99-29220. Interconnection and Resale Obligations in the Commercial Mobile Radio Services and Forbearance Issues  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 216 (Tuesday, November 9, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 61022-61028]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-29220]
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    47 CFR Part 20
    
    [CC Docket No. 94-54, WT Docket No. 98-100, GN Docket No. 94-33; FCC 
    99-250]
    
    
    Interconnection and Resale Obligations in the Commercial Mobile 
    Radio Services and Forbearance Issues
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule; reconsideration.
    
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    SUMMARY: This document generally affirms the Commission's earlier 
    decision in this proceeding to extend the cellular resale rule to 
    include certain broadband personal communications service (PCS) and 
    specialized mobile radio providers and to sunset the rule as of 
    November 24, 2002. However, this document modifies the previous 
    decision by removing customer premises equipment (CPE) and CPE in 
    bundled packages from the scope of the resale rule, by revising the 
    scope of the resale rule to exclude all C, D, E, and F block PCS 
    licensees that do not own and control and are not owned and controlled 
    by cellular or A or B block licensees, and by exempting from the rule 
    all SMR and other Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) providers 
    that do not utilize in-network switching facilities. This document also 
    clarifies certain aspects of the resale rule, and denies a Petition for 
    Reconsideration of the Commission's denial of a request for forbearance 
    from the resale rule. The action is intended to resolve issues raised 
    in several Petitions regarding the CMRS resale rule and forbearance.
    
    DATES: Effective January 10, 2000.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jane Phillips, 202-418-1310.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's 
    Memorandum Opinion and Order on Reconsideration (MO&O) in CC Docket No. 
    94-54, WT Docket No. 98-100, and GN Docket No. 94-33; FCC 99-250, 
    adopted September 15, 1999, and released September 27, 1999. The 
    complete text of this MO&O is available for inspection and copying 
    during normal business hours in the FCC Reference Information Center, 
    Courtyard Level, 445 12th Street, S.W., Washington, DC, and also may be 
    purchased from the Commission's copy contractor, International 
    Transcription Services (ITS, Inc.), CY-B400, 445 12th Street, S.W., 
    Washington, DC.
    
    Synopsis of the MO&O
    
        1. The First Report and Order in this proceeding (61 FR 38399, July 
    24, 1996) promulgated a rule prohibiting certain CMRS providers from 
    restricting the resale of their services during a transitional period. 
    This resale rule, which previously had applied only to cellular 
    providers, was extended to PCS and certain specialized mobile radio 
    (covered SMR) services. The First Report and Order (First R&O) sunset 
    this resale rule five years after the date of the award of the last 
    group of initial licenses for broadband PCS, which the Commission 
    subsequently determined to be November 25, 1997. (See Public Notice of 
    July 2, 1998, in CC Docket No. 94-54, 13 FCC Rcd 17427, 1998.) 
    Accordingly, the resale rule is currently set to expire at the close of 
    November 24, 2002.
        2. This Memorandum Opinion and Order on Reconsideration (MO&O) 
    generally affirms the Commission's decisions in the First R&O to extend 
    the cellular resale rule to include certain
    
    [[Page 61023]]
    
