99-10832. Deployment of Wireline Services Offering Advanced Telecommunications Capability  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 83 (Friday, April 30, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 23229-23243]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-10832]
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    47 CFR Part 51
    
    [CC Docket No. 98-147; FCC 99-48]
    
    
    Deployment of Wireline Services Offering Advanced 
    Telecommunications Capability
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This document adopts several measures designed to promote 
    competition in the advanced services markets. The intended effect is to 
    remove barriers to competition so that competing providers are able to 
    compete effectively with incumbent local exchange carriers (LECs) and 
    their affiliates in the provision of advanced services. An additional 
    effect of the First Report and Order is to ensure that incumbent LECs 
    are able to make their decisions to invest in, and deploy, advanced 
    telecommunications services based on market demand and their own 
    strategic business plans, rather than on regulatory requirements.
    
    DATES: Effective June 1, 1999, except for 47 CFR 51.321(f) and 
    51.321(h) and 51.323(b) and (i)(3), which contain information 
    collection requirements that are not effective until approved by the 
    Office of Management and Budget. The FCC will publish a document in the 
    Federal Register announcing the effective date for those sections. 
    Written comments regarding the Paperwork Reduction Act requirements 
    should be submitted on or before May 13, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Staci Pies, Attorney, Common Carrier 
    Bureau, Policy and Program Planning Division, (202) 418-1580 or via the 
    Internet at spies@fcc.gov. Further information may also be obtained by 
    calling the Common Carrier Bureau's TTY number: 202-418-0484. For 
    additional information concerning the information collections contained 
    in this Order contact Judy Boley at (202) 418-0214, or via the Internet 
    at jboley@fcc.gov.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's First 
    Report and Order adopted March 18, 1999, and released March 31, 1999. 
    The full text of this First Report and Order is available for 
    inspection and copying during normal business hours in the FCC 
    Reference Center, 445 12th Street, S.W., Room CY-A257, Washington, D.C. 
    The complete text also may be obtained through the World Wide Web, at 
    http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common Carrier/Orders/fcc9948.wp, or may be 
    purchased from the Commission's copy
    
    [[Page 23230]]
    
    contractor, International Transcription Service, Inc., (202) 857-3800, 
    1231 20th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. This First Report and 
    Order contains information collections subject to the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA). It has been submitted to the Office of 
    Management and Budget (OMB) for review under the PRA. The general 
    public and other federal agencies are invited to comment on the 
    information collections contained in this proceeding. The Commission 
    has requested an emergency review of the collections with an approval 
    by May 13, 1999.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Certification
    
        As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the First Report and 
    Order contains a Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis which is set 
    forth in the First Report and Order. A brief description of the 
    analysis follows. Pursuant to section 604 of the Regulatory Flexibility 
    Act, the Commission performed a comprehensive analysis of the Order 
    with regard to small entities. This analysis includes: (1) a succinct 
    statement of the need for, and objectives of, the Commission's 
    decisions in the Order; (2) a summary of the significant issues raised 
    by the public comments in response to the initial regulatory 
    flexibility analysis, a summary of the Commission's assessment of these 
    issues, and a statement of any changes made in the Order as a result of 
    the comments; (3) a description of and an estimate of the number of 
    small entities to which the Order will apply; (4) a description of the 
    projected reporting, recordkeeping and other compliance requirements of 
    the Order, including an estimate of the classes of small entities which 
    will be subject to the requirement and the type of professional skills 
    necessary for compliance with the requirement; (5) a description of the 
    steps the Commission has taken to minimize the significant economic 
    impact on small entities consistent with the stated objectives of 
    applicable statutes, including a statement of the factual, policy, and 
    legal reasons for selecting the alternative adopted in the Order and 
    why each one of the other significant alternatives to each of the 
    Commission's decisions which affect small entities was rejected.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This Report and Order contains new and modified information 
    collections. The Commission, as part of its continuing effort to reduce 
    paperwork burdens, invites the general public to comment on the 
    information collections contained in this Order, as required by the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104-12. Persons wishing to 
    comment on the information collections should submit comments on or 
    before May 13, 1999. Comments should address: (a) Whether the 
    collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of 
    the functions of the Commission, including whether the information 
    shall practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the Commission's burden 
    estimates; (c) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the 
    information collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of the 
    collection of information on the respondents including the use of 
    automated collection techniques or other forms of information 
    technology.
        OMB Approval Number: 3060-0848.
        Title: Deployment of Wireline Services Offering Advanced 
    Telecommunications Capability.
        Form No.: N/A.
        Type of Review: Revised collection.
    
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                                                   No. of
             Information collection              respondents        Estimated time per response       Total annual
                                                  (approx.)                                          burden (hours)
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    List of Equipment.......................              1400  1 hour............................              1400
    Report of Available Collocation Space...              1400  1 hour............................              1400
    Information on Security Training........              1400  30 minutes........................               700
    Access to Spectrum Management Procedures              1400  30 minutes........................               700
     and Policies.
    Rejection and Loop Information..........              1400  1 hour............................              1400
    Notification of Performance Degradation.              1400  30 minutes........................               700
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        Total Annual Burden: 6300 hours.
        Respondents: Businesses or other for-profit.
        Estimated costs per respondent: $0.
        Needs and Uses: The Commission seeks to implement Congress's goal 
    of promoting innovation and investment by all participating in the 
    telecommunications marketplace, in order to stimulate competition for 
    all services, including advanced services. In fulfillment of this goal, 
    the Commission imposes certain collections of information on all 
    incumbent local exchange carriers. Among other things, ILECs must 
    provide a list of equipment to competitive LECs, submit to requesting 
    carriers a report concerning collocation space, provide the specific 
    type of security training a competitive LEC's employees must complete, 
    etc. All of the requirements will be used by the Commission and by 
    competitive carriers to facilitate the deployment of advanced data 
    services and to implement section 706 of the Communications Act of 
    1934, as amended.
    
    Synopsis of Order
    
    I. Introduction
    
        1. One of the fundamental goals of the Telecommunications Act of 
    1996 (1996 Act) is to promote innovation and investment by all 
    participants in the telecommunications marketplace, in order to 
    stimulate competition for all services, including advanced services. In 
    this order, we take important steps towards implementing Congress' 
    goals with respect to advanced services.
        2. The market for advanced telecommunications is a nascent one. 
    Today, both incumbent local exchange carriers (LECs) and new entrants 
    are at the early stages of developing and deploying innovative new 
    technologies to meet the ever-increasing demand for high-speed, high-
    capacity advanced services. Because it is in the early stages of 
    development, the advanced services market is ripe for competition to 
    develop in a robust fashion. In order to encourage competition among 
    carriers to develop and deploy new advanced services, it is critical 
    that the marketplace for these services be conducive to investment, 
    innovation, and meeting the needs of consumers.
        3. To this end, we are committed to removing barriers to 
    competition so that competing providers are able to compete effectively 
    with incumbent LECs and their affiliates in the provision of advanced 
    services. We are also committed to ensuring that incumbent LECs are 
    able to make their decisions to invest in, and deploy, advanced 
    telecommunications services based on market demand and their own 
    strategic business plans, rather than on regulatory requirements. We 
    intend to
    
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    take deregulatory steps towards meeting this goal in a subsequent 
    order.
        4. In this order, we adopt several measures that we believe will 
    promote competition in the advanced services markets. We fully expect 
    that these measures will create incentives for providers of advanced 
    services to innovate and to develop and deploy new technologies and 
    services on a more efficient and expeditious basis. As a result, 
    consumers will ultimately benefit through lower prices and increased 
    choices in advanced services.
    
    II. Overview and Executive Summary
    
    A. Overview
        5. Increasingly, electronic communications are becoming digital and 
    are transmitted by means of ``packet switching.'' Packet-switched 
    transmission of information promises a revolution in information, 
    communications services, and entertainment by offering businesses, 
    residential users, schools and libraries, and other end users of 
    information the ability to access and send large amounts of information 
    very quickly across the street or across the globe. Moreover, for 
    wireline carriers, digital subscriber line technologies are making it 
    possible for ordinary citizens to access various networks, such as the 
    Internet, corporate networks, and governmental networks, at high speeds 
    through the existing copper telephone lines that connect their 
    residences or businesses to the incumbent LEC's central office. The 
    existing infrastructure is being used in new ways that make available 
    to average citizens a variety of new services and vast improvements to 
    existing services.
        6. We adopt, in this order, additional measures to further 
    facilitate the development of competition in the advanced services 
    market. First, we strengthen our collocation rules to reduce the costs 
    and delays faced by competitors that seek to collocate equipment in an 
    incumbent LEC's central office. For example, we require incumbent LECs 
    to make available to requesting competitive LECs shared cage and 
    cageless collocation arrangements. Moreover, when collocation space is 
    exhausted at a particular LEC location, we require incumbent LECs to 
    permit collocation in adjacent controlled environmental vaults or 
    similar structures to the extent technically feasible. Second, we adopt 
    certain spectrum compatibility rules and adopt a Further Notice of 
    Proposed Rulemaking (Further NPRM) to explore issues related to 
    developing long-term standards and practices for spectrum compatibility 
    and management. Finally, in the Further NPRM, we consider whether we 
    should require LECs to allow competitors to offer advanced services to 
    end users over the same line on which the LEC is offering voice 
    service.
        7. We intend to address, in a future order, other specific forms of 
    regulatory relief that may be needed to stimulate investment and 
    deployment of advanced services by incumbents or new entrants, or 
    whether other changes to the Commission's local competition rules may 
    facilitate deployment of advanced services by competing carriers. For 
    example, in the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, 63 FR 45134, August 
    24, 1998, we had proposed an option under which incumbent LECs would be 
    free to establish separate affiliates to provide advanced services that 
    would not be subject to section 251(c) obligations if those affiliates 
    were structured in a fashion so as not to be deemed a successor or 
    assign of the incumbent. We also sought comment on the applicability of 
    section 251(c)(4) resale obligations to advanced services to the extent 
    such services are exchange access services. In addition, the NPRM 
    proposed limited modifications of LATA boundaries. We also had set 
    forth proposals in the Advanced Services Order and NPRM relating to 
    incumbent LEC loop unbundling obligations. We are deferring action on 
    those issues and proposals.
    B. Executive Summary
        8. In the Order, we take the following steps:
    
