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Committee on
Energy and Commerce
2125 Rayburn House Office
Building, Washington, DC
20515
Phone: (202) 225-2927 Contact Us »
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Frequently Asked Questions on
"Tauzin-Dingell" (H.R. 1542)
Does this bill effectively re-open the Telecommunications Act
of 1996?
- No. This bill addresses issues that were never debated, or even contemplated, five years
ago, and essentially supplements the Act to reflect the current state of technology.
- H.R. 1542 does not roll back any of the market-opening requirements in the Act.
Bell companies still must comply with all network unbundling and resale rules that are
necessary for local telephone competition to take hold.
Does this bill allow the Bell companies to make an end-run
around the Telecom Acts Section 271 checklist for entry into the long distance
business?
- No. This argument is a red herring. While it is absolutely correct to say
that, in a digital world, a voice "bit" is indistinguishable from a data
"bit," the bills provision allowing the Bell companies incidental
interLATA relief for data services will not allow them to get a foothold in the voice
long distance market.
- The only way for Bell companies to offer voice long distance under our bill is by using
packet-switched, or "IP telephony." The experts say IP telephony is not a viable
service, and wont be for at least 3-5 years.
- Even if you assume IP telephony was viable today, our bill prohibits the Bell companies
from marketing voice long distance service. The Big 3 long distance companies,
AT&T, MCI, and Sprint, spend hundreds of millions of dollars in marketing costs each
year to acquire each new customer. It would be infeasible for the Bells to gain a foothold
in that market without spending a single dollar.
- Finally, even if the Bell companies could market the service, they are also prohibited
under H.R. 1542 from charging customers for it. There is no market incentive to acquire
customers who dont pay for the service.
- The Bottom line is Bell companies will still have a strong incentive to meet Section 271
checklist its the only way to effectively compete with the major long
distance companies for voice long distance customers.
How does the bill address the cable "open access"
question?
- H.R. 1542 does not specifically mandate open access for cable. However, it would
permit local cable franchise authorities to order open access, so long as they are
otherwise legally permitted to do so.
While open access may be a worthy policy goal, the bill accepts the proposition that
for most cable systems it is technologically infeasible to build into the distribution
platform. Thats why the legislation makes sure the telephone platform remains open,
so consumers will have a choice.
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Prepared by the Committee on Energy and Commerce
2125 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515
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