    broadband PCS service and SMR providers, and to sunset the rule as of 
    November 24, 2002. However, the MO&O modifies the initial decision in 
    three key respects. First, the MO&O removes customer premises equipment 
    (CPE) and CPE in bundled packages from the scope of the resale rule. 
    Second, the MO&O revises the scope of the resale rule to exclude all C, 
    D, E, and F block PCS licensees that do not own and control and are not 
    owned and controlled by cellular or A or B block PCS licenses. Third, 
    the MO&O exempts from the rule all SMR and other Commercial Mobile 
    Radio Service (CMRS) providers that do not utilize in-network switching 
    facilities. In addition, the MO&O clarifies certain other aspects of 
    the resale rule. Finally, the MO&O denies a Petition for 
    Reconsideration of the Commission's denial of a request for forbearance 
    from the resale rule filed by the Broadband Personal Communications 
    Services Alliance of the Personal Communications Industry Association 
    (PCIA), pursuant to section 10(a) of the Communications Act (Act). (See 
    47 U.S.C. 160(a)(1)-(3).
        3. The MO&O denies a request by several petitioners that the 
    Commission reconsider its decision in the First R&O to extend the 
    resale rule to broadband PCS and covered SMR providers. The Commission 
    finds that no new arguments have been presented and that circumstances 
    have not changed since the adoption of the First R&O in a way that 
    would warrant elimination of the resale rule prior to the sunset date. 
    The Commission continues to believe that, as a general matter, the 
    benefits of the resale rule outweigh its costs during this transitional 
    period as the marketplace becomes more competitive. These public 
    interest benefits include: (1) Encouraging competitive pricing; (2) 
    discouraging unjust, unreasonable, and unreasonably discriminatory 
    carrier practices; (3) reducing the need for detailed regulatory 
    intervention and the administrative expenditures and potential for 
    market distortions that may accompany such intervention; (4) promoting 
    innovation and the efficient deployment and use of telecommunications 
    facilities; (5) improving carrier management and marketing; (6) 
    generating increased research and development; and (7) affecting 
    positively the growth of the market for telecommunications services. 
    Therefore, the MO&O retains the rule with certain modifications and 
    clarifications.
        4. The MO&O also affirms the Commission's decision to terminate the 
    resale rule at the end of the sunset period. Some petitioners argue 
    that the Commission should refrain from sunsetting the rule at the end 
    of the five year period because the market for cellular and substitute 
    services is not fully competitive and will remain at this level for the 
    foreseeable future. The MO&O finds that such petitioners fail to 
    present any new facts or arguments to persuade the Commission that the 
    decision to sunset the resale rule should be revised in any way. Others 
    contend that the sunset for cellular providers was promulgated without 
    sufficient notice because the Commission failed to indicate in the 
    First Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (59 FR 35664, July 13, 1994) or the 
    Second Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (60 FR 20949, April 28, 1999) that 
    it was considering the adoption of a sunset provision for the cellular 
    resale requirement. The MO&O rejects this position, concluding that any 
    suggestion that the sunset provision was promulgated without sufficient 
    notice in the Second Notice of Proposed Rulemaking is without merit. 
    Other parties oppose the sunset provision claiming that any restriction 
    on resale violates sections 201(b) and 202(a) of the Communications 
    Act, unless the restricting party proves that resale would cause public 
    harm. The MO&O disagrees with this interpretation, finding that those 
    who support this argument have misconstrued the obligations imposed by 
    sections 201(b) and 202(a) and that the statutory arguments are thus 
    without merit.
        5. Although the MO&O maintains the sunset of the resale rule, the 
    Commission's decision should not be construed as a lack of commitment 
    to ensuring compliance with the resale obligation during the period in 
    which it is force. On the contrary, the Commission intends to take 
    effective and expeditious action against any carrier that fails to 
    comply with its obligations under the resale rule.
        6. The Commission recognizes that, in addition to simple refusals 
    to offer resale agreements, violations of the resale requirements may 
    take a variety of forms, including a carrier's unreasonable refusal to 
    offer resellers the same bundled packages of airtime and enhanced 
    services or the same volume discounts that the carrier offers to its 
    retailers. Thus, the Commission intends to look closely at allegations 
    of unreasonable restrictions on resale and to resolve expeditiously 
    complaints about whether the challenged restriction on resale is 
    reasonable. The Commission intends to initiate a stepped up mediation 
    program under which it will first attempt to resolve any formal or 
    informal complaints filed by a reseller through negotiation. In those 
    instances where the parties cannot reach agreement or where negotiation 
    does not appear to be a viable approach, the Commission will expedite 
    the complaint proceeding, to the fullest extent possible, in order to 
    ascertain whether the carrier in question is acting in derogation of 
    the resale rule requirement. In cases in which the Commission 
    determines that a violation of the rule has occurred, it intends to 
    impose rigorous enforcement measures, including, in appropriate cases, 
    the revocation of licenses and the imposition of forfeiture penalties.
        7. The MO&O also considers petitions requesting that the Commission 
    reverse the decision in the First R&O that the resale rule applies to 
    bundled packages of services such as CPE of enhanced services. The 
    Commission finds the petitioners' argument that the Commission provided 
    no notice to parties that the resale requirement might be extended to 
    bundled packages but has eliminated CPE and CPE in bundled packages 
    from the scope of the resale rule. The MO&O retains the rule, however, 
    for bundled packages that include enhanced services, because, at least 
    as CMRS enhanced services are presently provided, neither subscribers 
    nor resellers can purchase the service component of the bundle from one 
    provider and the enhanced service component of the bundle from another 
    provider.
        8. The MO&O next modifies the scope of the resale rule. The First 
    R&O concluded that the benefits of the mandatory CMRS resale rule will 
    continue to exceed its costs so long as mobile voice and data markets 
    are not yet fully competitive. The MO&O relies on this cost/benefit 
    methodology to revise tune the scope of the resale rule by eliminating 
    from its coverage those providers or services for which analysis 
    suggests that the rule is unnecessary.
        9. First, a review of the record convinces the Commission that the 
    benefits that might accrue as a result of imposing resale obligations 
    on C, D, E, and F block broadband PCS licensees are outweighed, at this 
    time, by the burdens such obligations impose on these carriers. In 
    contrast to more established firms, no significant benefits accrue from 
    subjecting smaller, new entrant competitors with limited network 
    infrastructure and minimal market share to the requirements of the 
    resale rule. The MO&O concludes that the A and B-block licensees are 
    the more likely of the broadband PCS block licensees to have capacity 
    to resell, whereas the C, D, E, and F block licensees have the greater 
    need to
    
