Phone Companies File Plan to Phase Out Connection Fees
Posted on: Tuesday, 17 August 2004, 06:00 CDT
Phone companies file plan to phase out connection fees
Bloomberg News
Tuesday, August 17, 2004
SBC Communications Inc., AT&T Corp. and seven other U.S. telephone companies filed a plan with federal regulators that would phase out most of the billions of dollars of fees they pay to connect each other's calls.
The three-year plan presented Monday to the U.S. Federal Communications Commission would overhaul rules for the "broken" compensation system, said Gary Epstein, a former FCC official who mediated talks on the proposal with the carriers. Consumers would pay more for phone service to make up some of the lost revenue, Epstein said in a Washington press briefing.
The carriers are seeking to end legal disputes and simplify a system that requires payments based on different per-minute rates, depending on the type or distance of the call.
AT&T and other long-distance phone companies pay higher fees and provide revenue to local providers such as SBC, which was the only one of the four U.S. regional carriers to endorse the plan.
Other carriers who support the proposal include MCI Inc. and Sprint Corp., Global Crossing Ltd. and Level 3 Communications Inc., which operate fiber-optic networks, as well as three closely held phone carriers in Texas, Iowa and Alaska, Epstein said.
Related Articles
- Fushi Copperweld Joins Word Economic Forum's Community of Global Growth Companies
- Phone thief called victim's cab company
- VPIsystems Helps Carriers Plan End-to-End Fiber Deployments
- Communications and Financial Services Companies Lead Other Industries in Type and Depth of Contact Center Technologies Implemented
- GCI Completes Purchase Of Communications Subsidiaries of United Companies, Inc.
- Airline Carriers Implement Baggage Handling Fees Amid Soaring Costs
- Cleveland Clinic Names Chief Marketing, Planning and Communications Officer
- Internet Phone Firms Must Pay Subsidy
- New AT&T Survey Shows Most Atlantic Hurricane Area Residents Are More Prepared Today for a Natural Disaster, but More Than One-Third Admit They Lack Plans to Communicate
- Analysis on Network Carrier's Cell Phone Gaming VAS Market
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds