SBA small business
size standard, a business is small if it
has 1,500 or fewer employees.
According to Commission data, 413
carriers reported that they were engaged
in wireless telephony. Of these, an
estimated 261 have 1,500 or fewer
employees and 152 have more than
1,500 employees. Therefore, a little less
than one third of these entities can be
considered small.
73. Cable and Other Subscription
Programming. This industry comprises
establishments primarily engaged in
operating studios and facilities for the
broadcasting of programs on a
subscription or fee basis. The broadcast
programming is typically narrowcast in
nature (e.g. limited format, such as
news, sports, education, or youthoriented). These establishments produce
programming in their own facilities or
acquire programming from external
sources. The programming material is
usually delivered to a third party, such
as cable systems or direct-to-home
satellite systems, for transmission to
viewers. The SBA has established a size
standard for this industry stating that a
business in this industry is small if it
has 1,500 or fewer employees. The 2012
Economic Census indicates that 367
firms were operational for that entire
year. Of this total, 357 operated with
less than 1,000 employees. Accordingly
we conclude that a substantial majority
of firms in this industry are small under
the applicable SBA size standard.
74. Cable Companies and Systems
(Rate Regulation). The Commission has
developed its own small business size
standards for the purpose of cable rate
regulation. Under the Commission’s
rules, a ‘‘small cable company’’ is one
serving 400,000 or fewer subscribers
nationwide. Industry data indicate that
there are currently 4,600 active cable
systems in the United States. Of this
total, all but nine cable operators
nationwide are small under the 400,000-
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
subscriber size standard. In addition,
under the Commission’s rate regulation
rules, a ‘‘small system’’ is a cable system
serving 15,000 or fewer subscribers.
Current Commission records show 4,600
cable systems nationwide. Of this total,
3,900 cable systems have fewer than
15,000 subscribers, and 700 systems
have 15,000 or more subscribers, based
on the same records. Thus, under this
standard as well, we estimate that most
cable systems are small entities.
75. Cable System Operators (Telecom
Act Standard). The Communications
Act of 1934, as amended, also contains
a size standard for small cable system
operators, which is ‘‘a cable operator
that, directly or through an affiliate,
serves in the aggregate fewer than one
percent of all subscribers in the United
States and is not affiliated with any
entity or entities whose gross annual
revenues in the aggregate exceed
$250,000,000 are approximately
52,403,705 cable video subscribers in
the United States today. Accordingly, an
operator serving fewer than 524,037
subscribers shall be deemed a small
operator if its annual revenues, when
combined with the total annual
revenues of all its affiliates, do not
exceed $250 million in the aggregate.
Based on available data, we find that all
but nine incumbent cable operators are
small entities under this size standard.
We note that the Commission neither
requests nor collects information on
whether cable system operators are
affiliated with entities whose gross
annual revenues exceed $250 million.
Although it seems certain that some of
these cable system operators are
affiliated with entities whose gross
annual revenues exceed $250,000,000,
we are unable at this time to estimate
with greater precision the number of
cable system operators that would
qualify as small cable operators under
the definition in the Communications
Act.
76. All Other Telecommunications.
‘‘All Other Telecommunications’’ is
defined as follows: ‘‘This U.S. industry
is comprised of establishments that are
primarily engaged in providing
specialized telecommunications
services, such as satellite tracking,
communications telemetry, and radar
station operation. This industry also
includes establishments primarily
engaged in providing satellite terminal
stations and associated facilities
connected with one or more terrestrial
systems and capable of transmitting
telecommunications to, and receiving
telecommunications from, satellite
systems. Establishments providing
internet services or voice over internet
protocol (VoIP) services via client
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
supplied telecommunications
connections are also included in this
industry.’’ The SBA has developed a
small business size standard for ‘‘All
Other Telecommunications,’’ which
consists of all such firms with gross
annual receipts of $32.5 million or less.
For this category, Census Bureau data
for 2012 show that there were 1,442
firms that operated for the entire year.
Of those firms, a total of 1,400 had
annual receipts less than $25 million.
Consequently, we conclude that the
majority of All Other
Telecommunications firms can be
considered small.
E. Description of Projected Reporting,
Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements
77. In this Order, we revise our rules
to better address ongoing problems in
the completion of long-distance
telephone calls to rural areas; namely,
providing insight into the identity of
intermediate providers in the voice call
market, and accountability to both
covered providers and the Commission.
In so doing, we require intermediate
providers to furnish information to a
publicly available online registry
maintained by the Commission that
allows for better transparency and
accountability these entities in the voice
call routing system.
F. Steps Taken To Minimize the
Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities and Significant Alternatives
Considered
78. The RFA requires an agency to
describe any significant, specifically
small business, 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 and reporting requirements
under the rules for such 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 such small entities.
79. The Order adopts reforms that
apply across the voice calling system,
including small entities. As described in
the Order, in adopting these reforms, we
sought comment on the impact of our
rule changes on all size providers, and
considered significant alternatives to
provide insight into the identity of
intermediate providers in the voice call
market, and establish accountability to
covered providers and the Commission.
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
47307
80. First, we apply our registration
requirement to all intermediate
providers, as we define them in this
Third Report and Order, but we clarify
that this requirement does not apply to
entities incidentally carrying, routing, or
transmitting voice traffic. This
clarification will reduce the burden on
all entities, including small providers,
which do not have specific business
arrangements to carry traffic, but which
transmission of voice traffic is merely
incident to operation. Because this
measure involves furnishing presently
existing information on intermediate
provider company leadership, rural call
completion technical point of contact,
contact information thereof, and places
of operation, we find little if no
additional burden to providers in
consolidating such information and
furnishing this information to the
Commission via an online registry. As
such we find that this is a low-cost
measure to facilitate industry
collaboration to address call completion
issues, and increase accountability and
transparency of intermediate providers
in the voice call market.
81. In addition, we revised our
proposal to require intermediate
provider registry changes within one
week of the change, to a time period of
ten business days, based upon record
concerns that the proposed time period
was burdensome.
82. Finally, we adopted an exception
to our prohibition on use of unregistered
intermediate providers by covered
providers transmitting covered voice
communications in the case of force
majeure, to minimize burdens covered
providers may experience in complying
with our rules during force majeure, and
accordingly provide for an initial
exemption period of up to 180 days,
which may be extended upon covered
provider request.
G. Report to Congress
83. The Commission will send a copy
of the Report and Order, including this
FRFA, in a report to be sent to Congress
pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act. In addition, the Commission will
send a copy of the Report and Order,
including this FRFA, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA. A
copy of the Report and Order and FRFA
(or summaries thereof) will also be
published in the Federal Register.
III. Procedural Matters
A. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
84. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, see 5 U.S.C. 604,
the Commission has prepared a Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
47308
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
of the possible significant economic
impact on small entities of the policies
and rules, as proposed, addressed in
this Third Report and Order. The FRFA
is set forth above. The Commission will
send a copy of this Third Report and
Order, including the FRFA, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration (SBA).
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
85. This Third Report and Order
contains new or modified information
collection requirements subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), Public Law 104–13. It will be
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review under
section 3507(d) of the PRA, 44 U.S.C.
3507. OMB, the general public, and
other Federal agencies will be invited to
comment on the revised information
collection requirements contained in
this proceeding. In addition, we note
that pursuant to the Small Business
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public
Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4),
we previously sought specific comment
on how the Commission might further
reduce the information collection
burden for small business concerns with
fewer than 25 employees.
86. In this present document, we
require intermediate providers to
register in our publicly available
intermediate provider registry within 30
days after a Public Notice announcing
the approval by the Office of
Management and Budget of the final
rules establishing the registry. We have
assessed the effects of this rule and find
that any burden on small businesses
will be minimal because this is a lowcost measure seeking readily available
information that will improve
transparency and accountability in the
call routing system.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
C. Congressional Review Act
87. The Commission will send a copy
of this Third Report and Order to
Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C.
801(a)(1)(A).
D. Contact Person
88. For further information about this
proceeding, please contact Zach Ross,
FCC Wireline Competition Bureau,
Competition Policy Division, Room 5–
C211, 445 12th Street SW, Washington,
DC 20554, at (202) 418–1033 or
Zachary.Ross@fcc.gov.
IV. Ordering Clauses
89. Accordingly, it is ordered that,
pursuant to sections 1, 4(i), 201(b),
202(a), 217, and 262 of the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 201(b),
202(a), 217, and 262, this Third Report
and Order and Order is adopted.
90. It is further ordered that Part 64
of the Commission’s rules are amended
as set forth in Appendix A.
91. It is further ordered that, pursuant
to sections 1.4(b)(1) and 1.103(a) of the
Commission’s rules, 47 CFR 1.4(b)(1),
1.103(a), this Third Report and Order
shall be effective 30 days after
publication of a summary in the Federal
Register, except for the addition of
section 64.2115 to the Commission’s
rules, which will become effective 30
days after the announcement in the
Federal Register of Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
approval and an effective date of the
rules.
92. It is further ordered that pursuant
to the authority contained in sections 1,
4(i), 201(b), 202(a), 217, 218, 220(a),
251(a), and 262 of the Communications
Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151,
154(i), 201(b), 202(a), 217, 218, 220(a),
251(a), and 262, USTelecom’s Petition
for Stay filed on June 11, 2018 in WC
Docket No. 13–39 is denied.
93. It is further ordered that the
Commission shall send a copy of this
Third Report and Order to Congress and
to the Government Accountability
Office pursuant to the Congressional
Review Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
94. It is further ordered that the
Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
Information Center, shall send a copy of
this Third Report and Order, including
the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
and Initial 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,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Telecommunications,
Telephone.
Federal Communications Commission.
Katura Jackson,
Federal Register Liaison Officer, Office of the
Secretary.
Final Rules
For the reasons set forth above, the
Federal Communications Commission
amends 47 CFR part 64 as follows:
PART 64—MISCELLANEOUS RULES
RELATING TO COMMON CARRIERS
1. Revise the authority citation for part
64 to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 202, 225, 251(e),
254(k), 262, 403(b)(2)(B), (c), 616, 620, Public
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Law 104–104, 110 Stat. 56. Interpret or apply
47 U.S.C. 201, 202, 217, 218, 220, 222, 225,
226, 227, 228, 251(a), 251(e), 254(k), 262 616,
620, and the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job
Creation Act of 2012, Pub. L. 112–96, unless
otherwise noted.
2. Amend § 64.2101 by adding a
definition of ‘‘covered voice
communication’’ in alphabetical order
and revising the definition of
‘‘intermediate provider’’ to read as
follows:
■
§ 64.2101
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Covered voice communication. The
term ‘‘covered voice communication’’
means a voice communication
(including any related signaling
information) that is generated—
(1) From the placement of a call from
a connection using a North American
Numbering Plan resource or a call
placed to a connection using such a
numbering resource; and
(2) Through any service provided by
a covered provider.