    Collocation
    
         Incumbent LECs must make available to requesting 
    competitive LECs shared cage and cageless collocation arrangements. 
    Moreover, when collocation is exhausted at a particular LEC location, 
    incumbent LECs must permit collocation in adjacent controlled 
    environmental vaults or similar structures to the extent technically 
    feasible.
         A collocation method used by one incumbent LEC or mandated 
    by a state commission is presumptively technically feasible for any 
    other incumbent LEC.
         Incumbent LECs may adopt reasonable security measures to 
    protect their central office equipment.
         Incumbent LECs may not require competitive LEC equipment 
    to meet more stringent safety requirements than those the incumbent LEC 
    imposes on its own equipment.
         Incumbent LECs must permit competitors to collocate all 
    equipment used for interconnection and/or access to unbundled network 
    elements (UNEs), even if it includes a ``switching'' or enhanced 
    services function, and incumbent LECs cannot require that the switching 
    or enhanced services functionality of equipment be disengaged.
         Incumbent LECs must permit a competitive LEC to tour the 
    entire central office in which that competitive LEC has been denied 
    collocation space. Incumbent LECs must provide a list of all offices in 
    which there is no more space. Incumbent LECs must remove obsolete, 
    unused equipment, in order to facilitate the creation of additional 
    collocation space within a central office.
         The collocation rules set forth in the Order serve as 
    minimum standards, and permit any state to adopt additional 
    requirements.
    
    Spectrum Compatibility
    
         We adopt certain spectrum compatibility and management 
    rules to allow competitive providers to deploy innovative advanced 
    services technology in a timely manner. Specifically, any loop 
    technology that complies with existing industry standards, has been 
    successfully deployed by any carrier without significantly degrading 
    the performance of other services, or has been approved by this 
    Commission, any state commission, or an industry standards body is 
    presumed acceptable for deployment. A LEC may not deny a carrier's 
    request to deploy technology that is presumed acceptable for 
    deployment, unless the LEC demonstrates to the state commission that 
    deployment of the particular technology within the LEC network will 
    significantly degrade the performance of other services.
         We also seek comment in the Further NPRM on measures that 
    would facilitate timely development of long-term industry standards and 
    practices on spectrum compatibility and management to facilitate 
    deployment of new and innovative loop technologies.
    
    Line Sharing
    
         In the Further NPRM, we tentatively conclude line sharing 
    is technically feasible, and we seek comment on the operational, 
    pricing, and policy ramifications to determine whether or not to 
    mandate line sharing nationally.
    
    III. Background
    
    A. Advanced Services Technologies
        9. In circumstances in which the xDSL-equipped line carries both 
    POTS (``plain old telephone service'') and data
    
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    channels, the carrier must separate those two streams when they reach 
    the telephone company's central office. This is generally done by a 
    device known as a digital subscriber line access multiplexer, or DSLAM. 
    The DSLAM and central office xDSL modem send the customer's POTS 
    traffic to the public, circuit-switched telephone network. The DSLAM 
    sends the customer's data traffic (combined with that of other xDSL 
    users) to a packet-switched data network. Thus, the data traffic, after 
    traversing the local loop, avoids the circuit-switched telephone 
    network altogether.
        10. Once on the packet-switched network, the data traffic is routed 
    to the location selected by the customer, for example, a corporate 
    local area network or an Internet service provider. That location may 
    itself be a gateway to a new packet-switched network or set of 
    networks, like the Internet.
    B. Statutory Framework
        11. In the 1996 Act, Congress established a ``pro-competitive, 
    deregulatory national policy framework'' for telecommunications, 
    opening all telecommunications markets to competition so as to make 
    advanced telecommunications and information technologies and services 
    available to all Americans. At the core of the Act's market-opening 
    provisions is section 251. In section 251, Congress sought to open 
    local telecommunications markets to competition by, among other things, 
    reducing economic and operational advantages possessed by incumbents.
        12. Section 251 requires incumbent LECs to share their networks in 
    a manner that enables competitors to choose among three methods of 
    entry--the construction of new networks, the use of unbundled elements 
    of the incumbent's network, and resale of the incumbent's retail 
    services. Section 251(a) requires all ``telecommunications carriers'' 
    to ``interconnect directly or indirectly with the facilities and 
    equipment of other telecommunications carriers.'' Section 251(c)(3) 
    requires incumbent LECs to provide nondiscriminatory access to 
    unbundled network elements. In addition, section 251(c)(6) imposes an 
    obligation on incumbent LECs ``to provide, on rates, terms and 
    conditions that are just, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory, for 
    physical collocation of equipment necessary for interconnection or 
    access to unbundled network elements. * * *'' Finally, for competitors 
    that seek to compete by reselling the incumbent LEC's services, section 
    251(c)(4) requires incumbent LECs to offer for resale at wholesale 
    rates ``any telecommunications service that the carrier provides at 
    retail to subscribers who are not telecommunications carriers.''
    C. Procedural History
        13. On August 7, 1998, we released the Advanced Services Order and 
    NPRM, in response to six petitions suggesting action we should take to 
    speed the deployment by wireline carriers of advanced services. In that 
    order, we concluded, inter alia, that the pro-competitive provisions of 
    the 1996 Act are technology-neutral and thus apply equally to advanced 
    services and to circuit-switched voice services. We therefore concluded 
    that incumbent LECs are subject to section 251(c) in their provision of 
    advanced services. Specifically, we found that incumbent LECs are 
    subject to the interconnection obligations of sections 251(a) and 
    251(c)(2) with respect to both their circuit-switched and packet-
    switched networks. We also clarified that the facilities and equipment 
    used by the incumbent LECs to provide advanced services are network 
    elements and generally subject to the obligations in section 251(c)(3). 
    In response to the petitions of Ameritech, Bell Atlantic, SBC and US 
    WEST requesting us to forbear from applying the requirements of section 
    251(c), or section 271, or both with respect to their provision of 
    advanced services, we concluded that we lacked the statutory authority 
    to do so and therefore denied those petitions.
        14. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we proposed, in 
    relevant part, to strengthen collocation requirements to foster timely, 
    cost-effective, competitive deployment of advanced services. We also 
    proposed to establish spectrum compatibility and management guidelines 
    so that multiple carriers could deploy advanced technologies on common 
    facilities.
        15. On January 25, 1999, the Supreme Court released an opinion in 
    AT&T Corp. v. Iowa Utilities Board in which it addressed the 
    Commission's rule setting forth those network elements that incumbent 
    LECs must make available to competitors. The Court held that the 
    Commission did not adequately consider the standards of section 
    251(d)(2) in determining which network elements must be unbundled 
    pursuant to section 251(c)(3). The Court stated that the Commission's 
    rule setting forth the network elements that incumbent LECs must make 
    available to requesting carriers should be vacated, and it remanded the 
    matter for further proceedings. We are currently reviewing the section 
    251(d)(2) standard consistent with the Supreme Court opinion in Iowa 
    Utilities Board, and will seek further comment on the issue of whether 
    network elements used in the provision of advanced services should be 
    unbundled.
    
    IV. First Report and Order
    
    A. Measures to Encourage Competitive LEC Deployment of Advanced 
    Services
    1. Overview
        16. In this section we adopt additional measures that we expect 
    will further facilitate competitive deployment of advanced services. In 
    order to enable competitive LECs to compete effectively with incumbents 
    in the advanced services marketplace, we establish additional standards 
    and rules that will strengthen our collocation requirements, thereby 
    reducing costs and delays associated with competitors collocating in an 
    incumbent LEC's central office. We also adopt certain spectrum 
    compatibility and management rules to allow competitive providers to 
    deploy innovative advanced services technology in a timely manner. We 
    acknowledge that the rules we adopt in this Order focus on the 
    provision of advanced services, but we emphasize that the actions we 
    take today pursuant to the Act apply to all telecommunications 
    services, whether traditional voice services or advanced services.
    2. Collocation Requirements
    a. Background
        17. In 1992, in the Expanded Interconnection proceeding, the 
    Commission adopted rules pursuant to section 201 of the Act that 
    required certain incumbent LECs to offer physical and virtual 
    collocation for parties seeking to locate interstate special access and 
    switched transport transmission facilities at LEC premises.
        18. Section 251(c)(6) of the 1996 Act requires incumbent LECs to 
    ``provide, on rates terms and conditions that are just, reasonable, and 
    nondiscriminatory, for physical collocation of equipment necessary for 
    interconnection or access to unbundled network elements at the premises 
    of the local exchange carrier, except that the carrier may provide for 
    virtual collocation if the local exchange carrier demonstrates to the 
    State commission that physical collocation is not practical for 
    technical reasons or because of space limitations.'' In the Local 
    Competition First Report and Order, 61 FR 45476, August 29, 1996, the 
    Commission adopted specific rules to implement the collocation 
    requirements of section 251(c)(6). In the Advanced Services Order and 
    NPRM, we tentatively concluded that we
    
