99-28204. Public Information Collections Approved by Office of Management and Budget  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 208 (Thursday, October 28, 1999)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 58060-58063]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-28204]
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    
    Public Information Collections Approved by Office of Management 
    and Budget
    
    October 22, 1999.
        The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has received Office of 
    Management and Budget (OMB) approval for the following public 
    information collections pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
    1995, Public Law 104-13. An agency may not conduct or sponsor and a 
    person is not required to respond to a collection of information unless 
    it displays a currently valid control number. For further information 
    contact Shoko B. Hair, Federal Communications Commission, (202) 418-
    1379.
    
    Federal Communications Commission
    
        OMB Control No.: 3060-0526.
        Expiration Date: 10/31/2002.
        Title: Density Pricing Zone Plans, Expanded Interconnection with 
    Local Telephone Company Facilities--CC Docket No. 91-141.
        Form No.: N/A.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 13 respondents; 48 hours per response 
    (avg.); 624 total annual burden hours for all collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
        Frequency of Response: On occasion.
        Description: Pursuant to Section 203 of the Communications Act, 
    LECs are required to tariff communications service offerings with the 
    Commission. Sections 201 and 202 of the Act require that all tariffed 
    charges, practices, classifications, and regulations be just and 
    reasonable and not unjustly or unreasonably discriminatory. The 
    Commission concluded that it will allow LECs additional special access 
    pricing flexibility for services subject to competition in any study 
    area in which expanded interconnection offerings are operational. If 
    they choose, LECs may file density pricing plans establishing systems 
    of pricing zones. Rates for special access services subject to 
    competition will be averaged within zones, but will be allowed to 
    diverge between zones over time subject to a price cap mechanism. LECs 
    will be permitted to lower the weighted average rate level in any zone 
    by as much as 10 percent annually relative to the price cap index for 
    the special access basket, or to raise the weighted average rate level 
    in any zone by up to five percent annually relative to the price cap 
    index for the special access basket, without triggering any of the 
    additional cost justification or advance notice requirements contained 
    in the price cap rules. Material supporting each LEC's density pricing 
    plan is necessary to ensure that these plans generally reflect cost 
    differences and foster fair competition. Absent the review of such 
    information by the Commission, the LECs would have strong incentives to 
    attempt to use this additional pricing flexibility in an 
    anticompetitive manner. In the Switched Transport Expanded 
    Interconnection Order, the Commission created a density zone pricing 
    plan that allows some degree of deaveraging for switched transport 
    services. The Commission concluded that relaxing the pricing rules in 
    this manner would enable price cap LECs to respond to increased 
    competition in the interstate switched transport market. For purposes 
    of deaveraging services in the trunking basket, the Commission in the 
    Fifth Report and Order issued in CC Docket No. 96-262, released August 
    27, 1999, eliminates the limitations inherent in its current density 
    zone pricing plan and allow price cap LECs to define the scope and 
    number of zones within a study area, provided that each zone, except 
    the highest-cost zone, accounts for at least fifteen percent of the 
    incumbent LEC's trunking basket revenues in the study area. In 
    addition, the Commission eliminates the requirement that LECs file zone 
    pricing plans prior to filing their tariffs. The density pricing plan 
    information is used by the FCC staff to ensure that the tariff rates to 
    be paid for special access services are just, reasonable, and 
    nondiscriminatory, as Sections 201 and 202 of the Communications Act 
    require. The filing of density pricing plans is necessary to allow 
    review of the number of zones and how offices were assigned to the 
    different zones. The information is used to determine if the carriers 
    have complied with our order on zone density. Without this information, 
    the FCC would be unable to determine whether the rates for these 
    services are just, reasonable, nondiscriminatory, and otherwise in 
    accordance with the law. The density pricing plans are to be filed 
    whenever a LEC voluntarily elects to implement additional special 
    access pricing flexibility. Obligation to comply: Required to obtain or 
    retain benefits.
    
    
    [[Page 58061]]
    
