98-6666. Public Information Collections Approved by Office of Management and Budget  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 50 (Monday, March 16, 1998)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 12804-12807]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-6666]
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    
    Public Information Collections Approved by Office of Management 
    and Budget
    
    March 6, 1998.
        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.: 3060-0736.
        Expiration Date: 09/30/98.
        Title: Implementation of the Non-Accounting Safeguards of Sections 
    271 and 272 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, CC Docket 
    No. 96-149.
        Form No.: N/A.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 5 respondents; 60.6 hours per response 
    (avg.); 303 total annual burden hours for all collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
        Frequency of Response: On occasion.
        Description: Section 272 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 
    requires that BOCs make information available to third parties if it 
    makes that information available to its section 272(a) affiliates. In 
    an Order released February 6, 1998, the Commission's Common Carrier 
    Bureau resolved questions regarding the application of sections 10 and 
    272 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, (Act) to the 
    provision of E911 services by the Bell Operating Companies (BOCs). Bell 
    Operating Companies, Petitions for Forbearance from the Application of 
    Section 272 of the Communications Act of 1934, As Amended, to Certain 
    Activities, CC Docket No. 96-149, DA 98-220, Memorandum Opinion and 
    Order (Com. Car. Bur. Feb. 6, 1998) (February 6 Order). E911 services 
    enable emergency service personnel to identify the location of the 
    party calling 911, and are essential to the safety of many Americans. 
    In the February 6 Order, the Bureau determined that the BOCs' E911 
    services are interLATA information services. One consequence of this 
    determination was that each BOC had an obligation under section 
    272(a)(2)(C) of the Act to provide E911 services only through a 
    separate affiliate. In the February 6 Order, the Bureau forbore from 
    the application of this separate affiliate requirement pursuant to the 
    forbearance authority in section 10 of the Act, thus permitting the 
    BOCs to provide E911 services on an integrated basis. The Bureau 
    determined that requiring the BOCs to provide E911 services only 
    through separate affiliates would have increased the cost, but not the 
    quality, of those services. In the February 6 Order, the Bureau 
    maintained the substance of the statutory nondiscrimination requirement 
    by requiring each BOC to provide unaffiliated entities with all listing 
    information, including unlisted and unpublished numbers as well as the 
    numbers of other local exchange carriers' customers, that the BOC uses 
    to provide E911 services, even though that Order was permitting the 
    BOCs to provide those services on an integrated basis. The Bureau 
    required that this listing information be provided at the same rates, 
    terms, and conditions, if any, the BOC charges or imposes on its own 
    E911 services. The BOCs are already required to account for their
    
    [[Page 12805]]
    
    E911 services on the books of account that they maintain in accordance 
    with Part 32 of the Commissions rules. The Commission requires that the 
    BOCs treat their E911 serves as nonregulated activities for federal 
    accounting purposes to the extent they involve storage and retrieval 
    functions included within the statutory definition of information 
    service. The BOCs shall record any charges they impute for their E911 
    services in their revenue accounts. The BOCs shall account for any 
    imputed charges by debiting their nonregulated operating revenue 
    accounts and crediting their regulated revenue accounts by the amounts 
    of the imputed charges. The BOCs shall make any changes to their cost 
    allocation manuals necessary to reflect this account. The BOCs' 
    independent auditors shall include this accounting in their review of 
    the BOCs compliance with their cost allocation manuals. The 
    requirements will be used to ensure that BOCs comply with the 
    nondiscrimination requirements under the 1996 Act. Obligation to 
    comply: mandatory.
    