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    should adopt additional collocation rules to ensure that competing 
    providers have access to the physical collocation space they need in 
    order to offer advanced services.
    b. Adoption of National Standards
        (1) Background: 19. In the Local Competition First Report and 
    Order, the Commission adopted minimum requirements for 
    nondiscriminatory collocation arrangements. The Commission adopted 
    rules for, among other things, space allocation and exhaustion, types 
    of equipment that could be collocated, and LEC premises where parties 
    could collocate equipment. The Commission also concluded that state 
    commissions should have the flexibility to adopt additional collocation 
    requirements that are otherwise consistent with the Act and the 
    Commission's regulations. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we 
    sought comment on the extent to which we should establish additional 
    national rules for collocation pursuant to sections 201 and 251 in 
    order to remove barriers to entry and speed the deployment of advanced 
    services.
        (2) Discussion: 20. We adopt our tentative conclusion to establish 
    additional national rules for collocation. We emphasize that the 
    collocation measures we adopt in this order apply to all 
    telecommunications services, including advanced services and 
    traditional voice services. The standards and rules we implement in 
    this proceeding will serve as minimum requirements. We note that state 
    commissions commenting in this proceeding generally support our 
    proposal to adopt additional national rules. We conclude that states 
    will continue to have the flexibility to respond to specific issues by 
    imposing additional requirements.
        21. There are numerous problems that remain with provisioning of 
    collocation space, and we believe that there are concrete steps we can 
    take, in conjunction with the ongoing work of state commissions, to 
    further the pro-competitive goals of the 1996 Act.
    c. Collocation Equipment
        (1) Background: 22. Section 251(c)(6) requires incumbent LECs to 
    allow collocation of ``equipment necessary for interconnection or 
    access to unbundled network elements . . . .'' In the Local Competition 
    First Report and Order, the Commission concluded that section 251(c)(6) 
    requires collocation of equipment used for: (1) interconnection for 
    ``the transmission and routing of telephone exchange service and 
    exchange access'' pursuant to section 251(c)(2); and (2) access to 
    unbundled network elements for ``the provision of a telecommunications 
    service'' pursuant to section 251(c)(3). The Commission interpreted 
    section 251(c)(6) as requiring incumbent LECs to permit competitors to 
    collocate equipment that is ``used and useful'' for either 
    interconnection or access to unbundled network elements.
        23. The Commission concluded in the Local Competition First Report 
    and Order that new entrants may collocate transmission equipment, 
    including optical terminating equipment and multiplexers, on incumbent 
    LEC premises. The Commission further concluded, at the time, that 
    incumbent LECs need not permit the collocation of other types of 
    equipment, including switching equipment and equipment used to provide 
    enhanced services. With respect to switching equipment, however, the 
    Commission recognized that ``modern technology has tended to blur the 
    line between switching equipment and multiplexing equipment.'' This 
    trend in manufacturing has benefited service providers and their 
    customers by reducing costs, promoting efficient network design, and 
    expanding the range of possible service offerings. As a consequence of 
    this integration, certain equipment that competing carriers need to 
    collocate to provide advanced services efficiently may also perform 
    switching functions. Because incumbent LECs are currently not required 
    by our rules to permit collocation of switching equipment, competing 
    providers argue that incumbent LECs have delayed competitive entry by 
    contesting, on a case-by-case basis, the functionality of a particular 
    piece of equipment (which may perform switching functions in addition 
    to its other functions) and whether it may be collocated.
        (2) Discussion: 24. Equipment with switching and enhanced services 
    functionality. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we tentatively 
    concluded that incumbent LECs should not be permitted to impede 
    competing carriers from offering advanced services by imposing 
    unnecessary restrictions on the type of equipment that competing 
    carriers may collocate. We sought comment on whether we should require 
    incumbent LECs to allow new entrants to collocate any equipment that is 
    used for interconnection and access to unbundled network elements, even 
    if such equipment also includes a switching functionality. 
    Specifically, we asked if collocation of equipment that performs both 
    switching and other functions would encourage competitive LECs to use 
    integrated equipment that otherwise might not be allowed in incumbent 
    LEC premises.
        25. Our existing rules, correctly read, require incumbent LECs to 
    permit collocation of all equipment that is necessary for 
    interconnection or access to unbundled network elements, regardless of 
    whether such equipment includes a switching functionality, provides 
    enhanced services capabilities, or offers other functionalities. Our 
    rules obligate incumbent LECs to ``permit the collocation of any type 
    of equipment used for interconnection or access to unbundled network 
    elements.'' Stated differently, an incumbent LEC may not refuse to 
    permit collocation of any equipment that is ``used or useful'' for 
    either interconnection or access to unbundled network elements, 
    regardless of other functionalities inherent in such equipment. Rather, 
    our rules require incumbent LECs to permit collocation of any equipment 
    required by the statute unless they first ``prove to the state 
    commission that the equipment will not be actually used by the 
    telecommunications carrier for the purpose of obtaining interconnection 
    or access to unbundled network elements.'' This rule requires incumbent 
    LECs to permit competitors to collocate such equipment as DSLAMs, 
    routers, ATM multiplexers, and remote switching modules. Nor may 
    incumbent LECs place any limitations on the ability of competitors to 
    use all the features, functions, and capabilities of collocated 
    equipment, including, but not limited to, switching and routing 
    features and functions.
        26. We consider this clarification of our existing rules to be 
    particularly important given the rapid pace of technological change in 
    the telecommunications equipment marketplace. By clarifying that 
    incumbent LECs must permit advanced services equipment to be collocated 
    on their premises, we take an important step towards elimination of 
    obstacles to competition. In order to compete effectively in the 
    advanced services marketplace, competitive telecommunications providers 
    must be permitted to collocate integrated equipment that lowers costs 
    and increases the services they can offer their customers.
        27. We continue to decline, however, to require incumbent LECs to 
    permit the collocation of equipment that is not necessary for either 
    access to UNEs or for interconnection, such as equipment used 
    exclusively for switching or for enhanced services. Although we may 
    explore requiring such collocation in the future, we do not find 
    sufficient
    
    [[Page 23234]]
    
    support in the record at this time for such a requirement. We reiterate 
    that incumbent LECs are obligated, pursuant to section 251(c)(6), to 
    permit competitors to collocate multi-functional equipment, even 
    equipment that includes switching or enhanced services functionalities, 
    if such equipment is necessary for access to UNEs or for 
    interconnection with the incumbent LEC's network.
        28. Cross-Connects. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we 
    sought comment on any additional steps we might take so that 
    competitive LECs are able to establish cross-connects to the equipment 
    of other collocated competitive LECs.
        29. We now revise our rules to require incumbent LECs to permit 
    collocating carriers to construct their own cross-connect facilities 
    between collocated equipment located on the incumbent's premises.
        30. Equipment Safety Requirements. In the Advanced Services Order 
    and NPRM, we tentatively concluded that incumbent LECs may require that 
    all equipment that a new entrant places on its premises meet safety 
    requirements to avoid endangering other equipment and the incumbent 
    LECs' networks. Certain performance and reliability requirements, 
    however, may not be necessary to protect LEC equipment. Such 
    requirements may increase costs unnecessarily, which would lessen the 
    ability of new entrants to serve certain markets and thereby harm 
    competition. We tentatively concluded that, to the extent that 
    incumbent LECs use equipment that does not satisfy the Bellcore Network 
    Equipment and Building Specifications (NEBS) requirements, competitive 
    LECs should be able to collocate the same or equivalent equipment. We 
    further tentatively concluded that incumbent LECs should be required to 
    list all approved equipment and all equipment they use.
        31. We conclude that, subject to the limitations described herein, 
    an incumbent LEC may impose safety standards that must be met by the 
    equipment to be collocated in its central office.
        32. Second, we conclude that, although an incumbent LEC may require 
    competitive LEC equipment to satisfy NEBS safety standards, the 
    incumbent may not impose safety requirements that are more stringent 
    than the safety requirements it imposes on its own equipment that it 
    locates in its premises.
    d. Alternative Collocation Arrangements
    (1) Background
        33. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we made several 
    tentative conclusions and sought comment on issues raised by ALTS in 
    its petition contending that the practices and policies that incumbent 
    LECs employed in offering physical collocation impeded competition by 
    imposing substantial costs and delays on competing carriers for space 
    and construction of collocation cages. Based on the record submitted in 
    this proceeding, we now adopt several of our tentative conclusions 
    related to the provisioning of collocation space in incumbent LEC 
    premises.
        34. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we tentatively 
    concluded that we should require incumbent LECs to offer collocation 
    arrangements to new entrants that minimize the space needed by each 
    competing provider in order to promote the deployment of advanced 
    services to all Americans. Such alternative collocation arrangements 
    include: (1) the use of shared collocation cages, within which multiple 
    competing providers' equipment could be either openly accessible or 
    locked within a secure cabinet; (2) the option to request collocation 
    cages of any size without any minimum requirement, so that competing 
    providers will not use any more space than is reasonably necessary for 
    their needs; and (3) physical collocation that does not require the use 
    of collocation cages (``cageless'' collocation).
    (2) Discussion
        35. We now adopt our tentative conclusion that incumbent LECs must 
    provide specific collocation arrangements, consistent with the rules we 
    outline below, at reasonable rates, terms, and conditions as are set by 
    state commissions in conformity with the Act and our rules.
        36. We now adopt new rules requiring incumbent LECs to make certain 
    collocation arrangements available to requesting carriers. In adopting 
    new rules, we reject the arguments of incumbent LEC commenters that 
    additional national collocation rules are not necessary.
        37. First, we require incumbent LECs to make shared collocation 
    cages available to new entrants. A shared collocation cage is a caged 
    collocation space shared by two or more competitive LECs pursuant to 
    terms and conditions agreed to by the competitive LECs. In making 
    shared cage arrangements available, incumbent LECs may not increase the 
    cost of site preparation or nonrecurring charges above the cost for 
    provisioning such a cage of similar dimensions and material to a single 
    collocating party. In addition, the incumbent must prorate the charge 
    for site conditioning and preparation undertaken by the incumbent to 
    construct the shared collocation cage or condition the space for 
    collocation use, regardless of how many carriers actually collocate in 
    that cage, by determining the total charge for site preparation and 
    allocating that charge to a collocating carrier based on the percentage 
    of the total space utilized by that carrier. In other words, a carrier 
    should be charged only for those costs directly attributable to that 
    carrier. The incumbent may not place unreasonable restrictions on a new 
    entrant's use of a collocation cage, such as limiting the new entrant's 
    ability to contract with other competitive carriers to share the new 
    entrant's collocation cage in a sublease-type arrangement. In addition, 
    if two or more competitive LECs who have interconnection agreements 
    with an incumbent LEC utilize a shared collocation arrangement, the 
    incumbent LEC must permit each competitive LEC to order UNEs to and 
    provision service from that shared collocation space, regardless of 
    which competitive LEC was the original collocator.
        38. Second, we require incumbent LECs to make cageless collocation 
    arrangements available to requesting carriers. While we do not prevent 
    incumbent LECs from offering caged collocation arrangements, we require 
    incumbent LECs to make cageless collocation available so as to offer 
    competitors a choice of arrangements. Subject only to technical 
    feasibility and the permissible security parameters outlined below, 
    incumbent LECs must allow competitors to collocate in any unused space 
    in the incumbent LEC's premises, without requiring the construction of 
    a room, cage, or similar structure, and without requiring the creation 
    of a separate entrance to the competitor's collocation space. Incumbent 
    LECs may require competitors to use a central entrance to the 
    incumbent's building, but may not require construction of a new 
    entrance for competitors' use, and once inside the building incumbent 
    LECs must permit competitors to have direct access to their equipment. 
    Incumbent LECs may not require competitors to use an intermediate 
    interconnection arrangement in lieu of direct connection to the 
    incumbent's network if technically feasible, because such intermediate 
    points of interconnection
    
