97-20899. Access to Telecommunications Equipment and Services by Persons With Disabilities (Hearing Aid Compatibility)  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 157 (Thursday, August 14, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 43481-43484]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-20899]
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    47 CFR Part 68
    
    [CC Docket No. 87-124; FCC 97-242]
    
    
    Access to Telecommunications Equipment and Services by Persons 
    With Disabilities (Hearing Aid Compatibility)
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This action amends Commission rules regarding HAC, which would 
    have required all telephones manufactured or imported for use in the 
    United States after November 1, 1998 to contain a volume control 
    feature. Under the amended rules, this compliance date is extended to 
    January 1, 2000. Furthermore, the Commission has made conforming 
    amendments to its hearing aid compatibility rules so that workplaces, 
    hotels and motels, and confined settings (e.g, hospitals and nursing 
    homes) will not be required to ensure that new or replacement 
    telephones contain a volume control feature until January 1, 2000, 
    parallel with the manufacturing requirements. This action was taken in 
    response to a petition for reconsideration filed by the Consumer 
    Electronics Manufacturers Association (CEMA).
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: September 15, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Andy Firth, Attorney, 202/418-1898, 
    Fax 202/418-2345, TTY 202/418-2224, afirth@fcc.gov, Network Services 
    Division, Common Carrier Bureau.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This summarizes the Commission's Order on
    
    [[Page 43482]]
    
    Reconsideration in the matter of Access to Telecommunications Equipment 
    and Services by Persons With Disabilities, (CC Docket 87-124, adopted 
    July 3, 1997, and released July 11, 1997.) The file is available for 
    inspection and copying during the weekday hours of 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 
    in the Commission's Reference Center, Room 239, 1919 M Street, N.W., or 
    copies may be purchased from the Commission's duplicating contractor, 
    ITS, Inc., 2100 M Street, N.W., Suite 240, Washington D.C. 20037, phone 
    202/857-3800.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        No impact.
    
    Analysis of Proceeding
    
        On June 27, 1996, the Commission adopted a Report and Order (R&O) 
    (FCC 96-285), 61 FR 42181 (August 14, 1996), which was released on July 
    3, 1996. The R&O, among other things, required that as of November 1, 
    1998, all telephones manufactured or imported for use in the United 
    States have a volume control feature. See 47 CFR 68.6. The R&O also 
    required that, as of November 1, 1998, all replacement telephones and 
    all newly purchased telephones in workplaces, confined settings, and 
    hotels and motels must be equipped with volume control, in addition to 
    having electro-magnetic coil hearing aid-compatibility. See 47 CFR 
    68.112 (b)(3), (b)(5), and (b)(6). The R&O included a technical 
    specification for volume control. See 47 CFR 68.317.
        On September 13, 1996, the Consumer Electronics Manufacturers 
    Association (CEMA) filed a Petition for Reconsideration of the R&O, 
    specifically for reconsideration of the rule adopted under 47 CFR 68.6, 
    which would have required all telephones manufactured or imported for 
    use in the United States after November 1, 1998, to contain volume 
    control. CEMA asserted that the rule as adopted would cause undue 
    financial burdens upon telephone equipment manufacturers, and also 
    asserted that the rule exceeded the Commission's authority under the 
    Hearing Aid Compatibility Act of 1988, 47 U.S.C. 610 (HAC Act). In the 
    alternative, CEMA urged the Commission to find that 47 CFR 68.6 should 
    only apply to new telephone models registered under part 68 after 
    November 1, 1998, as opposed to all telephone products manufactured 
    after that date. CEMA asserted that this ``grandfathering'' of existing 
    telephone models would, among other things, lessen burdens upon the 
    manufacturing industry by avoiding the need to re-tool existing 
    production lines.
        In its Order on Reconsideration, the Commission denied CEMA the 
    specific relief requested in its Petition. The Commission concluded 
    that CEMA's proposal would fall short of the HAC Act's requirement that 
    persons with hearing disabilities have reasonable access to the 
    telephone network, because there would be no assurance that 
    manufacturers will phase out the production of existing models without 
    volume control. By requiring volume control as a standard feature in 
    the manufacture of all telephones, the intent of the HAC Act is 
    furthered by minimizing the risk that persons with hearing disabilities 
    would be unable to access the telephone network in the event of an 
    emergency. The Commission also concluded that CEMA's argument that it 
    failed to consider the costs and benefits of the volume control rule to 
    be without merit, because in the R&O the Commission specifically 
    considered the costs and benefits of the rule, and concluded that the 
    costs of the volume control rule were not such a major obstacle as to 
    negate the benefits of the rule. The Commission concluded that CEMA 
    presented no further facts that would compel it to depart from this 
    finding made in the R&O.
        In the interest of minimizing potential burdens on the 
    manufacturing industry, however, the Commission concluded that the 
    volume control compliance date at 47 CFR 68.6 should be extended by 
    fourteen (14) months, to January 1, 2000. The Commission noted that 
    upon this date, manufacturers would have had three and one-half (3\1/
    2\) years to adjust their production cycles to comply with new volume 
    control manufacturing requirements, a generous compliance timetable. 
    Finally, the Commission adjusted existing rules at 47 CFR 68.112 that 
    would have required workplaces, hotels and motels, and confined 
    settings to provide telephones with volume control as of November 1, 
    1998, so that such establishments would not be required to comply until 
    January 1, 2000, parallel with the manufacturing requirements.
    
    Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, 5 U.S.C. 603, 
    the Commission's Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis in 
    this proceeding is as follows:
        1. Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis: As required 
    by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 603, an Initial 
    Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in the Notice 
    of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM). The Commission sought written public 
    comments in the NPRM, including on the IRFA. In addition, pursuant to 
    the RFA, 5 U.S.C. 603, a Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) 
    was incorporated in the Report and Order. Those analyses conformed to 
    the RFA. This Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 
    (SFRFA) in this Order on Reconsideration also conforms to the SBREFA. 
    The Commission's SFRFA in this Order on Reconsideration is as follows:
        a. Need for, and Objectives of this Order on Reconsideration: The 
    need for and objectives of the rules adopted in this Order on 
    Reconsideration are the same as those discussed in the FRFA in the 
    Report and Order. In general, the rules adopted herein amend the 
    Commission's rules at 47 CFR 68.6 to require that as of January 1, 
    2000, all wireline telephones manufactured or imported for use in the 
    United States must have volume control. This represents an amendment of 
    the original final rule in the Report and Order requiring all 
    telephones manufactured or imported for use in the U.S. after November 
    1, 1998, to have volume control. For reasons explained in this Order 
    and Reconsideration, the Commission has decided to extend its original 
    November 1, 1998 compliance timeline for this rule by fourteen (14) 
    months, to January 1, 2000. The Commission has also made conforming 
    amendments to portions of 47 CFR 68.112, which require establishments 
    such as workplaces, hospitals and hotels to provide volume control 
    telephones in their facilities. These establishments will not be 
    required to ensure that newly replaced or installed telephones must 
    have volume control until after January 1, 2000. This likewise reflects 
    a 14-month extension of the original November 1, 1998 timelines for 
    such establishments adopted in the Report and Order.
        b. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by the Public Comments In 
    Response to the FRFA: No comments were submitted specifically in 
    response to the FRFA. In its petition for reconsideration, which was 
    the initiating document for this Order on Reconsideration, the Consumer 
    Electronics Manufacturers Association (CEMA) asserted, inter alia, that 
    if 47 CFR 68.6 was to be applicable to all telephone models on the 
    compliance date, and not only to new models which are registered under 
    part 68 of the Commission's rules after that date, manufacturers would 
    incur significant expenses caused by the ``retooling'' of existing 
    production cycles prior to November 1, 1998. Several telephone
    
