US Court Upholds FCC Rule On Phone Number Transfers
29 April 2009 - 2:13AM
Dow Jones News
A federal court is supporting regulators' efforts to make it
easier for people to switch phone carriers by allowing customers to
keep their phone numbers.
A federal appeals court on Tuesday upheld a Federal
Communications Commission rule requiring landline phone companies
to allow customers take their phone numbers with them when they
switch to a wireless service.
The ruling comes as the FCC is poised to shorten the time period
it takes to "port" a customer's phone number from one carrier to
another. The current standard is four days.
A shorter wait time would spur competition in an industry
heavily influenced by big incumbents, advocates argue. They say
people are reluctant to switch to a competitor phone company if
they must wait a week or more to receive calls from their old
number.
The economic crisis gives new urgency to the issue as more
people are considering switching phone carriers or cutting their
landline service to save money.
Telecommunications companies seeking a shortened interval are
asking for a 24-hour standard but the FCC appears more likely to
adopt a 48-hour rule, according to people familiar with the
discussions.
The FCC is slated to vote on the number porting item at its May
13 meeting.
The FCC began its rulemaking on phone number porting in 1996,
when it required local phone companies to allow customers to keep
their phone numbers if they switched carriers and stayed in the
same location.
In 2003, the FCC expanded the porting requirement to include
people who "cut the cord" by shutting off their landline phones in
favor of a cellular service.
The National Telephone Cooperative Association, a group of small
rural phone companies, challenged the rule. NTCA said the number
porting requirement unduly burdens its members who bear high
interconnection costs when transferring calls to cellular
providers.
The three-judge panel rejected NTCA's claims, noting that rural
carriers' disproportionate interconnection costs aren't unique to
phone number porting. The FCC is addressing that problem in a
larger policy discussion on how phone carriers pay each other to
transfer calls, the court noted.
Small phone companies like Windstream Corp. (WIN) also are
telling the FCC that shortening the number porting period would be
too costly for them.
The FCC is considering waiving a shortened porting period for
small carriers, but larger carriers like AT&T Inc. (T) and
Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) now are arguing that any new
standard should apply to all carriers, regardless of their
status.
Rep. Rick Boucher, D-Va., who chairs a telecommunications
subcommittee in the House, has asked the FCC to consider ways that
small carriers can be compensated for the extra expense of a quick
phone number transfer.
-By Fawn Johnson, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9263;
fawn.johnson@dowjones.com