    
        OMB Control No.: 3060-0760.
        Expiration Date: 10/31/2002.
        Title: Access Charge Reform--CC Docket No. 96-262, First Report and 
    Order, Second Order on Reconsideration and Memorandum Opinion and 
    Order, Third Report and Order, and Fifth Report and Order.
        Form No.: N/A.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 14 respondents; 4165 hours per response 
    (avg.); 58,319 total annual burden hours for all collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $8,000.
        Frequency of Response: On occasion.
        Description: In the Fifth Report and Order (Order), CC Docket No. 
    96-262, Access Charge Reform, released August 27, 1999, the Commission 
    is modifying the rules that govern the provision of interstate access 
    services by those price cap LECs subject to price regulation to advance 
    the pro-competitive, de-regulatory national policies embodied in the 
    Telecommunications Act of 1996. The pricing flexibility framework 
    adopted in the Order is designed to grant greater flexibility to price 
    cap LECs as competition develops, while ensuring that: (1) Price cap 
    LECs do not use pricing flexibility to deter efficient entry or engage 
    in exclusionary pricing behavior; and (2) price cap LECs do not 
    increase rates to unreasonable levels for customers that lack 
    competitive alternatives.
        a. Showings under the Market-Based Approach: In the Fifth Report 
    and Order, the Commission provides detailed rules for implementing the 
    market-based approach, pursuant to which price cap LECs would receive 
    pricing flexibility in the provision of interstate access services as 
    competition for those services develops. The Order grants immediate 
    pricing flexibility to price cap LECs in the form of streamlined 
    introduction of new services, geographic deaveraging of rates for 
    services in the trunking basket, and removal of certain interstate 
    interexchange services from price cap regulation. The Order also 
    provides for additional pricing flexibility, to be granted in two 
    phases, that is contingent upon competitive showings. To obtain Phase I 
    relief, price cap LECs must demonstrate that competitors have made 
    irreversible, sunk investments in the facilities needed to provide the 
    services at issue. For instance, for dedicated transport and special 
    access services, price cap LECs must demonstrate that unaffiliated 
    competitors have collocated in at least 15 percent of the LEC's wire 
    centers within an MSA or collocated in wire centers accounting for 30 
    percent of the LEC's revenues from these services within an MSA. Higher 
    thresholds apply, however, for channel terminations between a LEC end 
    office and an end user customer. In that case, the LEC must demonstrate 
    that unaffiliated competitors have collocated in 50 percent of the 
    price cap LEC's wire centers within an MSA or collocated in wire 
    centers accounting for 65 percent of the price cap LEC's revenues from 
    this service within an MSA. For traffic-sensitive, common line, and the 
    traffic-sensitive components of tandem-switched transport services, a 
    LEC must show that competitors offer service over their own facilities 
    to 15 percent of the price cap LEC's customer locations within an MSA. 
    Phase I relief permits price cap LECs to offer, on one day's notice, 
    volume and term discounts and contract tariffs for these services, so 
    long as the services provided pursuant to contract are removed from 
    price caps. To obtain Phase II relief, price cap LECs must demonstrate 
    that competitors have established a significant market presence (i.e., 
    that competition for a particular service within the MSA is sufficient 
    to preclude the incumbent from exploiting any individual market power 
    over a sustained period) for provision of the services at issue. Phase 
    II relief for dedicated transport and special access services is 
    warranted when a price cap LEC demonstrates that unaffiliated 
    competitors have collocated in at least 50 percent of the LEC's wire 
    centers within an MSA or collocated in wire centers accounting for 65 
    percent of the LEC's revenues from these services within an MSA. Again 
    a higher threshold applies to channel terminations between a LEC end 
    office and an end user customer. In that case, a price cap LEC must 
    show that unaffiliated competitors have collocated in 65 percent of the 
    LEC's wire centers within an MSA or collocated in wire centers 
    accounting for 85 percent of the LEC's revenues from this service 
    within an MSA. Phase II relief permits price cap LECs to file tariffs 
    for these services on one day's notice, free from both our Part 61 rate 
    level and our Part 69 rate structure rules. See also 47 CFR Sections 
    1.774, 69.707, 69.709, 69.711, 69.713, 69.725, 69.727, 69.729. (No. of 
    respondents: 13; hours per response: 2117; total annual burden: 27,520 
    hours).
        b. Cost Study of Interstate Access Service That Remain Subject to 
    Price Cap Regulation: The 1996 Act has created an unprecedented 
    opportunity for competition to develop in local telephone markets. The 
    Commission recognizes, however, that competition is unlikely to develop 
    at the same rate in different locations, and that some services will be 
    subject to increasing competition more rapidly than others. The 
    Commission also recognizes, however, that there will be areas and 
    services for which competition may not develop. The Commission will 
    adopt a prescriptive ``backdrop'' to our market-based approach that 
    will serve to ensure that all interstate access customers receive the 
    benefits of more efficient prices, even in those places and for those 
    services where competition does not develop quickly. To implement our 
    backstop to market-based access charge reform, we require each 
    incumbent price cap LEC to file a cost study no later than February 8, 
    2001, demonstrating the cost of providing those interstate access 
    services that remain subject to price cap regulation because they do 
    not face substantial competition. (No. of respondents: 13; hours per 
    response: 8; total annual burden 104 hours).
        c. Tariff Filings: In the First Report and Order, the Commission 
    requires the filing of various tariffs, with modifications. For 
    example, the FCC directs incumbent LECs to establish separate rate 
    elements for the multiplexing equipment on each side of the tandem 
    switch. LECs must establish a flat-rated charge for the multiplexers on 
    the SWC side of the tandem, imposed pro-rata on the purchasers of the 
    dedicated trunks on the SWC side of the tandem. Multiplexing equipment 
    on the EO-to-tandem transport on a per-minute of use basis. These 
    multiplexer rate elements must be included in the LEC access tariff 
    filings to be effective January 1, 1998. In the Second Order on 
    Reconsideration, the FCC clarifies that the TIC exemption for access 
    customers using competitive transport providers only applies to that 
    portion of the residual per-minute TIC that is related to transport 
    facilities, and directs incumbent local exchange carriers to include, 
    in their access tariff filing, the amount of per-minute transport 
    interconnection charge (TIC) they anticipate will be allocated to 
    facilities-based rate elements in the future. (No. of respondents: 13; 
    hours per response 35 hours; total annual burden: 455 hours).
        d. Third-Party Disclosure: In the Second Order on Reconsideration, 
    the Commission requires LEC to provide IXCs with customer-specific 
    information about how many and what type of presubscribed interexchange 
    carrier charges (PICCs) they are assessing for each of the IXC's 
    presubscribed customers. One of the primary goals of
    
