Rural Telephone Co. Coalition v. Public Utility Commission

941 A.2d 751, 2008 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 34
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 24, 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 941 A.2d 751 (Rural Telephone Co. Coalition v. Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rural Telephone Co. Coalition v. Public Utility Commission, 941 A.2d 751, 2008 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 34 (Pa. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Senior Judge FLAHERTY.

Rural Telephone Company Coalition (Coalition) and The Pennsylvania Telephone Association (Association) (collectively, Petitioners) petition for review of a decision of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (Commission) which denied the protest Petitioners filed on July 18, 2005, granted the exceptions filed by Core Communications, Inc. (Core) to the initial decision of the administrative law judge (ALJ), reversed the decision of the ALJ and approved the application of Core to amend its certificate of public convenience to begin to offer, render, furnish or supply telecommunication services as a facilities-based competitive local exchange carrier to the public in certain service territories throughout Pennsylvania. 1 We affirm.

On May 27, 2005, Core filed an application with the Commission seeking approval to provide competitive residential and business local exchange and telecommunication services throughout the service territories of all rural local exchange carriers (RLECs). Notice of the application was published in the Pennsylvania Bulletin on July 2, 2005. Petitioners, who are RLECs, filed protests to Core’s application on July 18, 2005. 2 Core filed an amended *753 application on August 22, 2005, correcting the defects identified by Petitioners that were in Core’s original application.

On February 21 and 22, 2006, the ALJ held evidentiary hearings on Core’s amended application. Petitioners maintained that Core is not providing a public utility service, is not offering “telecommunication” services, lacks the “facilities” needed to be a facilities-based competitor and is generally unfit.

Since 2000, Core has been certified by the Commission to provide facilities-based local exchange service in the service territories of Verizon Pennsylvania, Inc. (Verizon), Verizon North, Inc. (Verizon North) and the United Telephone Company of Pennsylvania d/b/a Sprint (Sprint). 3

Core primarily markets services that provide connectivity between information service providers and the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN). Core’s customers are integrated telephone service providers (ITSPs), Internet Service Providers (ISPs), inbound voice recognition providers, interconnection vendors, PBX installers and fax bureaus. Core’s basic service is its Managed Modem Services, tariffed as a local exchange service in Pennsylvania since 2000, and is a replacement for Primary Rate Interface (PRI) service that ISPs purchase from incumbent telephone companies.

Core utilizes “virtual” NXX (VNXX) arrangements to provision local calling numbers for its customers. 4 Core intends to provision “loops” in the RLECs territories by leasing high capacity lines such as T-l and T-3 lines that would connect one of Core’s network locations to various locations in the RLECs’ territories.

Core is seeking competitive local exchange carrier (CLEC) authority to expand and compete with the RLECs within their service territories. Core provides the competitive backdrop of the application by explaining that there is a robust, competitive market for telecommunication services geared toward ISPs in the non-rural parts of Pennsylvania. It explains that there is nothing unique about the service it provides in the non-rural part of Pennsylvania. Its competitors in these markets include Verizon, Qwest, Sprint, and other CLECs.

In the ISP markets, Core maintains that the RLECs and their affiliates are among its fiercest competitors. Core states that some of the RLECs are engaged in a rural edge-out strategy by which it is alleged that the RLECs leverage their financial resources and regulatory protections to expand into neighboring service territories. Core seeks certification as a CLEC because only with certification may it obtain interconnection pursuant to Section 251 of TA-96, 47 U.S.C. § 251, et seq.

Petitioners contend that Core is a wholesale ISP. Core accepts computer dial-up calls destined for the internet on behalf of *754 retail ISPs that have sold internet access to the public. Core provides the following services to the ISPs: electronic recognition that an end user’s computer browser is attempting to access the internet, translation of that call to internet language protocols, and delivery to the internet. Core changes the content of the call and grooms it to allow an end-user’s computer to web browse or receive emails over the internet. Core does not sell to end-users directly, only to ISPs.

Core, by its application to the Commission, also claims that it operates on the telecommunication side of a dial-up call. This is where the issue arises. Certification as a CLEC by the Commission allows Core to obtain telephone numbers from the national administrator, to change the calling scope of those numbers, and to demand the free delivery of long distance calls to Core. Petitioners contend that Core is not a local exchange telephone company and that Core does not intend to invest in or lease facilities that would allow customers to call and be called on a local basis. There is no dial tone service by Core. Core’s business plan is to terminate long distance computer calls destined for the internet on a toll free basis. Core asserts that any internet dial-up call within a local access and transport area (LATA) is a local call, irrespective of the location of the calling party and that party’s local calling area. 5

On June 8, 2006, the ALJ denied Core’s application. The ALJ found in pertinent part as follows:

Despite the representations made in its Amended Application, evidence adduced at the Hearing in this case establishes that Core is not now, and would not be in the future, a facilities-based CLEC as that term has been understood in Pennsylvania since enactment of the Telecommunications Act of 1996.... [I]t is also the case that Core is not, and will not be, a “local exchange carrier.”
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Because Core is not engaged in the provision of either “telephone exchange service!!”] or “exchange access,” Core does not meet the definition of a “local exchange carrier” under Federal law.
Based upon the evidence in this case, Core’s Amended Application seeking authority to be a “facilities-based competitive local exchange carrier” is a sham. Core is not now, and does not plan to be, a “facilities-based” carrier in the territories where it is certificated nor in the RLEC territories of the [Coalition] and [Association] companies where it seeks certification. Further, Core is not now, nor would it be while operating under its business plan, a local exchange telecommunications company (local exchange carrier) in accordance with Pennsylvania law. Even if Federal law were applicable, Core’s operations do not meet the definition of a “local exchange carrier.” [Petitioners] have contended that Core is, in fact, an ISP or an ISP aggregator.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
941 A.2d 751, 2008 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rural-telephone-co-coalition-v-public-utility-commission-pacommwct-2008.