    [[Page 61024]]
    
    purchase capacity for resale, due to their relative underdevelopment. 
    The Commission thus believes that there are benefits from subjecting A 
    and B block licensees to the resale rule and to exempting licensees in 
    the C, D, E, and F blocks, whose minimal development and incentive to 
    restrict resale suggest that a resale requirement for them would be of 
    limited, if any, utility. The Commission recognizes that many cellular 
    and A and B block licensees also own licenses in the C, D, E, and F 
    blocks. Therefore, the MO&O excludes from the coverage of the resale 
    rule only those C, D, E, and F block PCS licensees that do not own and 
    control and are not owned and controlled by firms also holding 
    cellular, A or B block licenses.
        10. Second, the MO&O considers exclusion for certain SMR providers. 
    The First R&O limited the scope of the resale rule to SMR providers in 
    the 800-900 MHz bands that hold geographic area licenses and offer 
    real-time, two-way switched voice service that is interconnected with 
    the public switched network (PSTN) and to Incumbent Wide Area SMR 
    licensees that provide such services. On reconsideration, the 
    Commission now concludes that its objective with respect to SMR is best 
    achieved by limiting the resale rule to reach only those SMR providers 
    that offer real-time two-way switched service that is interconnected 
    with PSTN utilizing an in-network switching facility that enables the 
    provider to reuse frequencies and accomplish seamless hand-off of 
    subscriber calls. In so doing, the Commission abandons its previous 
    criterion, which was based on a carrier's license authority, in favor 
    of a technical and operational criterion, i.e., in-network switching 
    capacity, which more closely parallels the Commission's intention to 
    cover only those SMR carriers that compete directly with providers of 
    cellular service and broadband PCS. The Commission agrees with those 
    petitioners who maintain that the definition of ``covered SMR'' adopted 
    in the First R&O is overinclusive with respect to certain types of SMR 
    systems. The Commission does not believe that it serves the public 
    interest to extend the explicit rule against unreasonable resale 
    restrictions to carriers offering only geographically or functionally 
    limited services, such as dispatch, that are unlikely to be attractive 
    to resellers in any event.
        11. Although there may be limited practical significance to 
    extending the exclusion for SMR systems lacking in-network switching 
    capacity to cellular and broadband providers, the Commission concludes 
    that they should be treated consistently with SMR providers to the 
    extent they do not utilize an in-network switching facility or do not 
    meet other elements of the Commission's coverage test. As in the 
    contexts of number portability and E911, the Commission has extended 
    its modified ``covered SMR'' definition to providers of similar service 
    over cellular and broadband PCS spectrum as well.
        12. Third, the MO&O reviews other proposed exemptions for SMR. The 
    MO&O rejects the alternative proposal that the resale rule exclude 
    providers or systems that serve fewer than a particular number of 
    mobile of mobile units. The Commission believes that a definition based 
    solely on the size of a system without regard for the types of services 
    provided would be arbitrary and incompatible with its policy 
    objectives. Instead, the Commission seeks to develop a definition that 
    covers providers based on the functional nature of the service they 
    provide.
        13. The MO&O also rejects the contention of Nextel Communications 
    Inc. (Nextel) that all SMR providers should be excluded from the 
    requirements of the resale rule. Nextel argues that capacity restraints 
    on SMR spectrum mandate continuing technical control over SMR systems 
    and end users.that cannot accommodate the disjunction between the 
    system operator and the end user that middlemen like resellers create, 
    without significant costs to system integrity. Nextel also argues that 
    its spectrum is highly encumbered and that the relocation is just 
    beginning, and that an SMR provider must integrate the use of this type 
    of spectrum with that allocated on a site-specific-basis, as well as 
    integrating its analog services with its digital offerings. The 
    Commission finds that these arguments have already been made and 
    rejected in this proceeding and there is no new compelling evidence to 
    change the Commission's earlier position. In general, the Commission 
    finds that the problem of transitioning from analog to digital service 
    is not unique to SMR, and that, as indicated in the First R&O, it is 
    unclear how SMR providers would lose control over their daily 
    operations if their services were purchased by parties intending to 
    resell the services rather than being purchased by end users. In 
    particular the Commission notes that Nextel is rapidly moving away from 
    traditional dispatch service with the introduction of its four-function 
    Direct Connect service package. While the coverage and usage demands 
    placed on the system by this package are potentially greater than 
    traditional dispatch, it is not clear, and Nextel does not adequately 
    explain, why a reseller of such a package would place any greater or 
    more unpredictable demands upon Nextel's system than Nextel itself 
    does, in offering this service to its own retail customers. Under these 
    circumstances, the Commission finds unconvincing Nextel's arguments 
    against permitting a reseller to purchase Nextel's Direct Connect 
    service package for resale, or permitting a reseller to acquire the 
    billing data and other information necessary for traditional resale.
        14. The MO&O also looks at proposed amendments to the resale rule. 
    The MO&O first considers arguments that the resale rule should be 
    amended to clarify that only ``unreasonable'' restrictions on resale 
    are prohibited. The MO&O agrees with those who ask that the Commission 
    clarify the resale rule to make the text of the rule consistent with 
    existing Commission policy. This change in rule would clarify that the 
    reasonableness standard continues to apply in the resale context. 
    Accordingly, the MO&O amends the rule to prohibit only unreasonable 
    restrictions on resale. However, the Commission does not deem it 
    advisable to delineate in the rule itself what bases it might consider 
    reasonable for denying resale. The MO&O also clarifies, but cannot and 
    does not resolve definitively for each carrier, the issue of billing 
    tapes. To the extent that electronic billing tapes are available, or 
    could be made available without significant alterations to a carrier's 
    billing systems, the Commission would expect that a carrier would 
    provide access to them for a reseller as part of its responsibilities 
    under the resale rule, and the Commission would likely find it a 
    violation of the resale rule should the carrier fail to do so. On the 
    other hand, carriers are not required to undertake major alterations to 
    their billing systems to accommodate reseller requests.
        15. The MO&O rejects a proposed amendment to the resale rule that 
    would clarify that resale restrictions based on limited capacity are 
    reasonable and are therefore permitted under the rule. As an initial 
    matter, the MO&O notes that the First R&O indicated clearly that no 
    provider is required to add capacity in order to accommodate a 
    reseller. The Commission does add, however, that virtually all CMRS 
    carriers are adding capacity to their systems in one form or another, 
    as this is a rapidly growing market, and, in that sense, all could 
    claim to be facing capacity restraints to a certain degree. Obviously, 
    a generalized assertion of capacity limitations, where capacity is 
    actively being brought on line and service is being aggressively 
    marketed to retail
    