    [[Page 58062]]
    
    our First Report and Order was to develop a cost-recovery mechanism 
    that permits carriers to recover their costs in a manner that reflects 
    the way in which those costs are incurred. Without access to 
    information that indicates whether the LEC is assessing a primary or 
    non-primary residential PICC, or about how many local business lines 
    are presubscribed to a particular IXC, the IXC will be unable to 
    develop rates that accurately reflect the underlying costs. (No. of 
    respondents: 14; hours per response: 35 hours; total annual burden 455 
    hours).
        e. Contract-based Tariff Filings: Price cap LECs who have made a 
    Phase I showing may now offer contract-based tariffs. Contract-based 
    tariffs enable price cap LECs to tailor services to their customers' 
    individual needs, but also prevent targeting by requiring that price 
    cap LECs make contract tariffs available to all similarly situated 
    customers. See 47 CFR Sections 61.55 and 69.727. (No. of respondents: 
    13; hours per response: 3 hours; total annual burden: 780 hours).
        In the Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking issued in CC Docket 
    No. 96-262, released August 27, 1999, the Commission seeks comment on 
    whether to permit incumbent LECs to deaverage common line and traffic 
    sensitive access elements without a competitive showing. To the extent 
    that parties advocate conditioning deaveraging upon satisfaction of a 
    competitive showing, the Commission seeks comment on the appropriate 
    showing and the procedure by which evidence be presented and evaluated.
        f. Proposed Deaveraging of Common Line and Traffic Sensitive Access 
    Elements: Deaveraging common line and traffic sensitive access elements 
    would require at least one additional tariff filing and may require an 
    additional competitive showing. (No. of respondents: 13; hours per 
    response: 109 hours; total annual burden: 1420 hours).
        g. Proposed Common line and Traffic Sensitive Phase II Showings: 
    Incumbent LECs seeking pricing flexibility for switched services may be 
    required to file a petition demonstrating that it has met the triggers, 
    and make an initial tariff filing. (No. of respondents: 13; hours per 
    response: 1984 hours; total annual burden: 25,800).
        The Commission's authority to collect this information is provided 
    under 47 U.S.C 201-205 and 303(r). The information to be collected 
    would be submitted to the FCC by incumbent LECs for use in determining 
    whether the incumbent LECs should receive the regulatory relief 
    proposed in the Orders. The information collected under the Second 
    Order on Reconsideration and Memorandum Opinion and Order would be 
    submitted by the LECs to the interexchange carriers (IXCs) for use in 
    developing the most cost-efficient rates and rate structures. 
    Obligation to comply: Mandatory.
    
        OMB Control No.: 3060-0770.
        Expiration Date: 10/31/2002.
        Title: Price Cap Performance Review for Local Exchange Carriers--CC 
    Docket No. 94-1 (New Services).
        Form No.: N/A.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 13 respondents; 10 hours per response 
    (avg.); 130 total annual burden hours for all collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
        Frequency of Response: On occasion.
        Description: In the Fifth Report and Order, issued in CC Docket 
    Nos. 96-262 and 94-1, released August 27, 1999, the Commission permits 
    price cap LECs to introduce new services on a streamlined basis, 
    without prior approval. The Commission modified the rules to eliminate 
    the public interest showing required by Section 69.4(g) and to 
    eliminate the new services test (except in the case of loop-based new 
    services) required under Sections 61.49(f) and (g). These modifications 
    will eliminate the delays that now exist for the introduction of new 
    services as well as encourage efficient investment and innovation. The 
    Commission's authority to collect this information is provided under 47 
    U.S.C. Section 203. The information collected would be submitted to the 
    Commission by an incumbent LEC for use in determining whether it is in 
    the public interest for the incumbent LEC to offer a proposed new 
    switched access service. Obligation to comply: Required to obtain or 
    retain benefits.
    