*
*
*
*
*
Intermediate provider. The term
‘‘intermediate provider’’ means any
entity that—
(1) Enters into a business arrangement
with a covered provider or other
intermediate provider for the specific
purpose of carrying, routing, or
transmitting voice traffic that is
generated from the placement of a call
placed—
(i) From an end user connection using
a North American Numbering Plan
resource; or
(ii) To an end user connection using
such a numbering resource; and
(2) Does not itself, either directly or in
conjunction with an affiliate, serve as a
covered provider in the context of
originating or terminating a given call.
■ 3. Add § 64.2115 to subpart V to read
as follows:
§ 64.2115 Registration of Intermediate
Providers.
(a) Registration. An intermediate
provider that offers or holds itself out as
offering the capability to transmit
covered voice communications from one
destination to another and that charges
any rate to any other entity (including
an affiliated entity) for the transmission
shall register with the Commission in
accordance with this section. The
intermediate provider shall provide the
following information in its registration:
(1) The intermediate provider’s
business name(s) and primary address;
(2) The name(s), telephone number(s),
email address(es), and business
address(es) of the intermediate
provider’s regulatory contact and/or
designated agent for service of process;
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 182 / Wednesday, September 19, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
(3) All business names that the
intermediate provider has used in the
past;
(4) The state(s) in which the
intermediate provider provides service;
(5) The name, title, business address,
telephone number, and email address of
at least one person as well as the
department within the company
responsible for addressing rural call
completion issues, and;
(6) The name(s), business address,
and business telephone number(s) for an
executive leadership contact, such as
the chief executive officer, chief
operating officer, or owner(s) of the
intermediate provider, or persons
performing an equivalent function, who
directs or manages the entity.
(b) Submission of registration. An
intermediate provider that is subject to
the registration requirement in
paragraph (a) of this section shall
submit the information described
therein to the intermediate provider
registry on the Commission’s website.
The registration shall be made under
penalty of perjury.
(c) Changes in information. An
intermediate provider must update its
submission to the intermediate provider
registry on the Commission’s website
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:33 Sep 18, 2018
Jkt 244001
within 10 business days of any change
to the information it must provide
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section.
■ 4. Add § 64.2117 to subpart V to read
as follows:
§ 64.2117 Use of Registered Intermediate
Providers.
(a) Prohibition on use of unregistered
intermediate providers. A covered
provider shall not use an intermediate
provider to carry, route, or transmit
covered voice communications unless
such intermediate provider is registered
pursuant to section 64.2115 of this
subpart.
(b) Force majeure exemption. (1) If,
due to a force majeure for which a
covered provider has instituted a
disaster recovery plan, there are no
registered intermediate providers
available to carry, route, or transmit
covered voice communications, a
covered provider need not comply with
paragraph (a) of this section for a period
of up to 180 days with respect to those
covered voice communications. A
covered provider shall submit to the
Commission a certification, signed by a
corporate officer or official with
authority to bind the corporation, and
knowledge of the details of the covered
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
47309
provider’s inability to comply with our
rules, explaining the circumstances
justifying an exemption under this
section as soon as practicable.
(2) A covered provider seeking an
extension of the exemption described in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section must
submit a request for an extension of the
exemption period to the Commission.
Such an extension request shall, at
minimum, include a status report on the
covered provider’s attempts to comply
with paragraph (a) of this section; and
a statement detailing how the covered
provider intends to ensure that calls are
completed notwithstanding the
unavailability of registered intermediate
providers.
(3) For purposes of this section, ‘‘force
majeure’’ means a highly disruptive
event beyond the control of the covered
provider, such as a natural disaster or a
terrorist attack.
(4) For purposes of this section,
‘‘disaster recovery plan’’ means a
disaster response plan developed by the
covered provider for the purpose of
responding to a force majeure event.
[FR Doc. 2018–20239 Filed 9–18–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
E:\FR\FM\19SER1.SGM
19SER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 182 (Wednesday, September 19, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 47296-47309]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-20239]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 64
[WC Docket No. 13-39; FCC 18-120]
Rural Call Completion
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this document, the Commission continues its ongoing efforts
to ensure that calls are completed to all Americans, including those in
rural America. This Third Report and Order (Order) begins the
Commission's implementation of the Improving Rural Call Quality and
Reliability Act of 2017 (RCC Act). Pursuant to the RCC Act, the Order
adopts rules to establish a registry for intermediate providers and
require intermediate providers to register with the Commission before
offering to transmit covered voice communications. In addition, the
Order adopts rules to require covered providers to use only registered
intermediate providers to transmit covered voice communications and
requires covered providers to maintain the capability to disclose the
identities of any intermediate providers relied on in the call path to
the Commission.
DATES: Effective October 19, 2018, except for the addition of 47 CFR
64.2115, which requires approval by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). The Commission will publish a document in the Federal Register
announcing approval of this requirement and the date the rule will
become effective.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wireline Competition Bureau,
Competition Policy Division, Zach Ross, at (202) 418-1033, or
[email protected]. For further information concerning the Paperwork
Reduction Act information collection requirements contained in this
document, send an email to [email protected] or contact Nicole Ongele at
(202) 418-2991.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Third
Report and Order in WC Docket No. 13-39, adopted on August 13, 2018 and
released on August 15, 2018. The full text of this document, including
all Appendices, is available for public inspection during regular
business hours in the FCC Reference Information Center, Portals II, 445
12th Street SW, Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. It is also
available on the Commission's website at https://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-registry-boost-provider-accountability-rural-call-completion.
I. Synopsis
1. As directed by the RCC Act and informed by the record of this
proceeding, in this Third Report and Order we establish a registry for
intermediate providers and require intermediate providers to register
with the Commission before offering to transmit covered voice
communications. In addition, we adopt rules to require covered
providers to use only registered intermediate providers to transmit
covered voice communications, and we require covered providers to
maintain the capability to disclose the identities of any intermediate
providers relied on in the call path to the Commission. We also adopt a
narrowly tailored exception to our rules in instances of force majeure.
The RCC Act requires the Commission to promulgate rules establishing
service quality standards ``[n]ot later than 1 year after the date of
enactment,'' or by February 26, 2019. We accordingly sought comment on
proposed service quality standards in the Third RCC FNPRM, 83 FR 21983.
We will address the RCC Act's service quality requirements in a
subsequent Order.
A. Establishment of Intermediate Provider Registry
2. In accordance with the RCC Act, we adopt our proposal to
establish an intermediate provider registry. To ``ensure the integrity
of the transmission of covered voice communications to all customers in
the United States[] and . . . prevent unjust or unreasonable
discrimination among areas of the United States in the delivery of
covered voice communications,'' new section 262 of the Act requires the
Commission to establish a publicly available intermediate provider
registry on the Commission's website. We will require intermediate
providers to register via a portal on the Commission's website
furnishing the same five categories of information that we proposed in
the Third RCC FNPRM:
(1) The intermediate provider's business name(s) and primary
address;
(2) the name(s), telephone number(s), email address(es), and
business address(es) of the intermediate provider's regulatory contact
and/or designated agent for service of process;
(3) all business names that the intermediate provider has used in
the past;
(4) the state(s) in which the intermediate provider provides
service; and
(5) the name, title, business address, telephone number, and email
address of at least one person as well as the department within the
company responsible for addressing rural call completion issues.
Further, this information will be made publicly available.
3. As explained in the Third RCC FNPRM, the first four categories
of information are similar to the Commission's existing registration
requirements for interconnected VoIP and telecommunications carriers in
other contexts. For example, ``a telecommunications carrier that will
provide interstate telecommunications service'' is required to provide
the following information via FCC Form 499-A ``under oath and penalty
of perjury'': (1) The carrier's business name(s) and primary address;
(2) The names and business addresses of the carrier's chief executive
officer, chairman, and president, or, in the event that a company does
not have such executives, three similarly senior-level officials of the
company; (3) The carrier's regulatory contact and/or designated agent;
(4) All names that the carrier has used in the past; and (5) The
state(s) in which the carrier provides telecommunications service.''
The Commission's rules also require common carriers, interconnected
VoIP providers, and non-interconnected VoIP providers to provide the
contact information, including ``a name, business address, telephone or
voicemail number, facsimile number, and, if available, internet email
address,'' for service of process purposes. Such entities are also
required to ``list any other names by which it is known or under which
it does business, and, if the carrier, interconnected VoIP provider, or
non-interconnected VoIP provider is an affiliated company, the parent,
holding, or management company.'' The record reflects that ``the
[[Page 47297]]
burden to providers arising out of reporting such information is
minimal--it requires no more than logging into an account and typing in
the most basic information about a company.'' With respect to contact
information for the person and department responsible for addressing
rural call completion issues, we find, based on the record before us,
that requiring this information will facilitate inter-provider
cooperation to solve and prevent call completion issues. We also find
that this requirement is consistent with Congress's mandate that our
implementing rules ensure the integrity of the transmission of covered
voice communications to all customers in the country and prevent unjust
or unreasonable discrimination among areas of the United States in the
delivery of covered voice communications. The record reflects no
opposition to requiring these five information categories.
4. In addition to the five categories of information we proposed,
we also require intermediate providers to furnish the name(s), business
address, business telephone number(s), and email address for an
executive leadership contact, such as the chief executive officer,
chief operating officer, or owner(s) of the intermediate provider, or
person performing an equivalent function, who directs or manages the
entity. Verizon expressed concern that delisted intermediate providers
could regain registered status by subsequently re-incorporating under
other names for the purpose of circumventing Commission removal from
the intermediate provider registry. To assist in preventing
circumvention of our rules, Verizon proposes requiring this additional
information, which ``is a common requirement across state and foreign
corporation registrations, business licensing, and trade licensing,''
and thus presents no additional burden in furnishing such existing
information to the Commission. We agree with Verizon that requiring
this additional information will ``provide the Commission . . .
additional visibility into the individuals that direct and manage the
entity,'' and aid the Commission in enforcing our rules and the RCC
Act. We observe, however, that because the primary purpose of this
information is to aid the Commission in preventing circumvention of our
registry requirements, unlike the other five categories of information,
this latter category of information will not be made routinely
available for public inspection.
B. Definitions
5. As we proposed in the Third RCC FNPRM, we adopt the definition
of ``intermediate provider'' provided by Congress in section 262(i)(3).
This definition replaces the definition of ``intermediate provider''
currently in our rules. Thus, for purposes of our pre-existing rural
call completion rules and those we adopt pursuant to the RCC Act, we
define an intermediate provider as any entity that: ``(A) enters into a
business arrangement with a covered provider or other intermediate
provider for the specific purpose of carrying, routing, or transmitting
voice traffic that is generated from the placement of a call placed (i)
from an end user connection using a North American Numbering Plan
resource; or (ii) to an end user connection using such a numbering
resource; and (B) does not itself, either directly or in conjunction
with an affiliate, serve as a covered provider in the context of
originating or terminating a given call.'' We observe that in section
262(i)(1), Congress explicitly adopted the Commission's definition of
``covered provider,'' suggesting that, to the extent that section
262(i)(3) offers a different or narrower interpretation of
``intermediate provider'' than the current definition in our rules,
Congress intended the definition provided in the RCC Act to apply to
our rules implementing the RCC Act.