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    customers (including high volume customers), would not provide an 
    adequate basis to deny service to resellers. Beyond this, the 
    Commission declines to make a blanket determination as to what capacity 
    limitations or evidence thereof might constitute reasonable grounds to 
    restrict resale.
        16. AT&T Corporation (AT&T) seeks an exemption from the resale rule 
    for data services providers using cellular or broadband PCS spectrum. 
    It points out that such services are presently subject to the resale 
    rule, whereas data service offered by SMR providers are exempt, that 
    such disparate treatment is inequitable and that a comparable exemption 
    should be created for data services provided by cellular and PCS 
    carriers. Upon reconsideration, the Commission reiterates its position 
    in the First R&O that it would be imprudent to distinguish between data 
    services and other services offered using CMRS spectrum and extends the 
    rule to cover SMR as well as another CMRS data services. The MO&O also 
    dismisses arguments that the resale rule should not be applied to data 
    services because the data services market is nascent and no carrier has 
    a competitive advantage.
        17. With respect to SMR services, the Commission now concludes that 
    excluding data services from the resale rule would likely create 
    enforcement problems because it can be difficult to determine, as an 
    enforcement matter, whether a carrier is offering voice or data 
    services over digital transmission facilities. Thus, the Commission 
    extends the resale rule to data services offered using SMR spectrum to 
    the same extent that it applies to voice services. The MO&O determines 
    to apply the resale rule to providers of real-time, two-way switched 
    data service that is interconnected with the PSTN and that is offered 
    over cellular, broadband PCS, or SMR spectrum utilizing an in-network 
    switching facility.
        18. The MO&O dismisses a request that the Commission clarify that 
    the resale rule does not require unrestricted resale of services that 
    include proprietary technologies and products. Supporters of such a 
    clarification maintain that a resale requirement would reduce the 
    incentive for carriers to innovate by diminishing the competitive 
    advantages yielded by their investment. Absent a more focused showing 
    on this issue, the Commission declines to adopt a general ``proprietary 
    technology'' exception to the resale rule, which would likely prove 
    difficult, and unnecessarily burdensome to administer during the 
    remaining three-year life of the rule.
        19. The Commission emphasizes that under the CMRS resale rule, a 
    carrier is not required to offer a reseller wholesale prices or special 
    packages or configurations of services tailored to the reseller's 
    demands, but only to allow a reseller to purchase, at non-
    discriminatory prices, those services that the carrier is offering to 
    its own retail customers. The MO&O concludes that were the Commission 
    to allow carriers to restrict resale of services that include 
    proprietary technologies before sufficient competition develops, the 
    exception could severely restrict the opportunities for resale. The 
    MO&O reiterates the position taken in the Forbearance Memorandum 
    Opinion and Order (Forbearance M&O) (63 FR 43033, August 11, 1998) that 
    ``the obligation to permit resale [does not] significantly discourage 
    facilities-based carriers from innovating in a market that has not 
    achieved sufficient competition.''
        20. The MO&O considers a Petition for Reconsideration of the 
    Forbearance MO&O, filed by the Personal Communications Industry 
    Association (PCIA). PCIA maintains that the resale rule should be 
    sunset immediately for all CMRS providers. PCIA contends that 
    forbearance from the CMRS resale rule is consistent with the three 
    prongs of the forbearance test, and that the record does not contain 
    the evidentiary support required by the Administrative Procedure Act 
    (APA) to sustain the Commission's conclusions concerning the costs and 
    benefits of imposing a resale rule or its determination to deny PCIA's 
    request for forbearance from the rule.\1\
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        \1\ Section 10 of the Communications Act (47 U.S.c. 160) 
    requires forbearance if the Commission determines that (1) 
    enforcement of such regulation or provision is not necessary to 
    ensure that the charges, practices, classifications, or regulations 
    by, for, or in connection with that telecommunications carrier or 
    telecommunications service are just and reasonable are not unjustly 
    or unreasonably discriminatory; (2) enforcement of such regulation 
    or provision is not necessary for the protection of consumers; and 
    (3) forbearance from applying such provision or regulation is 
    consistent with the public interest.
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        21. The MO&O dismisses PCIA's request, finding that the present 
    approach provides a necessary degree of flexibility for disposing of 
    market-specific forbearance requests, both with respect to the 
    parameters of the market and the criteria indicative of adequate 
    competition. It would be difficult to establish a meaningful bright-
    line test to be applied across the board in all forbearance 
    proceedings. Furthermore, the near-term sunset of the rule provides an 
    additional reason to retain the present market-by-market approach to 
    forbearance requests respecting resale.
    