        OMB Control No.: 3060-0907.
        Expiration Date: 04/30/2002.
        Title: Universal Service Amendment Worksheets.
        Form No.: FCC Form 457(M) and FCC Form 499-S(M).
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 100 respondents; 2 hours per response 
    (avg.); 200 total annual burden hours for all collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
        Frequency of Response: One-time requirement.
        Description: On May 8, 1997, the Commission issued the Universal 
    Service Order, implementing the universal service provisions in Section 
    254 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended and setting forth a 
    plan to fulfill the universal service goals established by Congress. In 
    the Universal Service Order, the Commission announced its plan for 
    establishing a system of universal service support for rural, insular, 
    and high cost areas that will replace the existing high-cost support 
    mechanisms and implicit federal subsidies with explicit, competitively-
    neutral federal universal service support mechanisms. Pursuant to the 
    Act, the Commission also adopted rules to ensure that quality services 
    are available to low-income consumers at affordable rates. In addition, 
    the Commission adopted rules creating new support mechanisms to promote 
    universal service for eligible schools and libraries, and rural health 
    care providers, as mandated by Congress in the Act. Finally, the 
    Commission modified its existing funding methods, so that funding for 
    the support mechanisms is not generated exclusively through charges on 
    long distance carriers. Instead, as the statute requires, the new 
    universal service rules require equitable and nondiscriminatory 
    contributions from all telecommunications carriers that provide 
    interstate telecommunications services, as well as other providers of 
    interstate telecommunications to the extent that the Commission 
    determines that their contributions would serve the public interest. On 
    July 30, 1999, a three-judge panel of the United States Court of 
    Appeals for the Fifth Circuit issued a decision affirming in part, 
    remanding in part, and reversing in part the Commission's May 8, 1997 
    Universal Service Order. Several of the court's rulings in that 
    decision affect the assessment and recovery of universal service 
    contributions. In light of the court's ruling, the Commission amends 
    sections 54.706 and 54.709 of its rules in the Universal Service Remand 
    Order, released October 8, 1999, to provide for a single contribution 
    base for purposes of funding all of the universal service support 
    mechanisms. Specifically, in response to the court's determination that 
    the Commission lacks jurisdiction to assess providers' intrastate 
    revenues, we have eliminated intrastate revenues from the contribution 
    base. Consistent with the court's ruling, we also reconsider the basis 
    for assessing the international revenues of interstate providers. The 
    Commission is requiring each contributor that qualifies for the 
    international revenues exception adopted in the Universal Service
    
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    Remand Order to file an amendment to its March 1999 and September 1999 
    worksheets, identifying the amount and percentages of the contributor's 
    interstate and international revenues. This information is to be filed 
    on FCC Form 457(M) and/or FCC Form 499-S(M). Amendment to March 1999 
    Universal Service Worksheet, FCC Form 457(M) and Amendment to September 
    1999 Telecommunications Reporting Worksheet, FCC Form 499-S(M) simply 
    require contributors to identify the amounts and percentages of their 
    interstate and international revenues and will only apply to the 
    revenue data provided on the March 1999 and September 1999 Worksheet. 
    Contributors that qualify for the international revenues exception must 
    file the amendment forms with USAC by December 1, 1999. Copies of the 
    forms may be downloaded from the Commission's forms Web page, 
    www.fcc.gov/formpage.html. The form is also available through the FCC 
    Fax-on-Demand system. Copies may be order via fax 24 hours a day by 
    calling 202-418-0177 from the handset of any fax machine. The document 
    retrieval number for the FCC Form 475(M) is 0004571; the document 
    retrieval number for the FCC Form 499-S(M) is 0004993. The files 
    contain both the instructions and the forms. Follow the system voice 
    prompts and enter the document retrieval number when requested. Due to 
    the limited number of phone lines into the forms Fax-on-Demand system, 
    callers may wish to call during non-business hours. If you have 
    difficulty with the transmission of your fax contact Patricia Quartey 
    at 202-418-0212. Finally, copies may be obtained from the USAC at (973) 
    560-4400. Obligation to comply: Mandatory. Public reporting burden for 
    the collections of information is as noted above. Send comments 
    regarding the burden estimate or any other aspect of the collections of 
    information, including suggestions for reducing the burden to 
    Performance Evaluation and Records Management, Washington, DC 20554.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    Magalie Roman Salas,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 99-28204 Filed 10-27-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
10/28/1999
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Document Number:
99-28204
Dates:
10/31/2002.
Pages:
58060-58063 (4 pages)
PDF File:
99-28204.pdf