    [[Page 23235]]
    
    simply increase collocation costs without a concomitant benefit to 
    incumbents. In addition, an incumbent LEC must give competitors the 
    option of collocating equipment in any unused space within the 
    incumbent's premises, to the extent technically feasible, and may not 
    require competitors to collocate in a room or isolated space separate 
    from the incumbent's own equipment. The incumbent LEC may take 
    reasonable steps to protect its own equipment, such as enclosing the 
    equipment in its own cage, and other reasonable security measures as 
    discussed below. The incumbent LEC may not, however, require 
    competitors to use separate rooms or floors, which only serves to 
    increase the cost of collocation and decrease the amount of available 
    collocation space. The incumbent LEC may not utilize unreasonable 
    segregation requirements to impose unnecessary additional costs on 
    competitors.
        39. Incumbent LECs must also ensure that cageless collocation 
    arrangements do not place unreasonable minimum space requirements on 
    collocating carriers. Thus, a competitive LEC must be able to purchase 
    collocation space sufficient, for example, to house only one rack of 
    equipment, and should not be forced to purchase collocation space that 
    is much larger than the carrier requires. We require incumbent LECs to 
    make collocation space available in single-bay increments, meaning that 
    a competing carrier can purchase space in increments small enough to 
    collocate a single rack, or bay, of equipment. We conclude that this 
    requirement serves the public interest because it would reduce the cost 
    of collocation for competitive LECs and it will reduce the likelihood 
    of premature space exhaustion. We rely on state commissions to ensure 
    that the prices of these smaller collocation spaces are appropriate 
    given the amount of space in the incumbent LEC's premises actually 
    occupied by the new entrants.
        40. Finally, we require incumbent LECs, when space is legitimately 
    exhausted in a particular LEC premises, to permit collocation in 
    adjacent controlled environmental vaults or similar structures to the 
    extent technically feasible. Such a requirement is, we believe, the 
    best means suggested by commenters, both incumbents and new entrants, 
    of addressing the issue of space exhaustion by ensuring that 
    competitive carriers can compete with the incumbent, even when there is 
    no space inside the LEC's premises. Because zoning and other state and 
    local regulations may affect the viability of adjacent collocation, and 
    because the incumbent LEC may have a legitimate reason to exercise some 
    measure of control over design or construction parameters, we rely on 
    state commissions to address such issues. In general, however, the 
    incumbent LEC must permit the new entrant to construct or otherwise 
    procure such an adjacent structure, subject only to reasonable safety 
    and maintenance requirements. The incumbent must provide power and 
    physical collocation services and facilities, subject to the same 
    nondiscrimination requirements as traditional collocation arrangements.
        41. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we also asked whether, 
    if an incumbent LEC offers a particular collocation arrangement, such 
    an arrangement should be presumed to be technically feasible at other 
    LEC premises. We recognize that different incumbent LECs make different 
    collocation arrangements available on a region by region, state by 
    state, and even central office by central office basis. We now conclude 
    that the deployment by any incumbent LEC of a collocation arrangement 
    gives rise to a rebuttable presumption in favor of a competitive LEC 
    seeking collocation in any incumbent LEC premises that such an 
    arrangement is technically feasible. Such a presumption of technical 
    feasibility, we find, will encourage all LECs to explore a wide variety 
    of collocation arrangements and to make such arrangements available in 
    a reasonable and timely fashion. We believe this ``best practices'' 
    approach will promote competition.
    e. Security
        42. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we sought comment on 
    the security and access issues that may arise from a requirement that 
    incumbent LECs provide alternative collocation arrangements, including 
    cageless collocation. We noted that, in the Local Competition First 
    Report and Order, the Commission concluded that incumbent LECs should 
    be permitted reasonable security arrangements to protect their 
    equipment and ensure network security and reliability. We recognized 
    that adequate security for both incumbent LECs and competitive LECs is 
    important to encourage deployment of advanced services.
        43. We conclude, based on the record, that incumbent LECs may 
    impose security arrangements that are as stringent as the security 
    arrangements that incumbent LECs maintain at their own premises either 
    for their own employees or for authorized contractors. To the extent 
    existing security arrangements are more stringent for one group than 
    for the other, the incumbent may impose the more stringent 
    requirements. Except as provided below, we conclude that incumbent LECs 
    may not impose more stringent security requirements than these. Stated 
    differently, the incumbent LEC may not impose discriminatory security 
    requirements that result in increased collocation costs without the 
    concomitant benefit of providing necessary protection of the incumbent 
    LEC's equipment.
        44. We agree with commenting incumbent LECs that protection of 
    their equipment is crucial to the incumbents' own ability to offer 
    service to their customers. Therefore, incumbent LECs may establish 
    certain reasonable security measures that will assist in protecting 
    their networks and equipment from harm. The incumbent LEC may not, 
    however, unreasonably restrict the access of a new entrant to the new 
    entrant's equipment. We permit incumbent LECs to install, for example, 
    security cameras or other monitoring systems, or to require competitive 
    LEC personnel to use badges with computerized tracking systems. 
    Incumbent LECs may not use any information they collect in the course 
    of implementing or operating security arrangements for any marketing or 
    other purpose in aid of competing with other carriers. We expect that 
    state commissions will permit incumbent LECs to recover the costs of 
    implementing these security measures from collocating carriers in a 
    reasonable manner. We further permit incumbent LECs to require 
    competitors' employees to undergo the same level of security training, 
    or its equivalent, that the incumbent's own employees, or third party 
    contractors providing similar functions, must undergo. The incumbent 
    LEC may not, however, require competitive LEC employees to receive such 
    training from the incumbent LEC itself, but must provide information to 
    the competitive LEC on the specific type of training required so the 
    competitive LEC's employees can complete such training by, for example, 
    conducting their own security training.
        45. Incumbent LECs must allow collocating parties to access their 
    equipment 24 hours a day, seven days a week, without requiring either a 
    security escort of any kind or delaying a competitor's employees' entry 
    into the incumbent LEC's premises by requiring, for example, an 
    incumbent LEC employee to be present. We also require incumbent LECs to 
    provide competitors reasonable access to basic facilities, such as 
    restroom facilities and parking, while at the incumbent LEC's premises.
    
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    f. Space Preparation Cost Allocation
        46. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we sought comment on 
    ALTS' proposal that we establish rules for the allocation of up-front 
    space preparation charges. One approach we noted, which had been 
    adopted by Bell Atlantic in its pre-filing statement in the New York 
    Commission's section 271 docket, was that the competing provider would 
    be responsible only for its share of the cost of conditioning the 
    collocation space, whether or not other competing providers were 
    immediately occupying the rest of the space. In addition, Bell Atlantic 
    committed to allowing smaller competing providers to pay on an 
    installment basis. We sought comment on whether we should adopt Bell 
    Atlantic's approach, or any other approach, as a national standard in 
    order to speed the deployment of advanced telecommunications capability 
    to all Americans.
        47. We conclude, based on the record, that incumbent LECs must 
    allocate space preparation, security measures, and other collocation 
    charges on a pro-rated basis so the first collocator in a particular 
    incumbent premises will not be responsible for the entire cost of site 
    preparation. In order to ensure that the first entrant into an 
    incumbent's premises does not bear the entire cost of site preparation, 
    the incumbent must develop a system of partitioning the cost by 
    comparing, for example, the amount of conditioned space actually 
    occupied by the new entrant with the overall space conditioning 
    expenses. We expect state commissions will determine the proper pricing 
    methodology to ensure that incumbent LECs properly allocate site 
    preparation costs among new entrants. We also conclude that these 
    standards will serve as minimum requirements, and that states should 
    continue to have flexibility to adopt additional collocation 
    requirements, consistent with the Act.
    g. Provisioning Intervals
        48. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we sought comment on 
    how to address the entry barrier posed by delays between the ordering 
    and provisioning of collocation space. Specifically, we sought comment 
    on ALTS' proposal that we should establish presumptive reasonable 
    deployment intervals for new collocation arrangements and expansion of 
    existing arrangements. Currently, some incumbent LECs require a new 
    entrant to obtain state competitive LEC certification before it can 
    begin to negotiate an interconnection agreement. In addition, 
    competitive LECs asserted that some incumbent LECs will not allow a 
    requesting carrier to order collocation space until an interconnection 
    agreement becomes final.
        49. We conclude that an incumbent LEC may not impose unreasonable 
    restrictions on the time period within which it will consider 
    applications for collocation space. Specifically, we conclude that an 
    incumbent LEC may not refuse to consider an application for collocation 
    space submitted by a competitor while that competitor's state 
    certification is pending, or before the competitor and incumbent LEC 
    have entered into a final interconnection agreement. There is no 
    legitimate reason for an incumbent LEC to refuse to begin processing a 
    collocation application, especially given that competitors pay an 
    application fee to the incumbent to cover the costs associated with 
    consideration of the application.
        50. We do not adopt specific provisioning intervals at this time. 
    We have adopted several new collocation rules in this Order, and we do 
    not yet have sufficient experience with the implementation of these new 
    collocation arrangements to suggest time frames for provisioning. While 
    we do not at this time adopt specific intervals, we retain authority to 
    adopt specific time frames in the future as we deem necessary. We 
    emphasize the importance of timely provisioning, and we are confident 
    that state commissions recognize the competitive harm that new entrants 
    suffer when collocation arrangements are unnecessarily delayed. The 
    record in this proceeding reflects the significant competitive harm 
    suffered by new entrants whose collocation space is not ready for as 
    long as six to eight months after their initial collocation request is 
    submitted to the incumbent LEC. Several state commissions have taken 
    significant steps to lessen the time periods within which incumbent 
    LECs provision collocation space. The Texas PUC has required 
    Southwestern Bell Telephone Company (SWBT) to provide competitive LECs 
    with information on space availability in a SWBT premises within ten 
    days of receipt of a collocation request. Because of the importance of 
    ensuring timely provisioning of collocation space, we encourage state 
    commissions to ensure that incumbent LECs are given specific time 
    intervals within which they must respond to collocation requests.
        51. The practices of several carriers suggest that provisioning 
    intervals can be short. Both GTE and Ameritech state that they respond 
    to physical collocation requests within ten days by advising the 
    requesting carrier whether space is available or not. We view ten days 
    as a reasonable time period within which to inform a new entrant 
    whether its collocation application is accepted or denied. Even with a 
    timely response to their applications, however, new entrants cannot 
    compete effectively unless they have timely access to provisioned 
    collocation space. We urge the states to ensure that collocation space 
    is available in a timely and pro-competitive manner that gives new 
    entrants a full and fair opportunity to compete.
    h. Space Exhaustion
        52. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we noted that one of 
    the major barriers facing new entrants that seek to provide advanced 
    services on a facilities basis is the lack of collocation space in many 
    incumbent LEC premises. Pursuant to the Act, incumbent LECs must 
    provide physical collocation unless they demonstrate to the state 
    commission's satisfaction that ``physical collocation is not practical 
    for technical reasons or because of space limitations.'' Because 
    incumbent LECs have the incentive and capability to impede competition 
    by reducing the amount of space available for collocation by 
    competitors, the Commission, in the Local Competition First Report and 
    Order, required incumbent LECs that deny requests for physical 
    collocation on the basis of space limitations to provide the state 
    commission with detailed floor plans or diagrams of their premises. The 
    Commission concluded that such submissions would aid the state 
    commission in evaluating whether the denial of physical collocation was 
    justified.
        53. We now adopt our tentative conclusion that an incumbent LEC 
    that denies a request for physical collocation due to space limitations 
    should, in addition to providing the state commission with detailed 
    floor plans, allow any competing provider that is denied physical 
    collocation at the incumbent LEC's premises to tour the premises. 
    Specifically, we require the incumbent LEC to permit representatives of 
    a requesting telecommunications carrier that has been denied 
    collocation due to space constraints to tour the entire premises in 
    question, not just the room in which space was denied, without charge, 
    within ten days of the denial of space. As we noted in the Advanced 
    Services NPRM, allowing competing providers to walk through a LEC's 
    premises will enable those providers to identify space that they 
    believe could be used for physical collocation. If, after the tour of
    