        OMB Control No: 3060-0785.
        Expiration Date: 08/31/98.
        Title: Changes to the Board of Directors of the National Exchange 
    Carrier Association and the Federal-State Joint Board on Universal 
    Service, CC Docket Nos. 97-21 and 96-45.
        Form No.: FCC Form 457.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 5000 respondents; 11.13 hours per response 
    (avg.); 55,650 total annual burden hours for all collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: 
    $4,903,000.
        Frequency of Response: On occasion.
        Description: The Telecommunications Act of 1996 directed the 
    Commission to initiate a rulemaking to reform our system of universal 
    service so that universal service is preserved and advanced as markets 
    move toward competition. On May 8, 1997, the Commission released the 
    Report and Order on Universal Service (Universal Service Order) in CC 
    Docket 96-45 that established new federal universal service support 
    mechanisms consistent with the universal service provisions of section 
    254. In the Fourth Order on Reconsideration in CC Docket No. 96-45, 
    Report and Order in CC Docket Nos. 96-45, 96-262, 94-1, 91-213, 95-72 
    (adopted December 30, 1997, released December 30, 1997), the Commission 
    reconsidered certain aspects of the Universal Service Order and 
    exempted additional entities from universal service contribution and 
    reporting requirements. Broadcasters and schools, colleges, 
    universities, rural health care providers, and systems integrators that 
    derive de minimis amounts of revenue from the resale of 
    telecommunications will not be required to contribute to universal 
    service. Entities whose annual contribution would be less than $10,000 
    will not be required to contribute to universal service or comply with 
    universal service reporting requirements. Contributors exempt from 
    filing and contributing because of de minimis revenues must complete 
    and retain the FCC 457 worksheet and make it available to the 
    Commission or to the Universal Service Administrator upon request. 
    Underlying carriers should include revenues derived from providing 
    telecommunications to entities qualifying for the de minimis exemption 
    in line 34-47, where appropriate of their Universal Service Worksheet. 
    The Universal Service Worksheet, FCC Form 457 has been revised to make 
    it consistent with recent actions taken by the Commission in the 
    universal service proceeding. We have revised the Worksheet and 
    instructions to the Worksheet. Specifically, we revised the 
    instructions to clarify that quarterly contributions will be paid in 
    monthly installments and further clarify the method by which the 
    administrator of the universal service support mechanisms calculates 
    the individual quarterly contributions of universal service 
    contributors. We revised the instructions to provide a list of entities 
    that are excluded from federal universal service contribution 
    requirements. The instructions direct entities preparing Worksheets to 
    include on Line 27 amounts associated with waived presubscribed 
    interexchange carrier charges for Lifeline customers who have toll 
    blocking and clarify that revenues derived from the lease of bare 
    transponder capacity should not be included in Lines 32 or 46. In 
    addition, we revised Line 4, ``Principal communications business,'' to 
    include a new category, ``SMR (dispatch)'' and clarify that, where 
    possible, contributors should list billed revenues that are based on 
    books of account. Finally, we added a new Line 51. Contributors that 
    wish to request Commission nondisclosure of information contained in 
    the Worksheet may check a box in Line 51 to do so. Contributors are 
    required to file the Worksheet by March 31, 1998. The information will 
    be used by the Commission and the Administrator or Temporary 
    Administrator to calculate contributions to the universal service 
    support mechanisms. Copies of the Universal Service Worksheet may be 
    obtained from USAC by calling (973) 560-4400 or from the Commission's 
    website (www.fcc.gov/formpage.html) and from the Commission's fax-on-
    demand line at (202) 418-2830 and selecting document number 6730 
    system. Respondents obligation to comply: Mandatory.
    
        OMB Control No.: 3060-0818.
        Expiration Date: 09/30/98.
        Title: Geocode Data Request.
        Form No.: N/A.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 19 respondents; 37 hours per response 
    (avg.); 703 total annual burden hours for all collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
        Frequency of Response: One-time requirement.
        Description: Pursuant to Congress's directive in the 
    Telecommunications Act of 1996 that the Commission establish support 
    mechanisms to ensure the delivery of affordable telecommunications 
    service to all Americans, the Commission determined on May 8, 1997 that 
    universal service support for rural, insular, and high cost areas 
    (collectively referred to as high cost areas) should be based on 
    forward-looking economic costs. The Commission stated that it would 
    select a federal mechanism for high cost support to non-rural carriers 
    by August 1998. That federal mechanism will determine high cost support 
    for non-rural carriers beginning on January 1, 1999. Nineteen non-rural 
    telecommunications common carriers were requested to voluntarily submit 
    data relating to extent of their use of geocoded data to locate 
    customers. The Commission will use the information collected in the 
    data request in its determination of whether geocode data should be 
    used as inputs to a federal mechanism that will estimate the forward-
    looking economic costs that non-rural carriers will incur to provide 
    universal service in rural, insular, and high cost areas. Obligation to 
    comply: voluntary.
    