    Administrative Matters
    
    Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        22. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 604 
    (RFA),\2\ a Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) was 
    incorporated into the First Report and Order issued in this proceeding. 
    The Commission's Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 
    (Supplemental FRFA) in this Memorandum Opinion and Order on 
    Reconsideration and Order Denying Petition for Forbearance (Order on 
    Reconsideration) contains information additional to that contained in 
    the FRFA and is limited to matters raised on reconsideration with 
    regard to the First Report and Order and addressed in this Order on 
    Reconsideration. This Supplemental FRFA conforms to the RFA.
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        \2\ See 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA, see 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., has 
    been amended by the Contract With American Advancement Act of 1996, 
    Public Law. 104-121, 11 Stat. 847 (1996) (CWAA). Title II of CWAA is 
    the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness act of 1996 
    (SBREFA).
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    I. Need for and Purpose of This Action
        23. By resolving the pending petitions for reconsideration or 
    clarification of the First Report and Order, the actions taken in this 
    Order on Reconsideration will affirm and clarify the Commission's CMRS 
    resale policy, which is intended to help bring the benefits of 
    competition to the market for these services while the market is in 
    transition to a fully competitive state. In addition, the Commission's 
    resale policy is intended to help promote competition by allowing new 
    entrants to enter the marketplace quickly by reselling their 
    competitors' services during the time needed to construct their own 
    facilities.
    II. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by the Public in Response to 
    the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
        24. No petitions for reconsideration were filed in direct response 
    to the FRFA. In petitions for reconsideration or clarification, 
    however, and in responsive pleadings, as well, some issues were raised 
    that might affect small entities. Specifically, some commenters argued 
    that the term covered SMR should be limited to systems that have an in-
    network switching facility or that serve at least a minimum number of 
    mobile units, e.g., at least 100,000 mobile units that provide real-
    time, two-way interconnected voice services or that serve at least 
    20,000 or more subscribers nationwide.
    