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    the premises, the incumbent LEC and competing provider disagree about 
    whether space limitations at that premise make collocation impractical, 
    both carriers could present their arguments to the state commission. 
    Incumbent LECs are permitted to assign their own personnel to such 
    tours, thus offering sufficient protection against harm to the network 
    and proprietary information.
        54. We also adopt our tentative conclusion that an incumbent LEC 
    must submit to a requesting carrier within ten days of the submission 
    of the request a report indicating the incumbent LEC's available 
    collocation space in a particular LEC premises. This report must 
    specify the amount of collocation space available at each requested 
    premises, the number of collocators, and any modifications in the use 
    of the space since the last report. The report must also include 
    measures that the incumbent LEC is taking to make additional space 
    available for collocation. In addition to this reporting requirement 
    incumbent LECs must maintain a publicly available document, posted for 
    viewing on the Internet, indicating all premises that are full, and 
    must update such a document within ten days of the date at which a 
    premises runs out of physical collocation space. Such requirements will 
    allow competitors to avoid expending significant resources in applying 
    for collocation space in an incumbent LEC's premises where no such 
    space exists. We expect that state commissions will permit incumbent 
    LECs to recover the costs of implementing these reporting measures from 
    collocating carriers in a reasonable manner.
        55. For network planning purposes, new entrants need to know what 
    incumbent LEC offices are available for collocation. Each new entrant 
    cannot be required to apply for collocation space in every central 
    office in order to find out if there is space available in that office, 
    when such information is readily available to the incumbent LEC that 
    occupies that office.
        56. Finally, we conclude that in order to increase the amount of 
    space available for collocation, incumbent LECs must remove obsolete 
    unused equipment from their premises upon reasonable request by a 
    competitor or upon the order of a state commission. We rely on state 
    commissions to settle disputes between carriers as to which incumbent 
    equipment is truly obsolete and unused and can be removed from the 
    LEC's premises. We also note that carriers may utilize the complaint 
    provisions of section 208 of the Act in the case of collocation 
    disputes that fall within the Commission's jurisdiction.
    B. Spectrum Compatibility
        57. Background. Spectrum compatibility refers generally to the 
    ability of various loop technologies to reside and operate in close 
    proximity while not significantly degrading each other's performance. 
    Our discussion of spectrum compatibility includes spectral 
    compatibility standards issues, such as setting the signal power 
    densities so as to minimize interference, and spectrum management 
    issues, such as establishing binder group administration and deployment 
    practices. The development of spectral compatibility standards should 
    help to minimize crosstalk, the noise caused by extraneous signals 
    combining with the intended signal. This noise can result in the 
    degradation of the intended signal. Compatibility becomes a significant 
    concern with the introduction of new high-speed services in a multiple 
    provider environment. For example, if an incumbent LEC and a 
    competitive LEC offer DSL services that use different line encoding 
    technologies, and if their respective customers' loops are located 
    adjacent to each other within a binder group, the two technologies may 
    unintentionally interfere with one another and interrupt the signals 
    travelling over each loop. One method of ensuring spectral 
    compatibility is through the use of power spectral density (PSD) masks. 
    PSD masks are represented as graphical templates that define the limits 
    on signal power densities across a range of frequencies so as to 
    minimize interference. The goal of PSD mask standards is to permit 
    divergent technologies to coexist in close proximity within the same 
    binder groups. Standards bodies, such as T1E1.4, define these masks as 
    technology develops. The development of spectrum management rules and 
    practices should help enable multiple technologies to coexist within 
    binder groups.
        58. In the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, we sought comment on 
    how to address the host of loop spectrum compatibility issues. In 
    particular, we asked commenters to consider how we should address 
    interference concerns that may result from provision of advanced 
    services using different signal formats on copper pairs in the same 
    bundle. We asked parties to suggest ways to determine when a particular 
    service, technology, or piece of equipment causes network interference 
    such that the use of the particular service, technology, or piece of 
    equipment should be prohibited. We also asked commenters to suggest 
    ways to distinguish between legitimate claims that particular services, 
    technologies, or equipment create spectrum interference and claims 
    raised simply to impede competition. We sought comment on whether we 
    should adopt any industry standards as the basis for national spectrum 
    compatibility requirements. We also sought comment on how any 
    requirements should evolve over time so as to encourage and not stifle 
    innovation. In addition, we sought comment on other approaches to 
    spectrum management that would foster pro-competitive use of the loop 
    plant by incumbent LECs and new entrants, while providing necessary 
    network protection.
        59. Discussion. We acknowledge that clear spectral compatibility 
    standards and spectrum management rules and practices are necessary 
    both to foster competitive deployment of innovative technologies and to 
    ensure the quality and reliability of the public telephone network. We 
    find, however, that incumbent LECs should not unilaterally determine 
    what technologies LECs, both competitive LECs and incumbent LECs, may 
    deploy. Nor should incumbent LECs have unfettered control over spectrum 
    management standards and practices.
        60. We find that we do not have a sufficient record with which we 
    can adequately address all of the long-term spectrum compatibility 
    issues. Thus, we adopt below a Further NPRM through which we hope to 
    resolve, in a timely manner, the long-term spectrum compatibility 
    issues. In the Further NPRM, we seek comment on additional measures we 
    can take to encourage deployment of innovative technology while 
    simultaneously ensuring the integrity of the network. In this Order, we 
    adopt certain rules on spectrum compatibility and management which we 
    believe will enable reasonable and safe deployment of advanced services 
    prior to development of industry standards and resolution of all the 
    issues raised in the Further NPRM.
    a. Existing Power Spectral Density Masks
        61. Commenters generally agree that the process of establishing 
    power spectral density masks best occurs within the industry standards 
    setting bodies. Such standards bodies possess the combined knowledge 
    and expertise of a broad sector of the industry.
        62. We conclude, however, that we should establish certain rules on 
    spectrum compatibility that will immediately facilitate the deployment 
    of advanced services, until long-term
    