6. The definition of ``intermediate provider'' in section 262(i)(3)
is substantially similar to the definition previously applicable to our
rural call completion rules, with the added requirement that an
intermediate provider ``have a business arrangement with a covered
provider or other intermediate provider for the specific purpose of
carrying, routing, or transmitting voice traffic.'' As we observed in
the Third RCC FNPRM, the legislative history surrounding the RCC Act
suggests that Congress intended to exclude from the definition of
``intermediate provider'' entities ``that only incidentally transmit
voice traffic, like internet Service Providers who may carry voice
traffic alongside other packet data.'' The additional requirement that
intermediate providers have a business arrangement to carry voice
traffic effectuates this intent. Thus, entities like internet Service
Providers that may carry voice traffic only incidentally, absent any
business arrangement with a covered provider or intermediate provider
pertaining to that traffic, will not be considered intermediate
providers subject to our registry and service quality rules.
7. We decline to adopt an exemption from this definition for
``facilities-based carriers that provide backbone network capacity'' to
mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs), as urged by Sprint. To the
extent that such providers carry voice traffic that originates or
terminates with a North American Numbering Plan (NANP) resource
pursuant to a specific business relationship with a covered provider or
other intermediate provider for said voice traffic, and does not itself
serve as a covered provider in the context of originating or
terminating a given call, that entity is an intermediate provider under
the RCC Act and the rules we adopt today. We agree with NTCA's argument
that any effect of this rule on entities that, like Sprint, supply
wholesale capacity to MVNOs is likely to be ``minimally burdensome.''
As USTelecom observes, the information submission needed to comply with
our registration requirement ``[is] of a highly routine nature that
should be unproblematic for any legitimate company to provide.''
8. In addition, consistent with our proposal in the Third RCC
FNPRM, we also adopt the definition of ``covered voice communication''
provided by Congress in the RCC Act. The RCC Act defines ``covered
voice communication'' as ``a voice communication (including any related
signaling information) that is generated--(A) from the placement of a
call from a connection using a North American Numbering Plan resource
or a call placed to a connection using such a numbering resource; and
(B) through any service provided by a covered provider.''
9. We decline to adopt the proposal advanced by Verizon and
USTelecom to limit the definitions of ``intermediate provider'' and
``covered voice communications'' to ``apply only to intermediate
providers that handle covered voice communications that are destined
for rural areas.'' We also decline to adopt alternative suggestions
that we forebear from applying the RCC Act and our implementing rules
to non-rural areas. Forbearance is appropriate if the Commission
determines that: (1) Enforcement of a provision or regulation is not
necessary to ensure that the telecommunications carrier's charges,
practices, classifications, or regulations are just, reasonable, and
not unjustly or unreasonably discriminatory; (2) enforcement of the
provision or regulation is not necessary to protect consumers; and (3)
forbearance from applying such provision or regulation is consistent
with the public interest. As we explain, the RCC Act reflects
Congress's judgment that uniform rules are the best means to ensure
rural call
[[Page 47298]]
completion; and limiting the RCC Act's registry requirements to rural
areas would undermine the newly passed law's effectiveness. Because
forbearance would be inconsistent with the public interest and the
Commission's responsibility to protect consumers, as well as Congress's
direction in the RCC Act that the Commission ``ensure the integrity of
the transmission of covered voice communications to all customers in
the United States,'' we decline USTelecom's request that the Commission
forbear from applying the RCC Act to non-rural areas. We disagree with
Verizon's suggestion that ``[t]he RCC Act's text supports construing
the statute to ensure application only to rural areas.'' If Congress
had intended to apply the RCC Act definitions only to rural areas, it
easily could have done so. As Verizon itself notes, ``[t]he RCC Act on
its face does not include a limitation to rural areas.'' Indeed, apart
from the short title of the RCC Act, the word ``rural'' appears nowhere
in its text. As enacted, section 262 is entitled ``Ensuring the
integrity of voice communications,'' and none of the law's provisions
or definitions--including those for ``intermediate provider'' and
``covered voice communication''--contain the word ``rural.'' Nor is the
Commission's definition of ``covered provider,'' which Congress adopted
by reference in the RCC Act, limited to providers who originate traffic
destined for rural areas.
10. Although we agree with USTelecom's suggestion that Congress
``intended to implement measures to ensure completion of calls to rural
areas,'' we disagree with the argument that we should therefore read
the word ``rural'' into the RCC Act where it does not appear. This line
of reasoning fails to differentiate between Congress's stated
objective--to improve rural call completion--and the specific means by
which Congress has directed the Commission to achieve this goal.
Indeed, limitation of the RCC Act's provisions to traffic destined to
rural areas would appear to contravene Congress's explicit instructions
to the Commission in promulgating rules pursuant to the RCC Act, which
are to ``ensure the integrity of the transmission of covered voice
communications to all customers in the United States;'' and to
``prevent unjust or unreasonable discrimination among areas of the
United States in the delivery of covered voice communications.'' The
rules we adopt today are designed to achieve these ends. Despite
Verizon's and USTelecom's arguments to the contrary, Congress concluded
that the best way to address rural call completion issues is to craft
uniform rules applicable to intermediate providers regardless of a
call's geographic destination. As HD Tandem argues, call completion
issues are not inherently limited to rural areas, and limiting
application of the rules we adopt pursuant to the RCC Act to rural
areas may have the unintended consequence of simply shifting bad actors
into new markets. Unscrupulous providers may cause call completion
issues in non-rural areas as well, and our construction of the registry
provisions of the RCC Act is consistent with Congress's explicit
direction to the Commission, as noted above. Therefore, assuming
arguendo that the Act is ambiguous, we believe our approach is likely
to be more effective in curtailing the use of these providers and
achieving Congress's clearly stated objective of improving rural call
completion than the reading of the Act suggested by Verizon and
USTelecom.
11. Nor are we persuaded that that we should modify the plain
meaning of the RCC Act's language to correspond with the scope of our
recently adopted monitoring rule, which, unlike the RCC Act, does apply
only to ``call attempts to rural telephone companies.'' The monitoring
rule adopted in the Second RCC Order, 83 FR 21723, requires covered
providers to monitor the performance of intermediate providers when
they direct calls to rural areas, and to take action to address
identified problems. The RCC Act and our implementing rules require
certain intermediate providers to register with the Commission and
abide by service quality standards, and prevent covered providers from
using unregistered intermediate providers to deliver covered voice
communications. The monitoring rule and the rules adopted pursuant to
the RCC Act are complementary, but because covered providers and
intermediate providers are differently situated and play different
roles in the delivery of voice traffic, we find that it is appropriate
that our rules, and the RCC Act, treat them differently. For this
reason, we also disagree with Verizon's suggestion that our safe
harbor, referenced in the RCC Act in Section 262(h), compels limiting
the RCC Act to rural areas. Given the heightened vigilance our
monitoring rule requires of covered providers, it is appropriate that
it applies more narrowly than the RCC Act's prohibition on covered
provider use of unregistered intermediate providers.
12. Finally, we disagree with arguments that we should apply our
rules implementing section 262 only to rural areas to increase
``[a]dministrative efficiency'' or to decrease the burdens that the RCC
Act imposes on affected entities. In particular, we disagree with
Verizon's argument that the burdens of complying with the RCC Act will
``vastly increase'' absent a limitation of section 262 to traffic
destined to rural areas. Verizon argues that without this restriction
``[t]he number of OCNs required to be monitored would more than triple,
from the over 1,300 OCNs required for monitoring rural destinations, to
more than 4,700 rural and non-rural OCNs.'' The monitoring rule,
however, remains limited to requiring that covered providers monitor
intermediate provider performance in the completion of call attempts to
rural telephone companies. Further, because the RCC Act and our
implementing rules require intermediate providers to register with the
Commission, we disagree that requiring covered providers to only use
registered intermediate providers, without cabining such requirements
to calls to rural areas, would be burdensome. We therefore expect that
the burdens of our registry rules on both intermediate providers and
covered providers will be minimal.
C. Intermediate Providers Who Must Register With the Commission
1. Scope of Registry Requirement
13. Consistent with the text of section 262(a), we adopt our
proposal in the Third RCC FNPRM to require any intermediate provider
``that offers or holds itself out as offering the capability to
transmit covered voice communications from one destination to another
and that charges any rate to any other entity (including an affiliated
entity) for the transmission'' to register with the Commission. In
adopting this proposal, we decline to simply apply the registry
obligations of section 262(a) to all intermediate providers, as that
term is defined in section 262(i)(3). As we suggested in the Third RCC
FNPRM, the RCC Act's registry requirements and service quality
standards apply to a subset of ``intermediate providers,'' namely those
that ``charge[] any rate'' for the transmission of covered voice
communications.
14. We agree with commenters who argue that the ``charge[] any
rate'' language in section 262(a) is best interpreted broadly. Thus, we
conclude that the application of section 262(a) is not limited only to
intermediate providers who charge a per-call fee for service; rather,
section 262(a) encompasses broader remuneration agreements, as well as
entities offering service in exchange for in-kind or other,
[[Page 47299]]
non-monetary forms of consideration. We therefore disagree with
commenters who express concern that the ``charge[] any rate'' qualifier
may exclude entities that Congress intended to reach with the RCC Act.
To be deemed an intermediate provider under section 262(i), an entity
must have a ``business arrangement with a covered provider or other
intermediate provider for the specific purpose of carrying, routing, or
transmitting'' voice traffic originating or terminating with a NANP
resource. Although section 262(a) adds the requirement that an
intermediate provider ``charge[] any rate'' for transmitting covered
voice communications, we find that to ``charge any rate'' in this
context is merely to demand compensation for services based on a fixed
ratio, scale, or standard. Nothing in the language of the RCC Act
requires that the relevant ``rate'' charged be in the form of monetary
consideration. We agree with ANI, HD Tandem, and Verizon that relying
on remuneration as a qualifier may open the possibility for non-fee
arrangements to circumvent the RCC Act and our implementing rules, and
thus interpret section 262(a) as applying to any intermediate provider
that demands monetary or non-monetary consideration for its services.
2. Registration Deadline
15. We adopt our proposal in the Third RCC FNPRM to require
intermediate providers to submit their registration to the Commission
within 30 days after a Public Notice announcing the approval by the
Office of Management and Budget of the final rules establishing the
registry. We find, and the record supports, that a 30-day timeframe
will allow existing intermediate providers adequate time to come into
compliance with our registry rules. In addition, as we explained in the
Third RCC FNPRM, this phase-in period is consistent with the filing
timeframe for Form 499-A, which requires that new filers register with
the Commission within 30 days. Pursuant to sections 262(a) and (b),
upon expiration of the initial 30-day registration window, new
intermediate providers will be required to register with the Commission
before beginning to transmit covered voice communications for covered
providers.