    [[Page 61026]]
    
        25. Several other commenters contended, however, that the number of 
    units served bears no necessary relation to the purposes of limiting 
    SMR coverage and that coverage should be determined based on services 
    that compete with SMR providers. Other commenters contended that SMR 
    systems should be subject to the same rules as cellular and broadband 
    PCS in order to preserve regulatory parity in the CMRS market, and 
    that, if small SMR systems are excluded from the rule, small cellular 
    and broadband PCS systems should also be excluded.
    III. Description and Estimates of the Number of Entities Affected by 
    This Order on Reconsideration
        26. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of and, where 
    feasible, an estimate of, the number of small entities that may be 
    affected by the proposed rules, if adopted. (See 5 U.S.C. 603(b)(3). 
    The RFA generally defines the term ``small entity'' as having the same 
    meaning as the term ``small business.'' (See 5 U.S.C. 601(6). In 
    addition, the term ``small business'' has the same meaning as the term 
    ``small business concern'' under the Small Business Act.\3\ 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 Small Business Administration 
    (SBA). (Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 632 (1996).
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        \3\ U.S.C. 601(3) (incorporating by reference the definition of 
    ``small business concern'' in 15 U.S.C. 632). Pursuant to the RFA, 
    the statutory definition of a small business applies ``unless an 
    agency, after consultation with the Office of Advocacy of the Small 
    Business Administration and after opportunity for public comment, 
    establishes one or more definitions of such term which are 
    appropriate to the activities of the agency and publishes such 
    definition(s) in the Federal Register.'' 5 U.S.C. 601(3).
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        27. SMR Licensees. The Commission has defined ``small business'' 
    for purposes of auctioning 900 MHz SMR licenses, 800 MHz SMR licenses 
    for the upper 200 channels, and 800 MHz SMR licenses for the lower 230 
    channels as a firm that has had average annual gross revenues of $15 
    million or less in the three preceding calendar years. This small 
    business size standard for the 800 MHz and 900 MHz auctions has been 
    approved by the SBA. The rule amendment adopted in this Order on 
    Reconsideration affects geographic and wide area SMR providers that 
    were not previously subject to the resale rule because they do not 
    offer real-time, two-way PSTN-interconnected voice service. Such SMR 
    providers will now be subject to the CMRS resale rule if they offer 
    real-time, two-way voice or data service that is interconnected with 
    the public switched network, provided they use an in-network switching 
    facility.
        28. Sixty winning bidders for geographic area licenses in the 900 
    MHz SMR band qualified as small business under the $15 million size 
    standard. We conclude that the number of 900 MHz SMR geographic area 
    licensees affected by this rule modification is at least 60.
        29. Ten winning bidders for geographic area licenses for the upper 
    200 channels in the 800 MHz SMR band qualified as small businesses 
    under the $15 million size standard. It is not possible to determine 
    which of these licensees were not covered by the previous rule but 
    intend to offer real-time, two-way PSTN-interconnected voice or data 
    service utilizing an in-network switching facility. Therefore, we 
    conclude that the number of 800 MHz SMR geographic area licensees for 
    the upper 200 channels affected by this rule modification is at least 
    ten.
        30. The Commission has determined that 3325 geographic area 
    licenses will be awarded in the 800 MHz SMR auction for the lower 230 
    channels. Because the auction of these licenses has not yet been 
    conducted, there is no basis to estimate how many winning bidders will 
    qualify as small businesses under the Commission's $15 million size 
    standard. Nor is it possible to determine which of these licensees 
    would not have been covered by the previous rule but will offer real-
    time, two-way PSTN-interconnected voice or data service utilizing an 
    in-network switching facility. Therefore, we conclude that the number 
    of 800 MHz SMR geographic area licensees for the lower 230 channels 
    that may ultimately be affected by this rule modification is at least 
    3325.
        31. With respect to licensees operating under extended 
    implementation authorizations, approximately 6800 such firms provide 
    800 MHz or 900 MHz SMR service. However, we do not know how many of 
    these were not covered by the previous rule but intend to offer real-
    time, two-way PSTN-interconnected voice or data service utilizing an 
    in-network switching facility or which of this subset qualify as small 
    businesses under the $15 million size standard. We assumed, for 
    purposes of the FRFA, and continue to assume for purposes of this 
    Supplemental FRFA, that all of the remaining existing authorizations 
    are held by licensees qualifying as small businesses under the $15 
    million size standard. Of these, we assume, for purposes of our 
    evaluations and conclusions in this Supplemental FRFA, that none of 
    these licensees was covered by the previous rule but that all of them 
    intend to offer real-time, two-way PSTN-interconnected voice or data 
    service utilizing an in-network switching facility. Therefore, we 
    conclude that the number of SMR licensees operating in the 800 MHz and 
    900 MHz bands under extended implementation authorizations that may be 
    affected by this rule modification is up to 6800.
        32. Cellular Licensees. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
    developed a definition of small entities applicable to cellular 
    licensees. Therefore, the applicable definition of a small entity is 
    the definition under the SBA rules applicable to radiotelephone 
    (wireless) companies. This provides that a small entity is a 
    radiotelephone company employing no more than 1,500 persons. According 
    to the Bureau of the Census, only twelve radiotelephone firms from a 
    total of 1,178 such firms which operated during 1992 had 1,000 or more 
    employees. Therefore, even if all twelve of these firms were cellular 
    telephone companies, nearly all cellular carriers were small businesses 
    under the SBA's definition. In addition, we note that there are 1,758 
    cellular licenses; however, a cellular licensee may own several 
    licenses. In addition, according to the most recent Trends in Telephone 
    Service data, 732 carriers reported that they were engaged in the 
    provision of either cellular service or Personal Communications Service 
    (PCS) services, which are placed together in the data. We do not have 
    data specifying the number of these carriers that are not independently 
    owned and operated or have more than 1,500 employees, and thus are 
    unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of 
    cellular service carriers that would qualify as small business concerns 
    under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are 
    fewer than 732 small cellular service carriers that may be affected by 
    the policies adopted in this Order on Reconsideration.
        33. Broadband Personal Communications Service (PCS). The broadband 
    PCS spectrum is divided into six frequency blocks designated A through 
    F, and the Commission has held auctions for each block. The Commission 
    defined ``small entity'' for Blocks C and F as an entity that has 
    average gross revenues of less than $40 million in the three previous 
    calendar years. For Block F, an additional classification for ``very 
    small business'' was added and is defined as an entity that, together 
    with its affiliates, has average gross revenues of not more than
    