        OMB Control No.: 3060-0536.
        Expiration Date: 08/31/98.
        Title: Rules and Requirements for Telecommunications Relay Services 
    (TRS) Interstate Cost Recovery.
        Form No: FCC Form 431.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 5000 respondents; 3.11 hours per response 
    (avg.); 15,593 total annual burden hours for all collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
    
    [[Page 12806]]
    
        Frequency of Response: On occasion.
        Description: Title IV of the Americans with Disabilities Act, Pub. 
    L. No. 101-336, Section 401, 104 Stat. 327, 366-69 (codified at 47 
    U.S.C. Section 225) requires the Federal Communications Commission to 
    ensure that telecommunications relay services are available to persons 
    with hearing and speech disabilities in the United States. Among other 
    things, the Commission is required by 47 U.S.C. Section 225(d)(3) to 
    enact and oversee a shared-funding mechanism (TRS Fund) for recovering 
    the costs of providing interstate TRS. The Commission's regulations 
    concerning the TRS Fund are codified at 47 CFR Section 64.604(c)(4). 
    Pursuant to these regulations, the National Exchange Carrier 
    Association (NECA) has been appointed Administrator of the TRS Fund. 
    The Commission's rules require all carriers providing interstate 
    telecommunications services to contribute to the TRS Fund on an annual 
    basis. Contributions are the product of the carrier's gross interstate 
    revenues for the previous year and a contribution factor determined 
    annually by the Commission. The collected contributions are used to 
    compensate TRS providers for the costs of providing interstate TRS 
    service. The Commission releases an order each year approving the 
    contribution factor, payment rate and TRS Fund Worksheet for the 
    following year. Accordingly, on December 22, 1997, the Commission's 
    Common Carrier Bureau, acting under delegated authority, released an 
    order approving the contribution factor for the April 1998 through 
    March 1999 contribution period and the 1998 TRS Fund Worksheet (FCC 
    Form 431) and also making several revisions to the form. The data in 
    the report will be used to ensure that carriers properly fund 
    interstate TRS. All carriers providing interstate telecommunications 
    service must file this worksheet. Other telecommunications carriers may 
    voluntarily file this worksheet. The requested information is used to 
    administer the TRS Fund. Information is used to calculate a national 
    average to recover the total interstate TRS revenue requirements and to 
    determine the appropriate payment due to the TRS providers 
    participating in the shared-funding plan. Obligation to comply: 
    required to obtain benefit. A public notice will be issued to announce 
    the availability of the revised FCC Form 431.
    
        OMB Control No: 3060-0816.
        Expiration Date: 08/31/98.
        Title: Local Competition in the Local Exchange Telecommunications 
    Services Report.
        Form No.: N/A.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 9 respondents; 18 responses; 310 hours per 
    response (avg.); 5580 total annual burden hours for all collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
        Frequency of Response: Quarterly.
        Description: The Telecommunications Act of 1996 (1996 Act), Pub. 
    Law No. 104-104, 110 Stat 56, codified 47 U.S.C. Secs. 151 et seq., 
    imposes obligations and responsibilities on telecommunications 
    carriers, particularly incumbent local exchange carriers (LECs), that 
    are primarily designed to open telecommunications markets to 
    competitive entry, to promote universal service, and to lessen the need 
    for government regulation of telecommunications. Pursuant to these 
    overall goals, the statute directed the Commission to adopt regulations 
    to implement specific statutory requirements, including regulations 
    governing the provision of interconnection of incumbent LEC facilities 
    with new local exchange service competitors, and the competitive entry 
    of Bell Operating Companies (BOCs) into previously prohibited 
    interexchange and other services markets. As part of its 
    responsibilities toward achieving the intent of the statute, the 
    Commission must have adequate data at hand to evaluate the success of 
    these efforts. The Commission has asked certain carriers to complete a 
    two page survey questionnaire. The questions are limited to technical 
    queries about the nature and extent of carrier-provided access 
    facilities; switch ports and non-switched service lines; number of 
    customers purchasing specific services; state operations data; total 
    carrier-handled switched local, intrastate toll, and interstate toll 
    minutes; and number of local telephone numbers ported as of end-of-year 
    1997. The data request is necessary to evaluate the status of 
    developing competition in local exchange telecommunications markets. 
    This information will be used by Commission economists and carrier 
    analysts to advise the Commission about the efficacy of Commission 
    rules and policies adopted to implement the Telecommunications Act of 
    1996. Obligation to respond: voluntary.
    