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    equipment manufacturers also submitted comments in support of CEMA's 
    petition for reconsideration, stating that the rule as adopted in the 
    Report and Order would impose undue burdens on their manufacturing 
    processes and resources.
        c. Description and Estimate of Number of Small Entities to Which 
    Rules Will Apply:
        (1) Under the RFA, small entities may include small organizations, 
    small businesses, and small governmental organizations. The RFA 
    generally defines the term ``small business'' as having the same 
    meaning as the term ``small business concern'' under the Small Business 
    Act, 15 U.S.C. 632. 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). Id.
        (2) The description and estimate of the number of small businesses 
    to which the rules will apply set forth in the FRFA in the Report and 
    Order also applies to the rules adopted in this Order on 
    Reconsideration. The same four industry categories identified in the 
    FRFA are also subject to the rules adopted in this Order on 
    Reconsideration: (a) Workplaces; (b) confined settings, such as 
    hospitals and nursing homes; (c) hotels and motels; and (d) importers 
    and manufacturers of telephones for use in the United States. The 
    determination of whether or not an entity within these industry groups 
    is small is made by the Small Business Administration (SBA). These 
    standards also apply in determining whether an entity is a small 
    business for purposes of the RFA. The detailed analysis and estimate of 
    the number of small entities within each of these above four industry 
    categories in the FRFA to the Report and Order is also applicable to 
    the rules adopted in this Order on Reconsideration.
        d. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other 
    Compliance Requirements:
        (1) Reporting and Recordkeeping: No additional reporting 
    requirements beyond those identified in the FRFA to the Report and 
    Order are imposed by this Order on Reconsideration.
        (2) Other Compliance Requirements:
        (a) The rules adopted in this Report and Order require that on or 
    after January 1, 2000, owners of workplaces, confined settings, and 
    hotels and motels must ensure that newly installed or replacement 
    telephones have volume control. These requirements will affect owners 
    of workplaces, confined settings, and hotels and motels.
        (b) The rules also require that on or after January 1, 2000, all 
    telephones manufactured or imported for use in the United States must 
    have volume control. These rules would affect small as well as large 
    domestic manufacturers and importers of telephones.
        e. Steps Taken to Minimize Significant Economic Burdens on Small 
    Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered:
        (1) The Commission's efforts to learn of and respond to small 
    business concerns detailed in the FRFA to the Report and Order are 
    likewise applicable to this SFRFA. In applying the rules adopted in 
    this Order on Reconsideration, the Commission has sought to minimize 
    any disproportionate burden on small entities. The Commission's efforts 
    described in the FRFA to the Report and Order are also applicable to 
    the rules adopted in this Order on Reconsideration. In particular, the 
    Commission's decision in this Order on Reconsideration to extend the 
    date by which all telephones manufactured or imported for use in the 
    United States must have volume control is a direct result of the 
    Commission's consideration of the impact of the rule on small entities 
    and manufacturers. Furthermore, the Commission's decision to also 
    extend compliance dates for workplaces, confined settings, and hotels 
    is a result of consideration of the potential impact of the rule on 
    small business establishments.
        (2) Under Section 610(e) of the Hearing Aid Compatibility Act, the 
    Commission must consider the costs, as well as the benefits, of the 
    proposed rules to all telephone users, including persons with and 
    without hearing disabilities. In the NPRM, the Commission solicited 
    comment on the costs to establishments of providing volume control and 
    hearing aid compatible telephones. After reviewing the comments, the 
    Commission concluded in the Report and Order that the new rules will 
    not impose significant additional costs on telephone users, 
    manufacturers or establishments, and that any costs are significantly 
    outweighed by the benefits to be achieved. Likewise, in this Order on 
    Reconsideration the Commission specifically considered the costs and 
    benefits of the rules to all telephone users in its decision to extend 
    the original compliance date for volume control by fourteen (14) 
    months.
        (3) Small entities will be among the beneficiaries of the 
    Commission's new rules. Under the new rules, telephones in workplaces, 
    confined settings and hotels and motels will be more accessible to 
    persons with hearing disabilities. These changes may lead to new 
    business for hotels and motels and confined settings, and workplaces 
    may be able to hire better employees, since the pool of potential 
    employees will be widened to include persons with hearing disabilities. 
    In addition, the level of public safety will increase in all three 
    settings, thereby benefitting both the business setting and the public 
    at large. The volume control manufacturing requirement probably will 
    increase the consumer demand for volume control telephones, benefitting 
    large and small manufacturers alike, due to the fact that volume 
    control is a feature useful not only to people with hearing 
    disabilities, but to non-disabled telephone users as well. Furthermore, 
    to the extent that the rule amendments may allow smaller manufacturers 
    and suppliers more time to recoup costs sunk in any remaining equipment 
    inventory and allow them to expand their marketing options, they are 
    consistent with section 257 of the Communications Act, as amended, 47 
    U.S.C. 257. That section requires, among other things, that the 
    Commission eliminate marker entry barriers for small businesses who may 
    provide parts or services to providers of telecommunications services 
    and information services. Id. at section 257(a).
        (4) The Commission rejected the proposal of the Consumer 
    Electronics Manufacturers Association in its petition for 
    reconsideration that the volume control rules apply only to new 
    telephone models registered under part 68 of the Commission's rules 
    after the compliance date. The Commission concluded that this approach 
    would mean that upon the compliance date, some telephone models would 
    be without volume control, which would not further Congressional intent 
    in the HAC Act that persons with hearing disabilities have reasonable 
    access to the telephone network. Rather, the Commission concluded that 
    by extending the compliance timeline by an additional fourteen (14) 
    months, potential burdens on small entities could be reduced, while at 
    the same time furthering the goals of the HAC Act to provide access to 
    the telephone network for people with hearing disabilities.
        f. Summary of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other 
    Compliance Requirements:
        On or after January 1, 2000, all telephones manufactured or 
    imported for use in the United States must have
    
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    volume control; and newly purchased and replacement telephones in 
    workplaces, confined settings and hotels and motels must have volume 
    control on or after January 1, 2000. There are no other recordkeeping 
    or other compliance requirements.
        g. Report to Congress: The Commission will include a copy of this 
    Supplementary Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, along with this 
    Order on Reconsideration, in a report to Congress pursuant to the Small 
    Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, 5 U.S.C. Section 
    801(a)(1)(A). A copy of this SFRFA (or summary thereof) is also 
    published herein.
    