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    standards and practices can be established. Although we believe that 
    the development of power spectral density masks is best left to 
    standards bodies such as the T1E1.4, we also believe the Commission can 
    take certain immediate steps to encourage the deployment of advanced 
    services. Rather than setting forth in this Order specific standards 
    for the new technologies, we establish certain rules to foster 
    deployment of advanced services while maintaining network integrity, 
    until the standards bodies adopt comprehensive standards for the new 
    technologies. We find that any equipment deployed consistent with the 
    rules adopted here can be connected to the public switched telephone 
    network with reasonable confidence that this technology will not 
    significantly degrade the performance of other advanced services, and 
    with reasonable confidence that this technology will not impair 
    traditional voice band services.
        63. We conclude that any loop technology that complies with 
    existing industry standards is presumed acceptable for deployment. 
    Specifically, we conclude that technology that complies with any of the 
    following standards is presumed acceptable for deployment: T1.601, 
    T1.413, and TR28. Furthermore, any technology which has been 
    successfully deployed by any carrier without significantly degrading 
    the performance of other services or has been approved by this 
    Commission, any state commission, or an industry standards body is 
    presumed acceptable for deployment.
        64. We conclude that a LEC may not deny a carrier's request to 
    deploy technology that is presumed acceptable for deployment, unless 
    the LEC demonstrates to the state commission that deployment of the 
    particular technology within the LEC network will significantly degrade 
    the performance of other advanced services or traditional voice band 
    services. We conclude further that industry standards are not upper 
    limits on what technology is deployable; incumbent LECs and competitive 
    LECs are free to mutually agree to deploy new technologies that may 
    exceed these standards. We encourage cooperation between incumbents and 
    competitors to establish agreements on the deployment of non-standard 
    xDSL-based and other advanced services technology. We expect that as 
    standards are ratified for new technologies, carriers will recognize 
    these as deployable technologies and will not deny competitors the 
    ability to deploy these technologies. In the event that a LEC 
    subsequently demonstrates to this Commission or the relevant state 
    commission that a deployed technology is significantly degrading the 
    performance of other advanced services or traditional voice band 
    services, the carrier deploying the technology shall discontinue 
    deployment of that technology and migrate its customers to technologies 
    that will not significantly degrade the performance of other such 
    services.
        65. We further conclude that incumbent LECs cannot deny requesting 
    carriers the right to deploy a new technology that does not conform to 
    the standards cited in the preceding paragraph and has not yet been 
    approved by a standards body (or otherwise authorized by this 
    Commission or any state commission), if the requesting carrier can 
    demonstrate to the state commission that this particular technology 
    will not significantly degrade the performance of other advanced 
    services or traditional voice band services. In this situation, there 
    would be no presumption in favor of deployment and the burden would be 
    on the requesting carrier to make the appropriate showing.
    b. Spectrum Management
        66. In order to encourage deployment of innovative technology and 
    allow competitors the same opportunity as incumbent LECs to deploy 
    advanced services, while simultaneously ensuring the integrity of the 
    network, we establish certain spectrum management rules.
        67. We define spectrum management to include binder/cable 
    administration as well as the broader issue of deployment practices 
    (e.g., the rules for testing and implementing xDSL-based and other 
    advanced services). We believe that the industry must develop a simpler 
    and more open approach to spectrum management. Currently, each 
    incumbent LEC defines its own spectrum management specifications. These 
    measures vary from provider to provider and from state to state, 
    thereby requiring competitive LECs to conform to different 
    specifications in each area. We find that uniform spectrum management 
    procedures are essential to the success of advanced services 
    deployment. As such, we adopt the following spectrum management rules.
        68. We conclude that the incumbent LEC must provide competitive 
    LECs with nondiscriminatory access to the incumbent LEC's spectrum 
    management procedures and policies. The procedures and policies that 
    the incumbent LEC uses in determining which services can be deployed 
    must be equally available to competitive LECs intending to provide 
    service in an area. We believe that competitive LECs need 
    nondiscriminatory access to such information so that the competitive 
    LEC can independently and expeditiously determine what services and 
    technologies it can deploy within the incumbent LEC's territory.
        69. We conclude that incumbent LECs must disclose to requesting 
    carriers information with respect to the rejection of the requesting 
    carrier's provision of advanced services, together with the specific 
    reason for the rejection. The incumbent LEC must also disclose to 
    requesting carriers information with respect to the number of loops 
    using advanced services technology within the binder and type of 
    technology deployed on those loops. We believe that such disclosure 
    will allow for a more open and accessible environment, foster 
    competition, and encourage deployment of advanced services.
        70. We strongly believe that industry should discontinue deployment 
    of well recognized disturbers, such as AMI T1. We further believe 
    carriers should, to the fullest extent possible, replace AMI T1 with 
    new and less interfering technologies. In the accompanying Further 
    NPRM, we seek comment on methods by which to reduce or eliminate the 
    deployment of AMI T1.
        71. We conclude that if a carrier claims a service is significantly 
    degrading the performance of other advanced services or traditional 
    voice band services, then that carrier must notify the causing carrier 
    and allow that carrier a reasonable opportunity to correct the problem. 
    Any claims of network harm must be supported with specific and 
    verifiable supporting information.
        72. We recognize that there may be a limit to the number of lines 
    delivering advanced services that can share a binder group without 
    interfering with other customers' services. We conclude that the 
    incumbent LEC shall bear the burden of demonstrating to the relevant 
    state commission when a requested advanced service will significantly 
    degrade the performance of existing services, such that the incumbent 
    can deny the competitor's request. We do not believe this will be a 
    problem until advanced services penetrate a significant portion of the 
    market and expect incumbents to manage binder groups in such a manner 
    so as to maximize the number and types of advanced services that can be 
    deployed.
        73. We recognize further that the standards development process may 
    delay the deployment of new technologies. To address this difficulty, 
    we encourage the industry to apply a
    
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    ``test and see'' strategy, which would allow competitive LECs and 
    incumbent LECs to cooperate in testing and deployment of new services. 
    We find that this strategy will encourage innovation and allow for the 
    more rapid deployment of new technologies. Our hope is that all 
    providers recognize that cooperation is essential in this future shared 
    environment.
    5. Further Information
        74. For further information regarding this proceeding, contact 
    Michael Pryor, Deputy Division Chief, Policy and Program Planning 
    Division, Common Carrier Bureau, at 202-418-1580 or mpryor@fcc.gov. 
    Further information may also be obtained by calling the Common Carrier 
    Bureau's TTY number: 202-418-0484.
    
    VI. Ordering Clauses
    
        75. Accordingly, it is ordered that, pursuant to sections 1-4, 10, 
    201, 202, 251-254, 256, 271, and 303(r) of the Communications Act of 
    1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151-154, 160, 201, 202, 251-254, 256, 271, 
    and 303(r), the First Report and Order is hereby adopted. The 
    requirements adopted in this Order shall be effective 30 days after 
    publication in the Federal Register, except for 47 CFR 51.321 (f) and 
    (h) and 51.323 (b) and (i)(3) which contain information collection 
    requirements that are not effective until approved by the Office of 
    Management and Budget.
        76. It is further ordered that the Commission's Office of Public 
    Affairs, Reference Operations Division, shall send a copy of this First 
    Report and Order, including the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, 
    to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration.
    
    Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        1. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), an Initial 
    Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in the Advanced 
    Services Order and NPRM. The Commission sought written public comment 
    on the proposals in the Advanced Services Order and NPRM, including 
    comment on the IRFA. [The comments received are discussed below.] This 
    present Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) conforms to the 
    RFA.
    
    I. Need for and Objectives of This First Report and Order and the Rules 
    Adopted Herein
    
        2. In order to encourage competition among carriers to develop and 
    deploy new advanced services, it is critical that the marketplace for 
    these services be conducive to investment, innovation, and meeting the 
    needs of consumers. In this First Report and Order, we seek to ensure 
    that all carriers have economic incentives to innovate and invest in 
    new technologies.
        3. We also adopt additional measures to further facilitate the 
    development of competition in the advanced services market. First, we 
    strengthen our collocation rules to reduce the costs and delays faced 
    by competitors that seek to collocate equipment in an incumbent LEC's 
    central office. We also adopt certain spectrum compatibility guidelines 
    and adopt a Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (FNPRM) to explore 
    issues related to developing long-term standards and practices for 
    spectrum compatibility and management and line sharing. The issues 
    which are the subject of the FNPRM will be discussed in a separate 
    Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis.
    
    II. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response 
    to the IRFA
    
        4. In the IRFA, we stated that any rule changes would impose 
    minimum burdens on small entities. We indicated that the collocation 
    section of the NPRM proposed reporting requirements. The IRFA solicited 
    comment on alternatives to our proposed rules that would minimize the 
    impact they may have on small entities. In response we received 
    comments from the Office of Advocacy, United States Small Business 
    Administration (SBA) specifically directed to the IRFA. Specifically, 
    SBA contends that the Commission's IRFA was inadequate because it 
    failed to consider the effect of its proposed rules on small incumbent 
    LECs. While we continue to believe that incumbent LECs are dominant and 
    therefore not ``small'' businesses within the meaning of the SBA, we 
    include a discussion of the effect of the actions taken in this order 
    on small incumbent LECs in order to remove any possible issue of RFA 
    compliance. As noted in Part V of this FRFA, in making the 
    determinations reflected in this order, we have given consideration to 
    the SBA's comments, as well as comments of parties that generally 
    addressed the impact of our proposed rules on small entities. We also 
    do not agree with SBA's contention that our IRFA was not sufficiently 
    detailed to generate ``meaningful comments on the impact of the 
    proposed rules.'' The comments of the SBA, the National Rural Telecom 
    Association, and the Organization for the Promotion and Advancement of 
    Small Telecommunications Companies, among others, provided more than 
    sufficient detail for us to prepare this FRFA.
    
    III. Description and Estimates of the Number of Small Entities Affected 
    by the First Report and Order
    
        5. 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 actions taken in this First Report and Order. The RFA 
    generally defines the term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning 
    as the terms ``small business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small 
    governmental jurisdiction.'' In addition, the term ``small business'' 
    has the same meaning as the term ``small business concern'' under the 
    Small Business Act. A small business concern is one which: (1) is 
    independently owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of 
    operation; and (3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the 
    Small Business Administration (SBA).
        6. Below, we further describe and estimate the number of small 
    entities that may be affected by the decisions in this First Report and 
    Order.
        7. The most reliable source of information regarding the total 
    numbers of certain common carrier and related providers nationwide, as 
    well as the numbers of commercial wireless entities, appears to be data 
    the Commission publishes annually in its Telecommunications Industry 
    Revenue report, regarding the Telecommunications Relay Service (TRS). 
    According to data in the most recent report, there are 3,459 interstate 
    carriers. These carriers include, inter alia, local exchange carriers 
    (LECs), wireline carriers and service providers, interexchange 
    carriers, competitive access providers, operator service providers, pay 
    telephone operators, providers of telephone toll service, providers of 
    telephone exchange service, and resellers.
        8. The SBA has defined establishments engaged in providing 
    ``Telephone Communications, Except Radiotelephone'' to be small 
    businesses when they have no more than 1,500 employees. Below, we 
    discuss the total estimated number of telephone companies and small 
    businesses in this category, and we then attempt to refine further 
    those estimates.
        9. Although some affected incumbent LECs may have 1,500 or fewer 
    employees, we do not believe that such entities should be considered 
    small entities within the meaning of the RFA because they are either 
    dominant in their field of operations or are not
    