    [[Page 61027]]
    
    $15 million for the preceding three calendar years. No small businesses 
    within the SBA-approved definition bid successfully for licenses in 
    Blocks A and B. There were 90 winning bidders that qualified as small 
    entities in the Block C auctions. A total of 93 small and very small 
    business bidders won approximately 40 percent of the 1,479 licenses for 
    Blocks D, E, and F. Based on this information, we conclude that the 
    number of small broadband PCS licensees will total 183 small entity PCS 
    providers as defined by the SBA and the Commission's auction rules.
    IV. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other 
    Compliance Requirements
        34. Neither the rule adopted in the First Report and Order nor the 
    rule modifications adopted in the Order on Reconsideration impose a 
    reporting or recordkeeping requirement. The resale rule does, however, 
    operate as a negative prohibition forbidding restrictions on the resale 
    of covered services. The only compliance costs likely to be incurred, 
    as a result, are administrative costs to ensure that an entity's 
    practices are in compliance with the rule.
    V. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small 
    Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered
        35. It is important to note, in the first instance, that the 
    imposition of a resale requirement confers substantial benefits on 
    small entities, because a substantial number of those wireless 
    resellers it is designed to protect are small. Moreover, the exemption 
    from its requirements for certain C, D, E and F block licensees also 
    benefits smaller entities because it exempts from the obligations of 
    the resale rule, smaller, new entrant competitors that have little 
    market share and little or no incentive to restrict resale 
    unreasonably.
        36. The Commission has also reduced the potential impact of the 
    resale rule on small entities by continuing to exclude from its 
    requirements those entities that have, traditionally, constituted the 
    smallest of the SMR licensees, i.e., those licensees that do not 
    provide services on an interconnected basis. In the Order on 
    Reconsideration, the Commission has adopted an alternative definition 
    of covered SMR that includes only those systems that have an in-network 
    switching facility. This exception to coverage addresses the concerns 
    of SMR providers that primarily offer traditional dispatch services but 
    whose offer of limited interconnection capability might otherwise 
    subject them to the resale rule as previously drafted. Such a result 
    would have been inconsistent with the Commission's determination that 
    only SMR providers that compete directly with cellular and broadband 
    PCS should be subject to the resale rule, because an important 
    indicator of a provider's ability to compete with traditional cellular 
    and broadband PCS providers is whether the provider's system has ``in-
    network'' switching capability.
        37. In-adopting a network switching criterion, the Commission has 
    rejected a definition of SMR covered services that would exempt SMR 
    providers based on their particular number of mobile units or on 
    capacity. Defining the term covered SMR in terms of its number of 
    subscribers or its capacity could exempt from the resale requirement 
    services that compete in markets where competitive conditions do not 
    yet sufficiently protect against unreasonable restrictions on resale. 
    As we observed in the FRFA, our decision to extend the resale rule will 
    not require any carrier to expand its capacity or to change its system 
    in order to accommodate the desires of resellers.
    VI. Report to Congress
        38. The Commission will send a copy of this Order on 
    Reconsideration, including a copy of this Supplemental Final Regulatory 
    Flexibility Analysis, in a report to be sent to Congress pursuant to 
    the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, see 5 
    U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A). In addition, the Order on Reconsideration and this 
    Supplemental FRFA will be sent to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the 
    Small Business Administration. Finally, the Order on Reconsideration 
    and Supplemental FRFA (or summaries thereof) will be published in the 
    Federal Register. See 5 U.S.C. 604(b).
    