        OMB Control No.: 3060-0814.
        Expiration Date: 06/30/98.
        Title: Section 54.301 Local Switching Support and Local Switching 
    Support Data Collection Form and Instructions.
        Form No: N/A.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 192 respondents; 21.55 hours per response 
    (avg.); 4138 total annual burden hours for all collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
        Frequency of Response: On occasion; annually.
        Description: The Telecommunications Act of 1996 directed the 
    Commission to initiate a rulemaking to reform our system of universal 
    service so that universal service is preserved and advanced as markets 
    move toward competition. On May 8, 1997, the Commission released the 
    Report and Order on Universal Service (Universal Service Order) in CC 
    Docket 96-45 that established new federal universal service support 
    mechanisms consistent with the universal service provisions of section 
    254. In the Fourth Order on Reconsideration in CC Docket No. 96-45, 
    Report and Order in CC Docket Nos. 96-45, 96-262, 94-1, 91-213, 95-72 
    (adopted December 30, 1997, released December 30, 1997), the Commission 
    reconsiders certain aspects of the Universal Service Order. Among other 
    things, the Fourth Order on Reconsideration adopts a precise 
    methodology for the universal service administrator to use in 
    calculating the average unseparated local switching revenue 
    requirement. Although this rule generally requires carriers to submit 
    data on October 1 of each year, the universal service administrator 
    must collect data from carriers that do not participate in the NECA 
    common line pool immediately to prepare for the 1998 year. Each 
    incumbent local exchange carrier that is not a member of the NECA 
    Common Line tariff, that has been designated an eligible 
    telecommunications carrier, and that serves a study area with 50,000 or 
    fewer access lines shall, for each study area, provide the 
    Administrator with the projected total unseparated dollar amount 
    assigned to each account in Section 54.301(b) for 1998. Of the carriers 
    that do not participate in the NECA common line pool, 20 of these 
    carriers are ``average schedule'' companies as defined in Part 
    69.605(c) of the Commission's rules. Each incumbent local exchange 
    carrier that is not a member of the NECA Common Line tariff, that is an 
    average schedule company, that has been designated an eligible 
    telecommunications carrier, and that serves a study area with 50,000 or
    
    [[Page 12807]]
    
    fewer access lines shall, for each study area, provide the 
    Administrator with their total number of access lines, total number of 
    central offices, and projected access minutes for 1998. These companies 
    receive local switching support calculated pursuant to section 
    54.301(f), whereas the remaining companies receive support calculated 
    pursuant to section 54.301(b). This data request is necessary to 
    calculate the average unseparated local switching revenue requirement. 
    This revenue requirement calculation is necessary to calculate the 
    amount of local switching support that carriers will receive. This data 
    request is necessary to calculate the average unseparated local 
    switching revenue requirement. Obligation to comply: mandatory.
    