16. We require intermediate providers to submit any necessary
updates regarding their registration to the Commission within 10
business days. The record reflects that our proposal to require
intermediate providers to update their registrations within seven days
may not provide intermediate providers sufficient time to make
necessary changes. As such, we permit intermediate providers up to 10
business days to submit any necessary registration updates. As ATIS
argues, this additional time will better enable intermediate providers
to respond to changes related to mergers or similar events. And, as
West Telecom notes, ``there should be little adverse impact from the
slightly longer compliance period.'' Because we agree with Verizon that
``[t]he required information should be readily available,'' we decline
to increase the time period for updates to 30 days, as Verizon
requests. As USTelecom notes, the information to be collected is
generally of a ``routine nature that should be unproblematic for any
legitimate company to provide.'' Further, because covered providers and
members of the public will rely on the information contained in the
registry, for example, in making routing decisions or attempting to
discover point of contact information to resolve rural call completion
issues, we find that a 30-day update period would unnecessarily
undermine the effectiveness of the registry requirement by increasing
the likelihood that the information contained within the registry is
out-of-date.
3. Enforcement
17. Intermediate providers that fail to register with the
Commission on a timely basis, as required by our rules, shall be
subject to enforcement under the Act and our rules, including
forfeiture. For the Commission to exercise its forfeiture authority for
violations of the Act and the Commission's rules without first issuing
a citation, the wrongdoer must hold (or be an applicant for) some form
of license, permit, certificate, or other authorization from the
Commission, or be engaged in an activity for which such a license,
permit, certificate, or other authorization is required. Because
intermediate providers that provide service to covered providers are
required, under section 262(a)(1), to register with the Commission, we
conclude that an intermediate provider offering such services is
engaged in an activity for which Commission license or authorization is
required under sections 503(b)(5) and 262(a)(1) of the Act.
18. We disagree with Verizon's unsupported assertion that the
Commission ``should not interpret the act of registration itself as a
grant of authorization to exercise its forfeiture authority without
first issuing a citation.'' We note that no other parties commented our
proposal to ``interpret the act of registration itself as a grant of
Commission authorization to intermediate providers and allow us to
exercise our forfeiture authority against registered providers without
first issuing a citation.'' The RCC Act makes clear that Congress
intended the intermediate provider registry to function as a
qualification for entry into the intermediate provider market, and, as
such, the requirements to register and subsequently maintain that
registration in good standing serve as Commission license or
authorization to function as an intermediate provider transmitting
covered voice communications in the United States. Consistent with the
Administrative Procedure Act's definition of ``license,'' which
includes ``whole or part of an agency . . . registration,'' the
Commission has found that the term ``license'' encompasses
registrations.
19. Accordingly, we conclude that, under our rules, we may exercise
our forfeiture authority against intermediate providers that fail to
register, without first issuing a citation. When determining the amount
of a forfeiture, we will consider ``the nature, circumstances, extent,
and gravity of the violation and, with respect to the violator, the
degree of culpability, any history of prior offenses, ability to pay,
and such other matters as justice may require.'' To the extent that an
intermediate provider is a common carrier, the intermediate provider
may be assessed a forfeiture of up to $196,387 per violation or each
day of a continuing violation and up to a statutory maximum of
$1,963,870 for any single act or failure to act. These amounts reflect
inflation adjustments to the forfeitures specified in section
503(b)(2)(B) of the Act ($100,000 per violation or per day of a
continuing violation and $1,000,000 per any single act or failure to
act). The Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act Improvement
Act of 2015 (2015 Inflation Adjustment Act) requires the Commission to
amend its forfeiture penalty rules to reflect annual adjustments for
inflation in order to improve their effectiveness and maintain their
deterrent effect. Further, the 2015 Inflation Adjustment Act provides
that the new penalty levels shall apply to penalties assessed after the
effective date of the increase, including when the violations
associated with the penalties predate the increase. An intermediate
provider that is not a common carrier is subject to a forfeiture of up
to $19,639 per violation or each day of a continuing violation and up
to a statutory maximum of $147,290 for any single act
[[Page 47300]]
or failure to act. These same penalties also apply to an entity that
does not hold (and is not required to hold) a Commission license,
permit, certificate, or other instrument of authorization.
20. In addition, we decline to apply the Commission's ``red-light''
rule prior to intermediate providers' registration with the Commission.
In the Third RCC FNPRM, we sought comment on whether intermediate
providers should be prohibited from registering with the Commission if
they are ``red-lighted'' by the Commission for unpaid debts or other
reasons. Under the red light rule, the Commission will not process
applications and other requests for benefits by parties that owe non-
tax debt to the Commission. In the context of our rules implementing
the Debt Collection Improvement Act, the Commission has noted that
``[i]n some instances . . . filings with the Commission go into effect
immediately (or within one day), thus precluding a check to determine
if the filer is a delinquent debtor before the request goes into
effect.'' The Commission noted that in such situations, the Commission
has the ability to take appropriate action after the fact for
noncompliance with any of the Commission's rules. Because we will make
registrations immediately effective upon receipt, this is a situation
which precludes a check to determine if the intermediate provider is a
delinquent debtor before the registration goes into effect. As a
result, any applicable red-light check will be conducted after
intermediate provider registration; appropriate action, if any, will be
taken against intermediate providers who are later discovered to be
delinquent debtors, including de-registration.
D. Covered Providers May Not Use Unregistered Intermediate Providers
1. Covered Providers Must Take Steps Reasonably Calculated To Prevent
Use of Unregistered Intermediate Providers Anywhere in the Call Path
21. We find that section 262(b) requires a covered provider to
ensure that all intermediate providers involved in the transmission of
its covered voice communications are registered with the Commission.
The definition of ``intermediate provider'' contained in section 262(i)
broadly refers to providers at all intermediate points in the call
chain, excluding covered providers who originate or terminate a given
call; and, section 262(a) requires any of these entities that offer to
transmit covered voice communications for a rate to register with the
Commission and meet our service quality standards. We note, however,
that some intermediate providers may be exempted from our service
quality standards pursuant to section 262(h) and our safe harbor
provisions. Thus, we conclude that Congress's requirement that covered
providers ``may not use'' an unregistered intermediate provider to
transmit traffic is best understood to mean that a covered provider may
not rely on any unregistered intermediate providers in the path of a
given call. Consistent with our recently-adopted monitoring rule, we
allow covered providers to use contractual restrictions that flow down
the entire intermediate provider call path to fulfill their obligations
under section 262(b).
22. We conclude that this interpretation best supports Congress's
aims in enacting the RCC Act by placing responsibility for compliance
with section 262(b) with a single, easily identifiable entity. Our
construction of section 262(b) is supported by the record in this
proceeding, and is consistent with the rules adopted in the Second RCC
Order, which highlighted the importance of ``hold[ing] a central party
responsible for call completion issues.'' As we found in the Second RCC
Order, because ``covered providers select the initial long-distance
path and therefore can choose how to route a call,'' it is
``appropriate that they should have responsibility for monitoring rural
call completion performance'' along the entire path of a given call.
23. We agree with arguments advanced by NTCA that limiting the
application of section 262(b) only to the first contracted intermediate
provider would ``defeat the spirit and intent of [the RCC Act]'' and
potentially allow ``unscrupulous carriers or intermediate providers to
circumvent their ultimate responsibility to complete calls.'' As we
have explained, a call often travels through a chain of multiple
intermediate providers before reaching its destination. Because nothing
in our rules or section 262 requires intermediate providers to use
other registered intermediate providers to transmit covered voice
communications, interpreting the restrictions of section 262(b) to
apply only to the first contracted intermediate provider would
substantially undermine the purpose of the RCC Act, which is to improve
rural call completion by, among other things, requiring any
intermediate provider involved in the transmission of covered voice
communications to register (and maintain a registration) with the
Commission. Section 262(b) would do little to improve call completion
if it was construed only to require that the first of many intermediate
providers in a call path register with the Commission.
24. We disagree with commenters who argue in favor of such a narrow
reading of section 262(b). In particular, we disagree with Comcast's
claims that covered providers ``lack . . . control over intermediate
providers with which they have no direct contractual relationship.'' To
the contrary, we have found that as the first party in the call path,
covered providers have significant ability to affect the behavior of
downstream providers--including those with which there is no direct
relationship--through the use of contractual provisions that travel
along the entire chain of providers.
25. Consistent with the monitoring rule for covered providers,
pursuant to section 262(b) we require covered providers to (i) ensure
that any directly contracted intermediate provider is registered with
the Commission; and (ii) implement ``contractual restrictions . . .
that are reasonably calculated to ensure'' that any subsequent
intermediate providers with which the covered provider does not
directly contract are registered under section 262(a). As with the
monitoring rule, covered providers must ``ensure that these
[contractual] restrictions flow down the entire intermediate provider
call path.'' For example, covered providers may require that, as a
condition of accepting traffic, (i) any directly contracted
intermediate providers must agree to not hand off traffic to any
unregistered intermediate providers; and (ii) that they will impose
this same restriction on any subsequently contracted intermediate
providers.
26. Because we allow covered providers to use indirect contractual
restrictions to satisfy their obligations under section 262(b), we
disagree with arguments that our interpretation of section 262(b) to
encompass all intermediate providers in the call path will be
impractical, inefficient, or excessively burdensome. As West Telecom
notes, ``[n]egotiated arrangements, when combined with active
monitoring procedures, are an accepted and proven industry approach to
ensuring satisfactory performance by downstream providers.'' We
disagree with ITTA's assertions that construing section 262(b) ``to
mean that the covered provider must `ensure' only that the first
intermediate provider in the call path is registered is far more
consistent with the principles of privity applied by the Commission in
the Second RCC Order.'' To the contrary, as we have explained, the
construction of section 262(b) we adopt today uses the same notion of
[[Page 47301]]
privity as that which formed the basis of our monitoring rule. As NTCA
notes, ITTA's argument ``ignores the fact that covered providers have
contractual relationships with the first Intermediate Provider in the
call path, [which is] capable of then contractually binding downstream
providers to only use registered providers from an identified list.''
Instead, as NTCA and HD Tandem argue, because covered providers are
responsible for monitoring the entire call path pursuant to our
monitoring rule, it is reasonable to require them to ensure through
contractual provisions that all intermediate providers in the call path
are registered with the Commission. Indeed, as we have explained, this
construction of section 262(b) most reasonably gives effect to
Congress's intent in passing the RCC Act.