    Ordering Clauses
    
        39. Accordingly, the rule amendments and clarifications are adopted 
    and shall be effective January 10, 2000.
        40. Further, the Petitions for Reconsideration filed by AT&T Corp., 
    the Personal Communications Industry Association, the American Mobile 
    Telecommunications Association, and Nextel Communications, Inc. in CC 
    Docket 94-54 are granted to the extent indicated herein and otherwise 
    are denied.
        41. The Petition for Reconsideration or Clarification filed by 
    Small Business in Telecommunications, Inc. in CC Docket No. 94-54 is 
    accepted to the extent such Petition seeks clarification, and otherwise 
    is rejected as a late-filed Petition for Reconsideration.
        42. The Petitions for Reconsideration or Clarification filed by the 
    Cellular Resellers Association, Connecticut Telephone and 
    Communications Systems, Inc. the National Wireless Resellers 
    Association, and Small Business in Telecommunications, Inc. are denied.
        43. Additionally, the Petition for Reconsideration filed by the 
    Personal Communications Industry Association pertaining to WT Docket 
    No. 98-100 and GN Docket No. 94-33 is granted to the extent indicated 
    and otherwise is denied.
        44. Finally, the Commission's Office of Public Affairs, Reference 
    Operations Division, shall send a copy of this Order on 
    Reconsideration, including the Supplemental Final Regulatory 
    Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small 
    Business Administration.
    
    List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 20
    
        Communications common carriers.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    Magalie Roman Salas,
    Secretary.
    
    Rule Changes
    
        Part 20 of Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations is amended 
    as follows:
    
    PART 20--COMMERCIAL MOBILE RADIO SERVICE
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 20 continues to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 160, 251-254, 303, and 332, unless 
    otherwise noted.
    
        2. Section 20.12 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 20.12  Resale and roaming.
    
        (a) Scope of section. This section is applicable as follows:
        (1) Scope of resale requirement. Paragraph (b) of this section, 
    concerning resale, is applicable to the following, if such providers 
    offer real-time, two-way switched voice or data service that is 
    interconnected with the public switched network and utilizes an in-
    network switching facility that enables the provider to reuse 
    frequencies and accomplish seamless hand-offs of subscriber calls:
        (i) Providers of Broadband Personal Communications Services (part 
    24, subpart E of this chapter), except those C, D, E, and F block PCS 
    licensees that do not own and control and are not owned and controlled 
    by firms also holding cellular, A or B block licenses;
        (ii) Providers of Cellular Radio Telephone Service (part 22, 
    subpart H of this chapter); and
    
    [[Page 61028]]
    
        (iii) Providers of Specialized Mobile Radio Services (part 90, 
    subparts of this chapter).
        (2) Scope of Roaming Requirement. Paragraph (c) of this section, 
    concerning roaming, is applicable only to providers of Broadband 
    Personal Communications Services (part 24, subpart E of this chapter), 
    providers of Cellular Radio Telephone Service (part 22, subpart H of 
    this chapter), providers of Specialized Mobile Radio Services in the 
    800 MHz and 900 MHz bands that hold geographic licenses and offer real-
    time, two-way voice service that is interconnected with the public 
    switched network (included in part 90, subpart S of this chapter) and 
    Incumbent Wide Area SMR Licensees.
        (b) Resale. The resale requirement is applicable as follows:
        (1) Each carrier identified in paragraph (a)(1) of this section 
    shall not restrict the resale of its services, including enhanced 
    services, unless the carrier demonstrates that the restriction is 
    reasonable.
        (2) The resale requirement shall not apply to customer premises 
    equipment, whether or not it is bundled with services subject to the 
    resale requirement in this paragraph.
        (3) This paragraph shall cease to be effective five years after the 
    last group of initial licenses for broadband PCS spectrum in the 1850-
    1910 and the 1930-1990 MHz bands is awarded; i.e., at the close of 
    November 24, 2002.
        (c) Roaming. Each licensee identified in paragraph (a)(2) of this 
    section must provide mobile radio service upon request to all 
    subscribers in good standing to the services of any carrier subject to 
    this section, including roamers, while such subscribers are located 
    within any portion of the licensee's licensed service area where 
    facilities have been constructed and service to subscribers has 
    commenced, if equipment that is technically compatible with the 
    licensee's base stations.
    
    [FR Doc. 99-29220 Filed 11-8-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
1/10/2000
Published:
11/09/1999
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule; reconsideration.
Document Number:
99-29220
Dates:
Effective January 10, 2000.
Pages:
61022-61028 (7 pages)
Docket Numbers:
CC Docket No. 94-54, WT Docket No. 98-100, GN Docket No. 94-33, FCC 99-250
PDF File:
99-29220.pdf
CFR: (1)
47 CFR 20.12