        OMB Control No.: 3060-0809.
        Expiration Date: 02/28/2001.
        Title: Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act--CC Docket 
    No. 97-213 (Proposed rule).
        Form No: N/A.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 14,000 respondents; 3.3 hours per response 
    (avg.); 46,725 total annual burden hours for all collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
        Frequency of Response: On occasion.
        Description: On October 25, 1994, Congress passed and the President 
    signed the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA), 
    Pub. L. No. 103-414, 108 Stat. 4279 (1994). The Act was designed to 
    respond to rapid advances in telecommunications technology and 
    eliminate obstacles faced by law enforcement personnel in conducting 
    electronic surveillance. Section 301 of CALEA also requires the 
    Commission to prescribe and enforce the procedures and record keeping 
    that entities subject to CALEA must follow after receiving lawful 
    electronic surveillance requests from law enforcement entities. To 
    accomplish this statutory objective, the NPRM issued in CC Docket No. 
    97-213 proposed the creation of a subpart to Part 64 of the 
    Commission's rules, that would require each telecommunications carrier: 
    file a CALEA compliance statement with the Commission (47 CFR 
    Sec. 64.1705(a) (no. of respondents: 3500; hours per response: 1 hours; 
    total annual burden: 3500 hours)); have responsible employees sign 
    affidavits that the electronic surveillance was conducted lawfully (47 
    CFR Sec. 64.1704(c) no. of respondents: 3500; hours per response: 2.45; 
    total annual hours: 8575)); and maintain records of electronic 
    surveillance activity (47 CFR Sec. 64.1704(a) (no. of respondents: 
    3500; hours per response: 4.9; total annual hours: 17,510)). The 
    Commission also proposed to waive the compliance statement filing 
    requirement for telecommunications carriers with annual revenues below 
    an indexed threshold (currently $109 million), in order to reduce the 
    paperwork burden on small and rural telecommunications carriers (47 CFR 
    Sec. 1705(b)). We also proposed a requirement for carriers to maintain 
    a list of all persons authorized to process lawful requests for 
    electronic surveillance from law enforcement officials (no. of 
    respondents: 3500; hours per response: 5 hours; total annual hours: 
    17,500 hours). If adopted, the information submitted to the Commission 
    by telecommunications carriers will be used to determine whether or not 
    the telecommunications carriers are in conformance with CALEA's 
    requirements and the Commission's rules. The information maintained by 
    telecommunications carriers will be used by law enforcement officials 
    to determine the accountability and accuracy of telecommunications 
    carriers' compliance with lawful electronic surveillance orders. 
    Obligation to respond: mandatory, if adopted.
    
        OMB Control No: 3060-0819.
        Expiration Date: 09/30/98.
        Title: Lifeline Assistance (Lifeline), Lifeline Connection 
    Assistance (Link Up) Reporting Worksheet and Instructions (47 CFR 
    Sections 54.400-54.417).
        Form No: FCC Form 497.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 1500 respondents; 18,000 responses; 3 
    hours per response (avg.); 42,000 total annual burden hours for all 
    collections.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
        Frequency of Response: On occasion; monthly; quarterly; semi-
    annually.
        Description: The Telecommunications Act of 1996 directed the 
    Commission to initiate a rulemaking to reform our system of universal 
    service so that universal service is preserved and advanced as markets 
    move toward competition. On May 8, 1997, the Commission released a 
    Report and Order on Universal Service (Universal Service Order) in CC 
    Docket 96-45 that established new federal universal service support 
    mechanisms consistent with section 254. In the Universal Service Order, 
    the Commission expanded and made competitively neutral its programs for 
    low-income consumers, Lifeline and Link Up. On December 30, 1997, the 
    Commission released a Fourth Order on Reconsideration that amended some 
    of the Lifeline and Link Up rules. The following describes the 
    universal service support reimbursement available to eligible 
    telecommunications carriers for providing Lifeline and Link Up programs 
    to qualifying low-income customers: Eligible telecommunications 
    carriers are permitted to receive universal service support 
    reimbursement for offering Lifeline service to qualifying low-income 
    customers; eligible telecommunications carriers may receive universal 
    service support reimbursement for the revenue they forego in reducing 
    their customary charge for commencing telecommunications service and 
    for providing a deferred schedule for payment of the charges assessed 
    for commencing service for which the consumer does not pay interest, in 
    conformity with 47 CFR Section 54.411; eligible telecommunications 
    carriers providing toll-limitation services (TLS) for qualifying low-
    income subscribers will be compensated from universal service 
    mechanisms for the incremental cost of providing either toll blocking 
    or toll control; and eligible telecommunications carriers that serve 
    qualifying low-income consumers who have toll blocking shall receive 
    universal service support reimbursement for waiving the Presubscribed 
    Interexchange Carriers Charge (PICC) for Lifeline customers. FCC Form 
    497 implements the Lifeline and Link Up reimbursement programs. 
    Obligation to respond: required to obtain benefits. This information is 
    necessary in order for eligible telecommunications carriers to receive 
    universal service support reimbursement for providing Lifeline and Link 
    Up. Copies of the form may be obtained by calling USAC at (973) 884-
    8027.
        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, D.C. 20554.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    Magalie Roman Salas,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 98-6666 Filed 3-13-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/16/1998
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Document Number:
98-6666
Dates:
09/30/98.
Pages:
12804-12807 (4 pages)
PDF File:
98-6666.pdf