27. We require covered providers to use the intermediate provider
registry to ensure that the intermediate providers with which they
contract are registered with the Commission at the time any agreement
for the transmission of covered voice communications is finalized. We
agree with West Telecom, however, that it is unnecessary to require
covered providers to repeatedly check the registry to confirm the
registration status of all intermediate providers in the chain of a
call. Therefore, once an agreement for the transmission of covered
voice communications is effective, we allow covered providers to use
contractual restrictions to ensure that all intermediate providers in
the call path maintain an active registration with the Commission. As
West Telecom notes, it may be more effective and cost-efficient to
require downstream providers to promptly report de-registrations to the
upstream provider, rather than forcing the upstream provider to
repeatedly recheck the registry to verify the continued registration of
downstream providers. Notwithstanding any contractual provisions,
however, if a covered provider gains actual knowledge that it is using
an unregistered intermediate provider anywhere in its call routing, it
must cease that practice.
28. We agree with NCTA that ``covered provider[s] should be
afforded a reasonable period of time to transition to alternative
providers without penalty or threat of enforcement.'' As NCTA notes,
``[i]t takes time for covered providers to restructure their call
routes, renegotiate their relationships with intermediate providers, or
make the appropriate contractual arrangements to transition to
alternative providers.'' Without a transition period, covered providers
might be left with no option other than to decline to complete calls on
an affected route. Therefore we grant covered providers a reasonable
period of time, but no more than 45 days, in which to adjust their call
routing practices to avoid use of an unregistered intermediate provider
after gaining knowledge of its deregistration or lack of registration.
We remind covered providers that, with respect to rural destinations
that a provider knows or should know are experiencing call completion
problems, the Second RCC Order requires covered providers to ``promptly
resolve[ ] any anomalies or problems and take[ ] action to ensure they
do not recur.'' Our experience investigating individual call completion
complaints has shown that two weeks from reporting is ample time for a
provider to resolve a specific call completion problem. Although we
find, based upon our experience, that 45 days will provide covered
providers with sufficient time to adjust their call routing practices,
covered providers should remove deregistered or unregistered
intermediate providers as soon as reasonably practicable.
29. Exception for Force Majeure. We adopt a limited exception to
our rules and exempt covered providers from the prohibition on the use
of unregistered intermediate providers in circumstances where, due to
force majeure for which the covered provider invokes a disaster
recovery plan, no registered intermediate providers are available to
transmit covered voice communications to their destination. This
limited exemption that we adopt today is similar in nature to
exemptions found in our copper retirement rules. Under those
provisions, incumbent local exchange carriers (LECs) are exempted from
certain provisions of our copper retirement rules in the case of a
force majeure for which the incumbent LEC invokes a disaster recovery
plan. For the purposes of this exemption, we give the terms ``force
majeure'' and ``disaster recovery plan'' the definitions contained in
47 CFR 51.333(g). As with our copper retirement notification rules,
allowing an exception in response to force majeure will ensure that
service providers are able ``to restore their networks and service to
consumers as quickly as possible rather than jump through regulatory
hoops.''
30. We believe that the language of the RCC Act provides sufficient
authority for us to create a narrow and time-limited exemption of the
statutory prohibition on covered provider use of unregistered
intermediate providers. In directing the Commission to promulgate rules
to implement the RCC Act, Congress specifically instructed the
Commission to ``ensure the integrity of the transmission of covered
voice communications to all customers in the United States.'' We
conclude that permitting covered providers to use unregistered
intermediate providers to deliver covered voice communications in the
case of force majeure, as described above, for a limited period of time
while the provider has invoked a disaster recovery plan is necessary to
help ``ensure the integrity'' of covered voice communications to all
customers in the United States.
31. We find that carving out this limited exception provides
regulatory certainty to covered providers in these limited
circumstances where strict compliance with our rules would not be
possible or in the public interest. We have found that ``it is vital
that we do everything we can to facilitate rapid restoration of
communications networks in the face of natural disasters and other
unforeseen events.'' By codifying an exception to our rules
implementing section 262(b) for circumstances under which covered
providers would otherwise need to seek a waiver, we ensure that our
rules enable covered providers to restore service as quickly as
possible following force majeure.
32. Therefore, in circumstances where, due to force majeure, no
registered intermediate providers are available to transmit covered
voice communications to their destination, we exempt covered providers
from the prohibition on use of unregistered intermediate providers. To
obtain relief under this provision, we require covered providers to
submit to the Commission a certification explaining the circumstances
justifying an exemption as soon as practicable. The certification must
be signed by a corporate officer or official with authority to bind the
corporation, and knowledge of the details of the covered provider's
inability to comply with our rules. The exemption period will last a
period of 180 days, after which time a covered provider will be
required to submit a request for an extension of the exemption period,
which must include a status report on the covered provider's attempts
to come into compliance with section 262(b), including a statement of
how the covered provider intends to ensure that calls are completed
notwithstanding the lack of available registered intermediate
providers.
[[Page 47302]]
2. Covered Providers Must Be Capable of Disclosing to the Commission
the Identity of All Intermediate Providers in the Call Path
33. Consistent with our proposal in the Third RCC FNPRM, we require
covered providers to know, or be capable of knowing, the identity of
all intermediate providers in the path of a given call. We further
require covered providers to disclose this information to the
Commission upon request. As we explained in the Second RCC Order, this
requirement is a natural outgrowth of section 262(b), which prohibits
covered providers from using unregistered intermediate providers
anywhere in the call path.
34. We agree with HD Tandem that ``[a] registration process without
this oversight mechanism will likely be very ineffective.'' Permitting
covered providers to route calls without any means of determining which
intermediate providers participate in delivery of covered voice
communications would render the requirements in section 262(b), and the
registry scheme of the RCC Act, meaningless. As we noted in the Second
RCC Order, ``allowing covered providers to not know the identities of
their intermediates amounts to allowing willful ignorance: i.e., it
would allow covered providers to circumvent their duties by employing
unknown or anonymous intermediate providers in a call path.''
35. We disagree with commenters who suggest that this requirement
should be limited to apply only to intermediate providers with which a
covered provider shares a direct contractual relationship. As NTCA
observes, the requirement ``that intermediate providers be
contractually bound and identifiable'' is essential to enforcing the
registry and service quality standards imposed by the RCC Act.
Furthermore, as we have explained, our rural call completion rules are
premised on the fact that a central party--covered providers--must be
responsible for ensuring that calls are completed. The RCC Act
complements this scheme by making covered providers responsible for
preventing the use of unregistered intermediate providers anywhere in
the path of a given call.
36. We therefore disagree with the proposal advanced by Comcast
that would put the onus on the Commission to assemble this information
by making separate inquiries of a covered provider and each of its
individual intermediate providers in order to obtain a full picture of
the routing of a given call. Requiring covered providers to know and
disclose to the Commission only the identities of the intermediate
providers with which they immediately contract would be
administratively inefficient, insofar as it would require the
Commission to expend scarce resources in an effort to piece together
the identities of all parties in the path of a given call. Pursuant to
the Commission's rural call completion rules and section 262(b), it is
covered providers, and not the Commission, that are ultimately
responsible for ensuring that calls are completed using only registered
intermediates. Moreover, covered providers, as the party initiating
calls and making the initial routing decisions for covered voice
communications, are the most logical and efficient party to bear the
responsibility for obtaining the identities of their intermediate
providers and relaying this information to the Commission. As HD Tandem
observes, ``since covered providers are accountable for exercising
oversight regarding the performance of all intermediate providers (in
the path of calls for which the covered provider makes the initial
long-distance call path choice), they must be responsible for obtaining
and retaining this information.''
37. We agree with West Telecom that it is not necessary under
section 262 to require covered providers to ``know at all times `the
identity of all intermediate providers in a call path,' '' and that it
is sufficient that ``such information be promptly obtainable when there
is a call completion problem requiring investigation or a request from
regulatory authorities.'' Several commenters express concern that
requiring covered providers to maintain a current list of every
intermediate provider participating in every transmission of covered
voice communications would be excessively burdensome relative to the
benefits of such a rule. For this reason, as with our monitoring rule
and the prohibition on covered provider use of unregistered
intermediaries, we allow covered providers to satisfy their obligations
through the use of contractual restrictions that permit the discovery
within two weeks of the identities of any intermediate providers in the
path of a given call. We note that we currently allow a provider two
weeks to investigate a rural call competition complaint and file a
write written report with the Commission's Enforcement Bureau on the
results of its investigation and how it resolved the problem. As West
Telecom argues, this will permit the Commission to access necessary
information related to rural call completion failures, while avoiding
the costs and burdens associated with unnecessary monitoring efforts.
3. Compliance Deadline
38. We require covered providers to comply with our rules requiring
the use of registered intermediate providers within 90 days after the
date by which intermediate providers must register with the Commission.
As Comcast notes, ``most contracts in place today do not obligate
intermediate providers to disclose the names of other service providers
to which the intermediate providers deliver traffic further
downstream.'' A number of commenters expressed concern that our
proposed 60-day phase-in period would be insufficient for covered
providers to renegotiate their contracts for routing voice traffic in
order to come into compliance with the prohibition on use of
unregistered intermediates. We find, based on the record before us,
that a 90-day phase-in period following the date by which intermediate
providers must register with the Commission will permit covered
providers adequate time to make adjustments to existing contractual
arrangements.
39. We disagree with commenters who suggest that a longer, or
shorter, timeframe is appropriate. Waiting for a period of a year or
more to require covered providers to comply with their obligations
under section 262 and our rules would frustrate the purpose of the RCC
Act by needlessly delaying its implementation. A shorter time period,
however, could prove unnecessarily difficult for providers to comply
with. As several commenters note, a 90-day phase-in period following
the date by which intermediate providers must register with the
Commission will provide an appropriate period of adjustment, allowing
covered providers to renegotiate contracts with registered intermediate
providers. Furthermore, because our registry requires OMB approval and
contains its own 30-day implementation period, covered providers should
have approximately six-months, if not more, to come into compliance,
which is about the same as the six-month phase-in period recently
adopted by the Commission for the monitoring rule, which similarly
required covered providers to ``evaluate and renegotiate contracts with
intermediate providers.'' The prohibition on use of unregistered
intermediate providers will therefore go into effect 90 days after the
date by which intermediate providers must register with the Commission.
Once our
[[Page 47303]]
registry rules are approved by OMB, intermediate providers will have 30
days to register with the Commission. Our rules regarding covered
provider use of registered intermediate providers will take effect 90
days after the expiration of this 30-day initial registration period.
E. Denial of USTelecom Petition for Stay
40. USTelecom filed a petition to stay aspects of the April 17,
2018 Second RCC Order, specifically the covered provider monitoring
requirements adopted in the Second RCC Order, pending completion of the
rulemaking process to implement the RCC Act. USTelecom argues that
absent a stay, covered providers will ``unnecessarily be forced to
incur the cost of renegotiating their vendor contracts multiple times,
or be placed in a position where they risk . . . noncompliance with
[section] 64.2111.'' NTCA filed an opposition to the Petition for Stay,
while ITTA filed comments in support. For the reasons discussed below,
we find that USTelecom has failed to meet its burden for a grant of a
stay and accordingly deny its petition.