    [[Page 23240]]
    
    independently owned and operated, and therefore by definition not 
    ``small entities'' or ``small business concerns'' under the RFA. 
    Accordingly, our use of the terms ``small entities'' and ``small 
    businesses'' does not encompass small incumbent LECs. Out of an 
    abundance of caution, however, for regulatory flexibility analysis 
    purposes, we will separately consider small incumbent LECs within this 
    analysis and use the term ``small incumbent LECs'' to refer to any 
    incumbent LECs that arguably might be defined by the SBA as ``small 
    business concerns.''
        10. Local Exchange Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
    developed a definition for small LECs. The closest applicable 
    definition under the SBA rules is for telephone communications 
    companies other than radiotelephone (wireless) companies. According to 
    the most recent Telecommunications Industry Revenue data, 1,371 
    carriers reported that they were engaged in the provision of local 
    exchange services. We do not have data specifying the number of these 
    carriers that are either dominant in their field of operations, 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 LECs that would qualify as small business concerns under the 
    SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that fewer than 1,371 
    providers of local exchange service are small entities or small 
    incumbent LECs that may be affected by the proposed rules, if adopted.
        11. Competitive LECs. Neither the Commission nor SBA has developed 
    a definition of small entities specifically applicable to providers of 
    competitive LECs. The closest applicable definition under the SBA rules 
    is for telephone communications companies except radiotelephone 
    (wireless) companies. The most reliable source of information regarding 
    the number of competitive LECs nationwide is the data that we collect 
    annually in connection with the TRS Worksheet. According the most 
    recent Telecommunications Industry Revenue data, 109 companies reported 
    that they were engaged in the provision of either competitive local 
    exchange service or competitive access service, which are placed 
    together in the data. We do not have information on the number of 
    carriers that are not independently owned and operated, nor have more 
    than 1,500 employees, and thus are unable at this time to estimate with 
    greater precision the number of competitive LECs that would qualify as 
    small business concerns under the SBA definition. Consequently, we 
    estimate that there are fewer than 109 small competitive LECs or 
    competitive access providers.
    
    IV. Summary of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance 
    Requirements
    
    A. Collocation
        12. We establish additional national rules for collocation. We 
    require incumbent LECs to permit collocating carriers to construct 
    their own cross-connect facilities between collocated equipment located 
    on the incumbent's premises. An incumbent LEC that denies collocation 
    of a competitor's equipment, citing safety standards, must provide to 
    the competitive LEC within five business days a list of all equipment 
    that the incumbent LEC locates within the premises in question, 
    together with an affidavit attesting that all of that equipment meets 
    or exceeds the safety standard that the incumbent LEC contends the 
    competitor's equipment fails to meet. Incumbent LECs must provide 
    specific collocation arrangements, consistent with the rules we outline 
    below, at reasonable rates, terms, and conditions as are set by state 
    commissions in conformity with the Act and our rules.
        13. Incumbent LECs must make shared collocation cages, cageless 
    collocation, and adjacent controlled environmental huts, each with 
    single-bay collocation arrangements, available to new entrants. Subject 
    only to technical feasibility and certain security parameters, 
    incumbent LECs must allow competitors to collocate in any unused space 
    in the incumbent LEC's premises, without requiring the construction of 
    a cage or similar structure, and without requiring the creation of a 
    separate entrance to the competitor's collocation space. Incumbent LECs 
    may not require competitors to use an intermediate interconnection 
    arrangement in lieu of direct connection to the incumbent's network if 
    technically feasible, because such intermediate points of 
    interconnection simply increase collocation costs without a concomitant 
    benefit to incumbents. Incumbent LECs must allow competitive LECs to 
    have access to their collocated equipment 24 hours a day, seven days a 
    week, without requiring a security escort or delaying a competitor's 
    employees' entry into the incumbent LEC's premises.
        14. Incumbent LECs must allocate space preparation, security 
    measures, and other collocation charges on a pro-rated basis so the 
    first collocator in a particular incumbent premises will not be 
    responsible for the entire cost of site preparation. An incumbent LEC 
    may not refuse to consider an application for collocation space 
    submitted by a competitor while that competitor's state certification 
    is pending, or before the competitor and incumbent LEC have entered 
    into a final interconnection agreement. Incumbent LECs must permit 
    representatives of a requesting telecommunications carrier that has 
    been denied collocation due to space constraints to tour the entire 
    premises in question. Upon request from a competitive LEC, an incumbent 
    LEC must submit to the requesting carrier within ten days of the 
    submission of the request a report indicating the incumbent LEC's 
    available collocation space in a particular LEC premises. This report 
    should specify the amount of collocation space available at each 
    requested premises, the number of collocators, and any modifications in 
    the use of the space since the last report. The report should also 
    include measures that the incumbent LEC is taking to make additional 
    space available for collocation. In addition to this reporting 
    requirement, incumbent LECs must maintain a publicly available 
    document, posted for viewing on the Internet, indicating all premises 
    that are full, and must update such a document within ten days of the 
    date at which a premises runs out of physical collocation space. 
    Finally, incumbent LECs must remove obsolete unused equipment from 
    their premises to increase the amount of space available for 
    collocation.
    B. Spectrum Compatibility
        15. We establish certain spectrum compatibility guidelines in order 
    to permit the safe deployment of xDSL and other advanced technologies. 
    We determine that complying with these rules may require use of 
    engineering, technical, operational, accounting, billing, and legal 
    skills. However, we believe that incumbent LECs will already have these 
    skills.
    
    V. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small 
    Entities and Small Incumbent LECs, and Alternatives Considered
    
    A. Collocation
        16. Incumbent LECs that deny competitive LECs collocation of 
    certain equipment in a central office must provide the requesting 
    carrier, within five business days, a list of all equipment the 
    incumbent locates within the premises in question, together with an 
    affidavit attesting that all the incumbent's equipment meets the safety 
    standards that the incumbent contends the competitor's equipment fails 
    to
    
    [[Page 23241]]
    
    meet. In addition, an incumbent LEC must submit to the requesting 
    carrier within ten days of the submission of the request a report 
    indicating the incumbent LEC's available collocation space in a 
    particular LEC premises. These requirements allow competitive LECs, who 
    would otherwise have be unable to discover if incumbent LECs are 
    imposing discriminatory standards, to determine what type of equipment 
    incumbents will accept to be collocated, and further will allow 
    competitive LECs to determine if incumbent LECs are discriminating in 
    enforcing equipment requirements on competitive LECs but not on 
    themselves. The burden in preparing these reports in minimum, because 
    incumbent LECs already know what equipment they have in their offices, 
    how much space they have available, and the way in which they apply 
    their collocation standards.
        17. Incumbent LECs that deny collocation for space reasons must 
    allow competitive LECs to tour facilities. This requirement again 
    provides proof of lack of space, and allows competitive LECs to gather 
    evidence for presentation to state commission if there is a factual 
    dispute regarding space availability. The burden on the incumbent LEC 
    is minimum, because it can schedule tours when an employee is on site 
    and available to give one.
        18. An incumbent LEC must make public a document available on 
    Internet that lists all its premises that have no more collocation 
    space available, within 10 days of the time that the space fills up 
    completely. This serves competitive LECs by telling them when an 
    incumbent LEC office is full, so they need not apply for space. The 
    burden on incumbent LECs is minimal, because an Internet site is easy 
    and cheap to maintain, and all they are doing is making available 
    information that they already know themselves.
        19. An incumbent LEC must submit a report, within 10 days of 
    receipt of a request for such a report, to a requesting competitive LEC 
    indicating how much space is available in a particular incumbent LEC 
    premises. This benefits competitive LECs by allowing them to find out 
    if space is available without having to go through the lengthy and 
    expensive application process. There is minimal burden on the 
    incumbents because they already know the design of their own central 
    offices and should be able to easily state how much space is available 
    for collocation.
        20. Incumbent LECs must remove obsolete unused equipment from their 
    premises to create more collocation space. Such a requirement can 
    result in the creation of more collocation space in central offices 
    that were previously without space. The burden on incumbent LECs is 
    minimal, because if the equipment is obsolete and unused, the removal 
    of such equipment will not affect the network operations of the 
    incumbent.
    B. Spectrum Compatibility
        21. Incumbent LECs must make public the spectrum management 
    guidelines and policies that they use to determine what services 
    competitive LECs can provide over unbundled loops. This requirement 
    benefits competitive LECs by ensuring they know what services they can 
    provide over unbundled loops. There is a minimal burden to incumbent 
    LECs, because they already know what spectrum management guidelines 
    they are applying to their own network, and they are now simply 
    required to make such information public.
    
    VI. Report to Congress
    
        22. The Commission will send a copy of the First Report and Order, 
    including this FRFA, 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 Commission will send a copy of 
    the First Report and Order, including FRFA, to the Chief Counsel for 
    Advocacy of the Small Business Administration. A copy of the First 
    Report and Order and FRFA (or summaries thereof) will also be published 
    in the Federal Register. See 5 U.S.C. 604(b).
    
    List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 51
    
        Communications common carriers, Telecommunications.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    Magalie Roman Salas,
    Secretary.
    
    Rule Changes
    
    Amendments to the Code of Federal Regulations
    
        For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal 
    Communications Commission amends 47 CFR part 51 as follows:
    
    PART 51--INTERCONNECTION
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 51 continues to read as follows:
    
        Sections 1-5, 7, 201-05, 207-09, 218, 225-27, 251-54, 271, 332, 
    48 Stat. 1070, as amended, 1077; 47 U.S.C. 151-55, 157, 201-05, 207-
    09, 218, 225-27, 251-54, 271, 332, unless otherwise noted.
    