    Ordering Clauses
    
        Accordingly, It Is Orderd that pursuant to Sections 1, 4, 405, and 
    710 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154, 
    405 and 610, part 68 of the Commission's rules Is Amended as set forth 
    below.
        2. It Is Further Ordered that, pursuant to Sections 1, 4, 405, and 
    710 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154, 
    405 and 610, the Petition for Reconsideration filed by the Consumer 
    Electronics Manufacturers Association is granted to the extent 
    indicated herein, and otherwise Denied.
        3. It Is Further Ordered that the rule amendments set forth below 
    shall be effective September 15, 1997.
    
    List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 68
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Communications common 
    carriers, Communications equipment, Hearing aid compatibility, 
    Labeling, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Telephone, Volume 
    control.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    William F. Caton,
    Acting Secretary.
    
    Rule Changes
    
        Part 68 of Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations is amended 
    as follows:
    
    PART 68--CONNECTION OF TERMINAL EQUIPMENT TO THE TELEPHONE NETWORK
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 68 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 155, 303.
    
        2. Section 68.6 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 68.6  Telephones with volume control.
    
        As of January 1, 2000, all telephones, including cordless 
    telephones, as defined in Sec. 15.3(j) of this chapter, manufactured in 
    the United States (other than for export) or imported for use in the 
    United States, must have volume control in accordance with Sec. 68.317. 
    Secure telephones, as defined by Sec. 68.3 are exempt from this 
    section, as are telephones used with public mobile services or private 
    radio services.
        3. Section 68.112 is amended by revising paragraphs (b)(3)(ii), 
    (b)(3)(iii), (b)(3)(iv), (b)(5)(ii), and (b)(6)(i), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 68.112  Hearing aid-compatibility.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (3) * * *
        (ii) As of January 1, 2000 or January 1, 2005, whichever date is 
    applicable, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that all telephones 
    located in the workplace are hearing aid compatible, as defined in 
    Sec. 68.316. Any person who identifies a telephone as non-hearing aid-
    compatible, as defined in Sec. 68.316, may rebut this presumption. Such 
    telephone must be replaced within fifteen working days with a hearing 
    aid compatible telephone, as defined in Sec. 68.316, including, on or 
    after January 1, 2000, with volume control, as defined in Sec. 68.317.
        (iii) Telephones, not including headsets, except those headsets 
    furnished under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(A) of this section, that are 
    purchased, or replaced with newly acquired telephones, must be:
        (A) Hearing aid compatible, as defined in Sec. 68.316, after 
    October 23, 1996; and
        (B) Include volume control, as defined in Sec. 68.317, on or after 
    January 1, 2000.
        (iv) When a telephone under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section 
    is replaced with a telephone from inventory existing before October 23, 
    1996, any person may make a bona fide request that such telephone be 
    hearing aid compatible, as defined in Sec. 68.316. If the replacement 
    occurs on or after January 1, 2000, the telephone must have volume 
    control, as defined in Sec. 68.317. The telephone shall be provided 
    within fifteen working days.
    * * * * *
        (5) * * *
        (ii) Telephones that are purchased, or replaced with newly acquired 
    telephones, must be:
        (A) Hearing aid compatible, as defined in Sec. 68.116, after 
    October 23, 1996; and
        (B) Include volume control, as defined in Sec. 68.317, on or after 
    January 1, 2000.
    * * * * *
        (6) * * *
        (i) Anytime after October 23, 1996, if a hotel or motel room is 
    renovated or newly constructed, or the telephone in a hotel or motel 
    room is replaced or substantially, internally repaired, the telephone 
    in that room must be:
        (A) Hearing aid compatible, as defined in Sec. 68.316, after 
    October 23, 1996; and
        (B) Include volume control, as defined in Sec. 68.317, on or after 
    January 1, 2000.
    * * * * *
    [FR Doc. 97-20899 Filed 8-13-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
9/15/1997
Published:
08/14/1997
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-20899
Dates:
September 15, 1997.
Pages:
43481-43484 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
CC Docket No. 87-124, FCC 97-242
PDF File:
97-20899.pdf
CFR: (3)
47 CFR 68.6
47 CFR 68.112
47 CFR 68.316