41. To qualify for the extraordinary remedy of a stay, a petitioner
must show that: (1) It is likely to prevail on the merits; (2) it will
suffer irreparable harm absent the grant of preliminary relief; (3)
other interested parties will not be harmed if the stay is granted; and
(4) the public interest would favor grant of the stay. The Commission's
consideration of each factor is weighed against the others, and no
single factor is dispositive. USTelecom has not introduced arguments
into the record regarding the first factor, therefore we do not
consider it here. Because we find that USTelecom has not shown that any
of the remaining three factors weigh in favor of a stay, we conclude
that USTelecom has failed to meet the test for this extraordinary
remedy.
1. USTelecom Has Failed To Demonstrate Irreparable Injury
42. We find that USTelecom's claims that it ``will be irreparably
injured absent grant of the requested stay'' are unsupported by the
record. USTelecom rests its claims regarding irreparable injury on the
theory that covered providers ``will unnecessarily be forced to incur
the cost of renegotiating their vendor contracts multiple times'' if
section 64.2111 becomes effective before we have established registry
and service quality standards for intermediate providers pursuant to of
the RCC Act.
43. The record reflects disagreement as to whether multiple rounds
of contractual negotiations will be required as a result of the
monitoring rule coming into effect prior to full implementation of the
RCC Act. ITTA argues that covered provider contracts with intermediate
providers ``cannot be renegotiated or amended until all parties in the
call chain have an understanding of the service quality standards to
which intermediate providers will be subject.'' As NTCA points out,
however, there are steps that covered providers can take in negotiating
contracts to implement the monitoring requirement that could help to
mitigate the need for re-negotiation and its attendant costs,
including, for example, incorporating an express ``change of law''
provision to import whatever standards may thereafter be adopted by the
Commission for intermediate providers.
44. Even assuming covered providers will in fact be required to
undergo separate rounds of contractual negotiations with intermediate
providers absent a stay, as USTelecom asserts, USTelecom has failed to
meet the high bar required to demonstrate irreparable injury. USTelecom
makes no attempt to quantify the costs associated with multiple rounds
of contractual negotiations; it merely offers unsupported assertions
that such an outcome would be ``highly disruptive and burdensome.'' As
a form of equitable relief, a stay generally is granted only where
petitioners show that remedies at law--for example, the award of
monetary damages--are insufficient. For this reason, according to well-
established judicial precedent, ``economic loss does not, in and of
itself, constitute irreparable harm,'' and ``[m]ere injuries, however
substantial, in terms of money, time and energy necessarily expended in
the absence of a stay are not enough.'' Recoverable monetary loss may
constitute an irreparable injury in narrow circumstances where ``the
loss threatens the very existence of the movant's business;'' however,
USTelecom makes no assertions to this effect.
45. Moreover, to justify a stay of the Commission's Second RCC
Order, the alleged injury ``must be both certain and great; it must be
actual and not theoretical.'' A stay is warranted only if ``[t]he
injury complained of is of such imminence that there is a clear and
present need for equitable relief to prevent irreparable harm.''
USTelecom asserts that absent a stay, covered providers will be forced
to ``incur the cost of renegotiating their vendor contracts multiple
times,'' and that these costs, ``which need not be incurred, could
potentially result in higher rates for end users.'' We find that the
speculative potential incurrence of an unquantified amount of costs to
renegotiate contracts does not rise to the level of a ``certain and
great'' injury. For these reasons, we find that USTelecom has failed to
demonstrate irreparable injury.
2. USTelecom Has Failed To Demonstrate That a Stay Is in the Public
Interest and Will Not Harm Other Parties
46. We also find that USTelecom has failed to demonstrate that
granting a stay is in the public interest and will not harm other
parties to the proceeding. Indeed, we find that staying the
effectiveness of section 64.2111 would be contrary to the public
interest and would threaten harm to consumers by needlessly undermining
the effectiveness of our rural call completion rules.
47. We disagree with USTelecom's suggestion that any compliance
costs associated with prompt enforcement of our covered provider
monitoring rule are ``unnecessary in light of the fact that rural call
completion complaints continue to fall.'' Even assuming this were
correct, rural call completion issues continue to have significant
ramifications for affected consumers, as we have repeatedly observed.
Although USTelecom cites the Second RCC Order in support of this
assertion, it misconstrues our findings. As the Second RCC Order
observes, ``[t]rends in [rural call completion] complaints are mixed.''
While carrier complaints have indeed fallen in the last several years,
consumer complaints have increased, on a yearly basis, for much of this
time. Further, we note that rural carrier complaints filed with the
Commission have increased significantly over this time last year. Call
completion problems in rural areas ``have serious repercussions,
imposing needless economic and personal costs, and potentially
threatening public safety in local communities.'' In enacting the RCC
Act, Congress and the President have clearly signaled that they agree
with this assessment. For these reasons, solving rural call completion
issues has been, and remains, a pressing concern for the Commission.
48. Despite its claims that ``the public interest strongly favors a
stay of [section 64.2111],'' USTelecom offers little evidence in
support of its argument. USTelecom rests its claims that a stay would
not harm other parties, including consumers, on the basis that the cost
of multiple rounds of contract renegotiation ``could potentially result
in higher rates for end users.'' As NTCA observes, however, both the
existence of
[[Page 47304]]
these costs, and their ultimate impact on consumers in the form of
higher prices, are speculative. As noted above, USTelecom fails to
attempt to quantify these costs.
49. We find that the significant public interest benefits resulting
from effective rural call completion rules outweigh the hypothetical
financial harms suggested by USTelecom. As NTCA observes, the public
has a clear interest in rules that address rural call completion
issues. Rural carriers, too, have a substantial interest in prompt
enforcement of our rules, as their business interests are harmed when
calls initiated elsewhere fail to reach their intended destination. The
monitoring rule is a critical component of our rural call completion
regulatory regime. In adopting the Second RCC Order, we considered, but
declined to adopt, a longer phase-in period for section 64.2111,
finding that ``the monitoring requirement addresses the ongoing call
completion problems faced by rural Americans, and delay only postpones
when rural Americans will see the fruit of this solution.'' The
monitoring rule is an obligation of covered providers to ensure that
calls they initiate to rural areas are in fact completed. This
obligation complements, but exists independently of, the registry and
service quality obligations contained in the RCC Act and any rules the
Commission adopts to implement that Act. For the foregoing reasons, we
deny USTelecom's request for a stay of section 64.2111 pending full
implementation of the RCC Act.
II. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
50. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was
incorporated into the Third RCC FNRPM for the Rural Call Completion
proceeding. The Commission sought written public comment on the
proposals in the Third RCC FNRPM, including comment on the IRFA. The
Commission received no comments on the IRFA. Because the Commission
amends its rules in this Order, the Commission has included this Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA). This present FRFA conforms to
the RFA.
A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Rules
51. In this Order, we revise our rules to better address ongoing
problems in the completion of long-distance telephone calls to rural
areas. Specifically, we require intermediate providers to register in a
publicly available intermediate provider registry, maintained by the
Commission. We also require that covered providers not use unregistered
providers to carry, route, or otherwise transmit covered voice
communications, except in cases of force majeure. The requirements we
adopt today implement the Improving Rural Call Quality and Reliability
Act of 2017 (RCC Act). The RCC Act directs us to (1) promulgate
registration requirements for intermediate providers within 180 days of
enactment, and create a registry for such providers on our website; and
(2) establish service quality standards for intermediate providers
within one year of enactment.
52. In implementing the RCC Act, first, we adopt a new rule
requiring ``intermediate providers'' to provide and update as needed
the following information on a publicly available online registry
maintained by the Commission: (1) The intermediate provider's business
name(s) and primary address; (2) the name(s), telephone number(s),
email address(es), and business address(es) of the intermediate
provider's regulatory contact and/or designated agent for service of
process; (3) all business names that the intermediate provider has used
in the past; (4) the state(s) in which the intermediate provider
provides service; (5) the name, title, business address, telephone
number, and email address of at least one person as well as the
department within the company responsible for addressing rural call
completion issues a telephone number and email address for the express
purpose of receiving and responding promptly to any rural call
completion issues, and; (6) the name(s), business address, and business
telephone number(s) for an executive leadership contact, such as the
chief executive officer, chief operating officer, or owner(s) of the
intermediate provider, or persons performing an equivalent function,
who directs or manages the entity.
53. This Order also requires intermediate providers to register in
our publicly available intermediate provider registry within 30 days
after a Public Notice announcing the approval by the Office of
Management and Budget of the final rules establishing the registry;
prohibits covered providers from using any unregistered intermediate
providers in the path of a given call; and requires covered providers
to be responsible for knowing or obtaining knowledge of the identity of
all intermediate providers in a call path. To ease burdens covered
providers may experience during force majeure, covered providers are
exempted from the prohibition on unregistered providers during such
events, for an initial period of up to 180 days. Covered providers may
seek an extension of this exemption period upon submission of a status
report on the covered provider's attempts to comply with our rules, and
a statement detailing how the covered provider intends to ensure that
calls are completed notwithstanding the unavailability of registered
intermediate providers.
54. We conclude these rules and procedures are necessary to inject
transparency and accountability into the call routing system, ``to
ensure the integrity of voice communications and to prevent unjust or
unreasonable discrimination among areas of the United States in the
delivery of such communications.''
B. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response
to the IRFA
55. The Commission did not receive comments specifically addressing
the rules and policies proposed in the IRFA.
C. Response to Comments by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration
56. The Chief Counsel did not file any comments in response to this
proceeding.
D. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which
the Rules Will Apply
57. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description and, where
feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be
affected by the final rules adopted pursuant to the Third RCC FNPRM.
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.
58. Small Businesses, Small Organizations, Small Governmental
Jurisdictions. Our actions, over time, may affect small entities that
are not easily categorized at present. We therefore describe here, at
the outset, three comprehensive small entity size standards that could
be directly affected herein. First, while there are industry specific
size standards for small businesses that are used in the regulatory
flexibility analysis, according to data from the SBA's Office of
Advocacy, in general a small business is
[[Page 47305]]
an independent business having fewer than 500 employees. These types of
small businesses represent 99.9 percent of all businesses in the United
States which translates to 28.8 million businesses.
59. Next, the type of small entity described as a ``small
organization'' is generally ``any not-for-profit enterprise which is
independently owned and operated and is not dominant in its field.''
Nationwide, as of Aug 2016, there were approximately 356,494 small
organizations based on registration and tax data filed by nonprofits
with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
60. Finally, the small entity described as a ``small governmental
jurisdiction'' is defined generally as ``governments of cities,
counties, towns, townships, villages, school districts, or special
districts, with a population of less than fifty thousand.'' U.S. Census
Bureau data from the 2012 Census of Governments indicates that there
were 90,056 local governmental jurisdictions consisting of general
purpose governments and special purpose governments in the United
States. Of this number there were 37, 132 General purpose governments
(county, municipal and town or township) with populations of less than
50,000 and 12,184 Special purpose governments (independent school
districts and special districts) with populations of less than 50,000.