        2. Section 51.5 is amended by adding the following definition to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 51.5  Terms and definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Advanced services. The term ``advanced services'' is defined as 
    high speed, switched, broadband, wireline telecommunications capability 
    that enables users to originate and receive high-quality voice, data, 
    graphics or video telecommunications using any technology.
    * * * * *
        3. Section 51.321 is amended by revising paragraphs (c) and (f) and 
    adding new paragraphs (h) and (i) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 51.321  Methods of obtaining interconnection and access to 
    unbundled elements under section 251 of the Act.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) A previously successful method of obtaining interconnection or 
    access to unbundled network elements at a particular premises or point 
    on any incumbent LEC's network is substantial evidence that such method 
    is technically feasible in the case of substantially similar network 
    premises or points. A requesting telecommunications carrier seeking a 
    particular collocation arrangement, either physical or virtual, is 
    entitled to a presumption that such arrangement is technically feasible 
    if any LEC has deployed such collocation arrangement in any incumbent 
    LEC premises.
    * * * * *
        (f) An incumbent LEC shall submit to the state commission, subject 
    to any protective order as the state commission may deem necessary, 
    detailed floor plans or diagrams of any premises where the incumbent 
    LEC claims that physical collocation is not practical because of space 
    limitations. An incumbent LEC that contends space for physical 
    collocation is not available in an incumbent LEC premises must also 
    allow the requesting carrier to tour the entire premises in question, 
    not just the area in which space was denied, without charge, within ten 
    days of the receipt of the incumbent LEC's denial of space.
    * * * * *
        (h) Upon request, an incumbent LEC must submit to the requesting 
    carrier within ten days of the submission of the request a report 
    indicating the incumbent LEC's available collocation space in a 
    particular LEC premises. This report must specify the amount of 
    collocation space available at each requested premises, the number of 
    collocators, and any modifications in the use of the space since the 
    last report. This report must also include measures that the incumbent 
    LEC is taking to
    
    [[Page 23242]]
    
    make additional space available for collocation. The incumbent LEC must 
    maintain a publicly available document, posted for viewing on the 
    incumbent LEC's publically available Internet site, indicating all 
    premises that are full, and must update such a document within ten days 
    of the date at which a premises runs out of physical collocation space.
        (i) An incumbent LEC must, upon request, remove obsolete unused 
    equipment from their premises to increase the amount of space available 
    for collocation.
        4. Section 51.323 is amended by revising paragraphs (b), (c), (h), 
    and (i) and adding new paragraph (k) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 51.323  Standards for physical collocation and virtual 
    collocation.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) An incumbent LEC shall permit the collocation of any type of 
    equipment used or useful for interconnection or access to unbundled 
    network elements. Whenever an incumbent LEC objects to collocation of 
    equipment by a requesting telecommunications carrier for the purposes 
    within the scope of section 251(c)(6) of the Act, the incumbent LEC 
    shall prove to the state commission that the equipment will not be 
    actually used by the telecommunications carrier for the purpose of 
    obtaining interconnection or access to unbundled network elements. An 
    incumbent LEC may not object to the collocation of equipment on the 
    grounds that the equipment does not comply with safety or engineering 
    standards that are more stringent than the safety or engineering 
    standards that the incumbent LEC applies to its own equipment. An 
    incumbent LEC may not object to the collocation of equipment on the 
    ground that the equipment fails to comply with National Equipment and 
    Building Specifications performance standards. An incumbent LEC that 
    denies collocation of a competitor's equipment, citing safety 
    standards, must provide to the competitive LEC within five business 
    days of the denial a list of all equipment that the incumbent LEC 
    locates within the premises in question, together with an affidavit 
    attesting that all of that equipment meets or exceeds the safety 
    standard that the incumbent LEC contends the competitor's equipment 
    fails to meet. Equipment used for interconnection and access to 
    unbundled network elements includes, but is not limited to:
        (1) Transmission equipment including, but not limited to, optical 
    terminating equipment and multiplexers, and
        (2) Equipment being collocated to terminate basic transmission 
    facilities pursuant to Secs. 66.1401 and 64.1402 of this chapter as of 
    August 1, 1996.
        (3) Digital subscriber line access multiplexers, routers, 
    asyncronous transfer
        (c) Nothing in this section requires an incumbent LEC to permit 
    collocation of equipment used solely for switching or solely to provide 
    enhanced services; provided, however, that an incumbent LEC may not 
    place any limitations on the ability of requesting carriers to use all 
    the features, functions, and capabilities of equipment collocated 
    pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section, including, but not limited 
    to, switching and routing features and functions and enhanced services 
    functionalities.
    * * * * *
        (h) An incumbent LEC shall permit a collocating telecommunications 
    carrier to interconnect its network with that of another collocating 
    telecommunications carrier at the incumbent LEC's premises and to 
    connect its collocated equipment to the collocated equipment of another 
    telecommunications carrier within the same premises provided that the 
    collocated equipment is also used for interconnection with the 
    incumbent LEC or for access to the incumbent LEC's unbundled network 
    elements.
        (1) An incumbent LEC shall provide, at the request of a collocating 
    telecommunications carrier, the connection between the equipment in the 
    collocated spaces of two or more telecommunications carriers. The 
    incumbent LEC must permit any collocating telecommunications carrier to 
    construct its own connection between the carrier's equipment and that 
    of one or more collocating carriers, if the telecommunications carrier 
    does not request the incumbent LEC's construction of such facilities. 
    The incumbent LEC must permit the requesting carrier to construct such 
    facilities using copper or optical fiber equipment.
        (2) An incumbent LEC shall permit collocating telecommunications 
    carriers to place their own connecting transmission facilities within 
    the incumbent LEC's premises outside of the actual physical collocation 
    space, subject only to reasonable safety limitations.
        (i) As provided herein, an incumbent LEC may require reasonable 
    security arrangements to protect its equipment and ensure network 
    reliability. An incumbent LEC may only impose security arrangements 
    that are as stringent as the security arrangements that incumbent LECs 
    maintain at their own premises for their own employees or authorized 
    contractors. An incumbent LEC must allow collocating parties to access 
    their collocated equipment 24 hours a day, seven days a week, without 
    requiring either a security escort of any kind or delaying a 
    competitor's employees' entry into the incumbent LEC's premises. 
    Reasonable security measures that the incumbent LEC may adopt include:
        (1) Installing security cameras or other monitoring systems; or
        (2) Requiring competitive LEC personnel to use badges with 
    computerized tracking systems; or
        (3) Requiring competitive LEC employees to undergo the same level 
    of security training, or its equivalent, that the incumbent's own 
    employees, or third party contractors providing similar functions, must 
    undergo; provided, however, that the incumbent LEC may not require 
    competitive LEC employees to receive such training from the incumbent 
    LEC itself, but must provide information to the competitive LEC on the 
    specific type of training required so the competitive LEC's employees 
    can conduct their own training.
    * * * * *
        (k) An incumbent LEC's physical collocation offering must include 
    the following:
        (1) Shared collocation cages. A shared collocation cage is a caged 
    collocation space shared by two or more competitive LECs pursuant to 
    terms and conditions agreed to by the competitive LECs. In making 
    shared cage arrangements available, an incumbent LEC may not increase 
    the cost of site preparation or nonrecurring charges above the cost for 
    provisioning such a cage of similar dimensions and material to a single 
    collocating party. In addition, the incumbent must prorate the charge 
    for site conditioning and preparation undertaken by the incumbent to 
    construct the shared collocation cage or condition the space for 
    collocation use, regardless of how many carriers actually collocate in 
    that cage, by determining the total charge for site preparation and 
    allocating that charge to a collocating carrier based on the percentage 
    of the total space utilized by that carrier. An incumbent LEC must make 
    shared collocation space available in single-bay increments or their 
    equivalent, i.e., a competing carrier can purchase space in increments 
    small enough to collocate a single rack, or bay, of equipment.
        (2) Cageless collocation. Incumbent LECs must allow competitors to 
    collocate in any unused space in the incumbent LEC's premises, without 
    requiring the construction of a cage or
    
    [[Page 23243]]
    
    similar structure, and without requiring the creation of a separate 
    entrance to the competitor's collocation space. An incumbent LEC may 
    require collocating carriers to use a central entrance to the 
    incumbent's building, but may not require construction of a new 
    entrance for competitors' use, and once inside the building, incumbent 
    LECs must permit collocating carriers to have direct access to their 
    equipment. An incumbent LEC may not require competitors to use an 
    intermediate interconnection arrangement in lieu of direct connection 
    to the incumbent's network if technically feasible. In addition, an 
    incumbent LEC must give competitors the option of collocating equipment 
    in any unused space within the incumbent's premises, and may not 
    require competitors to collocate in a room or isolated space separate 
    from the incumbent's own equipment. An incumbent LEC must make cageless 
    collocation space available in single-bay increments, meaning that a 
    competing carrier can purchase space in increments small enough to 
    collocate a single rack, or bay, of equipment.
        (3) Adjacent space collocation. An incumbent LEC must make 
    available, where space is legitimately exhausted in a particular 
    incumbent LEC premises, collocation in adjacent controlled 
    environmental vaults or similar structures to the extent technically 
    feasible. The incumbent LEC must permit the new entrant to construct or 
    otherwise procure such an adjacent structure, subject only to 
    reasonable safety and maintenance requirements. The incumbent must 
    provide power and physical collocation services and facilities, subject 
    to the same nondiscrimination requirements as applicable to any other 
    physical collocation arrangement. The incumbent LEC must permit the 
    requesting carrier to place its own equipment, including, but not 
    limited to, copper cables, coaxial cables, fiber cables, and 
    telecommunications equipment, in adjacent facilities constructed by 
    either the incumbent LEC or by the requesting carrier itself.
    
    [FR Doc. 99-10832 Filed 4-29-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
6/1/1999
Published:
04/30/1999
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
99-10832
Dates:
Effective June 1, 1999, except for 47 CFR 51.321(f) and 51.321(h) and 51.323(b) and (i)(3), which contain information collection requirements that are not effective until approved by the Office of Management and Budget. The FCC will publish a document in the Federal Register announcing the effective date for those sections. Written comments regarding the Paperwork Reduction Act requirements should be submitted on or before May 13, 1999.
Pages:
23229-23243 (15 pages)
Docket Numbers:
CC Docket No. 98-147, FCC 99-48
PDF File:
99-10832.pdf
CFR: (3)
47 CFR 51.5
47 CFR 51.321
47 CFR 51.323