The 2012 U.S. Census Bureau data for most types of governments in the
local government category show that the majority of these governments
have populations of less than 50,000. Based on these data we estimate
that at least 49,316 local government jurisdictions fall in the
category of ``small governmental jurisdictions.''
61. Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau
defines this industry as ``establishments primarily engaged in
operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities and
infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of
voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired communications
networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology
or a combination of technologies. Establishments in this industry use
the wired telecommunications network facilities that they operate to
provide a variety of services, such as wired telephony services,
including VoIP services, wired (cable) audio and video programming
distribution, and wired broadband internet services. By exception,
establishments providing satellite television distribution services
using facilities and infrastructure that they operate are included in
this industry.'' The SBA has developed a small business size standard
for Wired Telecommunications Carriers, which consists of all such
companies having 1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for 2012 show
that there were 3,117 firms that operated that year. Of this total,
3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this size
standard, the majority of firms in this industry can be considered
small.
62. Local Exchange Carriers (LECs). Neither the Commission nor the
SBA has developed a size standard for small businesses specifically
applicable to local exchange services. The closest applicable NAICS
Code category is for Wired Telecommunications Carriers, as defined in
paragraph 11 of this FRFA. Under that size standard, such a business is
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for 2012 show
that there were 3,117 firms that operated that year. Of this total,
3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees. The Commission
therefore estimates that most providers of local exchange carrier
service are small entities that may be affected by the rules adopted.
63. Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers (incumbent LECs). Neither the
Commission nor the SBA has developed a small business size standard
specifically for incumbent local exchange services. The closest
applicable NAICS Code category is Wired Telecommunications Carriers as
defined in paragraph 11 of this FRFA. Under that size standard, such a
business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. According to
Commission data, 3,117 firms operated in that year. Of this total,
3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that most providers of incumbent local exchange
service are small businesses that may be affected by the rules and
policies adopted. One thousand three hundred and seven (1,307)
Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers reported that they were incumbent
local exchange service providers. Of this total, an estimated 1,006
have 1,500 or fewer employees.
64. Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (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 NAICS Code category is Wired
Telecommunications Carriers, as defined in paragraph 11 of this FRFA.
Under that size standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. U.S. Census data for 2012 indicate that 3,117 firms
operated during that year. Of that number, 3,083 operated with fewer
than 1,000 employees. Based on this data, the Commission concludes that
the majority of Competitive LECs, CAPs, Shared-Tenant Service
Providers, and Other Local Service Providers are small entities.
According to Commission data, 1,442 carriers reported that they were
engaged in the provision of either competitive local exchange services
or competitive access provider services. Of these 1,442 carriers, an
estimated 1,256 have 1,500 or fewer employees. In addition, 17 carriers
have reported that they are Shared-Tenant Service Providers, and all 17
are estimated to have 1,500 or fewer employees. In addition, 72
carriers have reported that they are Other Local Service Providers. Of
this total, 70 have 1,500 or fewer 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 that may be
affected by the adopted rules.
65. Interexchange Carriers (IXCs). Neither the Commission nor the
SBA has developed a definition for Interexchange Carriers. The closest
NAICS Code category is Wired Telecommunications Carriers as defined in
paragraph 11 of this FRFA. The applicable size standard under SBA rules
is that such a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
According to Commission data, 359 companies reported that their primary
telecommunications service activity was the provision of interexchange
services. Of this total, an estimated 317 have 1,500 or fewer employees
and 42 have more than 1,500 employees. Consequently, the Commission
estimates that the majority of interexchange service providers are
small entities that may be affected by rules adopted.
66. Local Resellers. The SBA has developed a small business size
standard for the category of Telecommunications Resellers. The
Telecommunications Resellers industry comprises establishments engaged
in purchasing access and network capacity from owners and operators of
telecommunications networks and reselling wired and wireless
telecommunications services (except satellite) to businesses and
households. Establishments in this industry resell telecommunications;
they do not operate transmission facilities and infrastructure. Mobile
virtual network operators (MVNOs) are included in this
[[Page 47306]]
industry. Under that size standard, such a business is small if it has
1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for 2012 show that 1,341 firms
provided resale services during that year. Of that number, all operated
with fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this category and the
associated small business size standard, the majority of these prepaid
calling card providers can be considered small entities.
67. Toll Resellers. The Commission has not developed a definition
for Toll Resellers. The closest NAICS Code Category is
Telecommunications Resellers. The Telecommunications Resellers industry
comprises establishments engaged in purchasing access and network
capacity from owners and operators of telecommunications networks and
reselling wired and wireless telecommunications services (except
satellite) to businesses and households. Establishments in this
industry resell telecommunications; they do not operate transmission
facilities and infrastructure. Mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs)
are included in this industry. The SBA has developed a small business
size standard for the category of Telecommunications Resellers. Under
that size standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. Census data for 2012 show that 1,341 firms provided resale
services during that year. Of that number, 1,341 operated with fewer
than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this category and the associated
small business size standard, the majority of these resellers can be
considered small entities. According to Commission data, 881 carriers
have reported that they are engaged in the provision of toll resale
services. Of this total, an estimated 857 have 1,500 or fewer
employees. Consequently, the Commission estimates that the majority of
toll resellers are small entities.
68. Other Toll Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has
developed a definition for small businesses specifically applicable to
Other Toll Carriers. This category includes toll carriers that do not
fall within the categories of interexchange carriers, operator service
providers, prepaid calling card providers, satellite service carriers,
or toll resellers. The closest applicable NAICS Code category is for
Wired Telecommunications Carriers as defined above. Under the
applicable SBA size standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500
or fewer employees. Census data for 2012 show that there were 3,117
firms that operated that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated with fewer
than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this category and the associated
small business size standard, the majority of Other Toll Carriers can
be considered small. According to internally developed Commission data,
284 companies reported that their primary telecommunications service
activity was the provision of other toll carriage. Of these, an
estimated 279 have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that most Other Toll Carriers are small entities
that may be affected by rules adopted pursuant to the Third RCC FNRPM.
69. Prepaid Calling Card Providers. The SBA has developed a
definition for small businesses within the category of
Telecommunications Resellers. Under that SBA definition, such a
business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. According to the
Commission's Form 499 Filer Database, 500 companies reported that they
were engaged in the provision of prepaid calling cards. The Commission
does not have data regarding how many of these 500 companies have 1,500
or fewer employees. Consequently, the Commission estimates that there
are 500 or fewer prepaid calling card providers that may be affected by
the rules.
70. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite). This
industry comprises establishments engaged in operating and maintaining
switching and transmission facilities to provide communications via the
airwaves, such as cellular services, paging services, wireless internet
access, and wireless video services. The appropriate size standard
under SBA rules is that such a business is small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. For this industry, Census data for 2012 show that
there were 967 firms that operated for the entire year. Of this total,
955 firms had fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus under this category and
the associated size standard, the Commission estimates that the
majority of wireless telecommunications carriers (except satellite) are
small entities. Similarly, according to internally developed Commission
data, 413 carriers reported that they were engaged in the provision of
wireless telephony, including cellular service, Personal Communications
Service (PCS), and Specialized Mobile Radio (SMR) services. Of this
total, an estimated 261 have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently,
the Commission estimates that approximately half of these firms can be
considered small. Thus, using available data, we estimate that the
majority of wireless firms can be considered small.
71. Wireless Communications Services. This service can be used for
fixed, mobile, radiolocation, and digital audio broadcasting satellite
uses. The Commission defined ``small business'' for the wireless
communications services (WCS) auction as an entity with average gross
revenues of $40 million for each of the three preceding years, and a
``very small business'' as an entity with average gross revenues of $15
million for each of the three preceding years. The SBA has approved
these definitions.
72. Wireless Telephony. Wireless telephony includes cellular,
personal communications services, and specialized mobile radio
telephony carriers. As noted, the SBA has developed a small business
size standard for Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite). Under the SBA small business size standard, a business is
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. According to Commission data,
413 carriers reported that they were engaged in wireless telephony. Of
these, an estimated 261 have 1,500 or fewer employees and 152 have more
than 1,500 employees. Therefore, a little less than one third of these
entities can be considered small.
73. Cable and Other Subscription Programming. This industry
comprises establishments primarily engaged in operating studios and
facilities for the broadcasting of programs on a subscription or fee
basis. The broadcast programming is typically narrowcast in nature
(e.g. limited format, such as news, sports, education, or youth-
oriented). These establishments produce programming in their own
facilities or acquire programming from external sources. The
programming material is usually delivered to a third party, such as
cable systems or direct-to-home satellite systems, for transmission to
viewers. The SBA has established a size standard for this industry
stating that a business in this industry is small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. The 2012 Economic Census indicates that 367 firms were
operational for that entire year. Of this total, 357 operated with less
than 1,000 employees. Accordingly we conclude that a substantial
majority of firms in this industry are small under the applicable SBA
size standard.
74. Cable Companies and Systems (Rate Regulation). The Commission
has developed its own small business size standards for the purpose of
cable rate regulation. Under the Commission's rules, a ``small cable
company'' is one serving 400,000 or fewer subscribers nationwide.
Industry data indicate that there are currently 4,600 active cable
systems in the United States. Of this total, all but nine cable
operators nationwide are small under the 400,000-
[[Page 47307]]
subscriber size standard. In addition, under the Commission's rate
regulation rules, a ``small system'' is a cable system serving 15,000
or fewer subscribers. Current Commission records show 4,600 cable
systems nationwide. Of this total, 3,900 cable systems have fewer than
15,000 subscribers, and 700 systems have 15,000 or more subscribers,
based on the same records. Thus, under this standard as well, we
estimate that most cable systems are small entities.
75. Cable System Operators (Telecom Act Standard). The
Communications Act of 1934, as amended, also contains a size standard
for small cable system operators, which is ``a cable operator that,
directly or through an affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer than
one percent of all subscribers in the United States and is not
affiliated with any entity or entities whose gross annual revenues in
the aggregate exceed $250,000,000 are approximately 52,403,705 cable
video subscribers in the United States today. Accordingly, an operator
serving fewer than 524,037 subscribers shall be deemed a small operator
if its annual revenues, when combined with the total annual revenues of
all its affiliates, do not exceed $250 million in the aggregate. Based
on available data, we find that all but nine incumbent cable operators
are small entities under this size standard. We note that the
Commission neither requests nor collects information on whether cable
system operators are affiliated with entities whose gross annual
revenues exceed $250 million. Although it seems certain that some of
these cable system operators are affiliated with entities whose gross
annual revenues exceed $250,000,000, we are unable at this time to
estimate with greater precision the number of cable system operators
that would qualify as small cable operators under the definition in the
Communications Act.
76. All Other Telecommunications. ``All Other Telecommunications''
is defined as follows: ``This U.S. industry is comprised of
establishments that are primarily engaged in providing specialized
telecommunications services, such as satellite tracking, communications
telemetry, and radar station operation. This industry also includes
establishments primarily engaged in providing satellite terminal
stations and associated facilities connected with one or more
terrestrial systems and capable of transmitting telecommunications to,
and receiving telecommunications from, satellite systems.
Establishments providing internet services or voice over internet
protocol (VoIP) services via client supplied telecommunications
connections are also included in this industry.'' The SBA has developed
a small business size standard for ``All Other Telecommunications,''
which consists of all such firms with gross annual receipts of $32.5
million or less. For this category, Census Bureau data for 2012 show
that there were 1,442 firms that operated for the entire year. Of those
firms, a total of 1,400 had annual receipts less than $25 million.
Consequently, we conclude that the majority of All Other
Telecommunications firms can be considered small.
E. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements
77. In this Order, we revise our rules to better address ongoing
problems in the completion of long-distance telephone calls to rural
areas; namely, providing insight into the identity of intermediate
providers in the voice call market, and accountability to both covered
providers and the Commission. In so doing, we require intermediate
providers to furnish information to a publicly available online
registry maintained by the Commission that allows for better
transparency and accountability these entities in the voice call
routing system.
F. Steps Taken To Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities and Significant Alternatives Considered
78. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant,
specifically small business, 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 and
reporting requirements under the rules for such 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 such small
entities.
79. The Order adopts reforms that apply across the voice calling
system, including small entities. As described in the Order, in
adopting these reforms, we sought comment on the impact of our rule
changes on all size providers, and considered significant alternatives
to provide insight into the identity of intermediate providers in the
voice call market, and establish accountability to covered providers
and the Commission.
80. First, we apply our registration requirement to all
intermediate providers, as we define them in this Third Report and
Order, but we clarify that this requirement does not apply to entities
incidentally carrying, routing, or transmitting voice traffic. This
clarification will reduce the burden on all entities, including small
providers, which do not have specific business arrangements to carry
traffic, but which transmission of voice traffic is merely incident to
operation. Because this measure involves furnishing presently existing
information on intermediate provider company leadership, rural call
completion technical point of contact, contact information thereof, and
places of operation, we find little if no additional burden to
providers in consolidating such information and furnishing this
information to the Commission via an online registry. As such we find
that this is a low-cost measure to facilitate industry collaboration to
address call completion issues, and increase accountability and
transparency of intermediate providers in the voice call market.
81. In addition, we revised our proposal to require intermediate
provider registry changes within one week of the change, to a time
period of ten business days, based upon record concerns that the
proposed time period was burdensome.
82. Finally, we adopted an exception to our prohibition on use of
unregistered intermediate providers by covered providers transmitting
covered voice communications in the case of force majeure, to minimize
burdens covered providers may experience in complying with our rules
during force majeure, and accordingly provide for an initial exemption
period of up to 180 days, which may be extended upon covered provider
request.
G. Report to Congress
83. The Commission will send a copy of the Report and Order,
including this FRFA, in a report to be sent to Congress pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act. In addition, the Commission will send a copy
of the Report and Order, including this FRFA, to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the SBA. A copy of the Report and Order and FRFA (or
summaries thereof) will also be published in the Federal Register.
III. Procedural Matters
A. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
84. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, see 5
U.S.C. 604, the Commission has prepared a Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (FRFA)
[[Page 47308]]
of the possible significant economic impact on small entities of the
policies and rules, as proposed, addressed in this Third Report and
Order. The FRFA is set forth above. The Commission will send a copy of
this Third Report and Order, including the FRFA, to the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration (SBA).
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
85. This Third Report and Order contains new or modified
information collection requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (PRA), Public Law 104-13. It will be submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review under section 3507(d)
of the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3507. OMB, the general public, and other Federal
agencies will be invited to comment on the revised information
collection requirements contained in this proceeding. In addition, we
note that pursuant to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002,
Public Law 107-198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4), we previously sought
specific comment on how the Commission might further reduce the
information collection burden for small business concerns with fewer
than 25 employees.
86. In this present document, we require intermediate providers to
register in our publicly available intermediate provider registry
within 30 days after a Public Notice announcing the approval by the
Office of Management and Budget of the final rules establishing the
registry. We have assessed the effects of this rule and find that any
burden on small businesses will be minimal because this is a low-cost
measure seeking readily available information that will improve
transparency and accountability in the call routing system.
C. Congressional Review Act
87. The Commission will send a copy of this Third Report and Order
to Congress and the Government Accountability Office pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
D. Contact Person
88. For further information about this proceeding, please contact
Zach Ross, FCC Wireline Competition Bureau, Competition Policy
Division, Room 5-C211, 445 12th Street SW, Washington, DC 20554, at
(202) 418-1033 or [email protected]
IV. Ordering Clauses
89. Accordingly, it is ordered that, pursuant to sections 1, 4(i),
201(b), 202(a), 217, and 262 of the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 201(b), 202(a), 217, and 262, this
Third Report and Order and Order is adopted.
90. It is further ordered that Part 64 of the Commission's rules
are amended as set forth in Appendix A.
91. It is further ordered that, pursuant to sections 1.4(b)(1) and
1.103(a) of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.4(b)(1), 1.103(a), this
Third Report and Order shall be effective 30 days after publication of
a summary in the Federal Register, except for the addition of section
64.2115 to the Commission's rules, which will become effective 30 days
after the announcement in the Federal Register of Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) approval and an effective date of the rules.
92. It is further ordered that pursuant to the authority contained
in sections 1, 4(i), 201(b), 202(a), 217, 218, 220(a), 251(a), and 262
of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i),
201(b), 202(a), 217, 218, 220(a), 251(a), and 262, USTelecom's Petition
for Stay filed on June 11, 2018 in WC Docket No. 13-39 is denied.
93. It is further ordered that the Commission shall send a copy of
this Third Report and Order to Congress and to the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional Review Act, see 5
U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
94. It is further ordered that the Commission's Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference Information Center, shall send a
copy of this Third Report and Order, including the Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis and Initial 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, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Telecommunications, Telephone.
Federal Communications Commission.
Katura Jackson,
Federal Register Liaison Officer, Office of the Secretary.
Final Rules
For the reasons set forth above, the Federal Communications
Commission amends 47 CFR part 64 as follows:
PART 64--MISCELLANEOUS RULES RELATING TO COMMON CARRIERS
0
1. Revise the authority citation for part 64 to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 202, 225, 251(e), 254(k), 262,
403(b)(2)(B), (c), 616, 620, Public Law 104-104, 110 Stat. 56.
Interpret or apply 47 U.S.C. 201, 202, 217, 218, 220, 222, 225, 226,
227, 228, 251(a), 251(e), 254(k), 262 616, 620, and the Middle Class
Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012, Pub. L. 112-96, unless
otherwise noted.
0
2. Amend Sec. 64.2101 by adding a definition of ``covered voice
communication'' in alphabetical order and revising the definition of
``intermediate provider'' to read as follows:
Sec. 64.2101 Definitions.
* * * * *
Covered voice communication. The term ``covered voice
communication'' means a voice communication (including any related
signaling information) that is generated--
(1) From the placement of a call from a connection using a North
American Numbering Plan resource or a call placed to a connection using
such a numbering resource; and
(2) Through any service provided by a covered provider.
* * * * *
Intermediate provider. The term ``intermediate provider'' means any
entity that--
(1) Enters into a business arrangement with a covered provider or
other intermediate provider for the specific purpose of carrying,
routing, or transmitting voice traffic that is generated from the
placement of a call placed--
(i) From an end user connection using a North American Numbering
Plan resource; or
(ii) To an end user connection using such a numbering resource; and
(2) Does not itself, either directly or in conjunction with an
affiliate, serve as a covered provider in the context of originating or
terminating a given call.
0
3. Add Sec. 64.2115 to subpart V to read as follows:
Sec. 64.2115 Registration of Intermediate Providers.
(a) Registration. An intermediate provider that offers or holds
itself out as offering the capability to transmit covered voice
communications from one destination to another and that charges any
rate to any other entity (including an affiliated entity) for the
transmission shall register with the Commission in accordance with this
section. The intermediate provider shall provide the following
information in its registration:
(1) The intermediate provider's business name(s) and primary
address;
(2) The name(s), telephone number(s), email address(es), and
business address(es) of the intermediate provider's regulatory contact
and/or designated agent for service of process;
[[Page 47309]]
(3) All business names that the intermediate provider has used in
the past;
(4) The state(s) in which the intermediate provider provides
service;
(5) The name, title, business address, telephone number, and email
address of at least one person as well as the department within the
company responsible for addressing rural call completion issues, and;
(6) The name(s), business address, and business telephone number(s)
for an executive leadership contact, such as the chief executive
officer, chief operating officer, or owner(s) of the intermediate
provider, or persons performing an equivalent function, who directs or
manages the entity.
(b) Submission of registration. An intermediate provider that is
subject to the registration requirement in paragraph (a) of this
section shall submit the information described therein to the
intermediate provider registry on the Commission's website. The
registration shall be made under penalty of perjury.
(c) Changes in information. An intermediate provider must update
its submission to the intermediate provider registry on the
Commission's website within 10 business days of any change to the
information it must provide pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section.
0
4. Add Sec. 64.2117 to subpart V to read as follows:
Sec. 64.2117 Use of Registered Intermediate Providers.
(a) Prohibition on use of unregistered intermediate providers. A
covered provider shall not use an intermediate provider to carry,
route, or transmit covered voice communications unless such
intermediate provider is registered pursuant to section 64.2115 of this
subpart.
(b) Force majeure exemption. (1) If, due to a force majeure for
which a covered provider has instituted a disaster recovery plan, there
are no registered intermediate providers available to carry, route, or
transmit covered voice communications, a covered provider need not
comply with paragraph (a) of this section for a period of up to 180
days with respect to those covered voice communications. A covered
provider shall submit to the Commission a certification, signed by a
corporate officer or official with authority to bind the corporation,
and knowledge of the details of the covered provider's inability to
comply with our rules, explaining the circumstances justifying an
exemption under this section as soon as practicable.
(2) A covered provider seeking an extension of the exemption
described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section must submit a request for
an extension of the exemption period to the Commission. Such an
extension request shall, at minimum, include a status report on the
covered provider's attempts to comply with paragraph (a) of this
section; and a statement detailing how the covered provider intends to
ensure that calls are completed notwithstanding the unavailability of
registered intermediate providers.
(3) For purposes of this section, ``force majeure'' means a highly
disruptive event beyond the control of the covered provider, such as a
natural disaster or a terrorist attack.
(4) For purposes of this section, ``disaster recovery plan'' means
a disaster response plan developed by the covered provider for the
purpose of responding to a force majeure event.
[FR Doc. 2018-20239 Filed 9-18-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P