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DSL Prime Editorial: Billions at Stake Of course no game played in Washington, D.C. is penny ante, but the dollars at stake in VoIP regulation mean that in 2004, political decisions will affect the fortunes of several of the nation's largest companies.
The Christmas panic in D.C. The Bells, originally expected to fight VoIP ferociously, have instead decided to join in and tilt the rules to their needs. Mike Powell, delighted to see something that looks like competition appear, wanted the VoIP experiment to continue unregulated for a year or so, proposing to issue a NPRM in January and take ample time to consider the issues. After all, fewer than 100,000 use VoIP in the U.S., not enough to directly change the business. That sensible strategy hits the wall, however, if AT&T/MCI/others switch much of the existing LD traffic to some form of IP and stop paying. Access charge basics But calls delivered to U.S. regional carriers in rural areas pay as much as seven cents a minute, a remnant of the old system. The result is an average cost to drop a call blended across the U.S. is 1.1 to 1.5 cents. This amounts to an enormous transfer of funds to rural carriers. It's clear most does not get passed on to consumersCitizens has margins 50 percent higher than SBC, and virtually no competition. Companies like Citizens have borrowed billions to purchase more lines from competitors at $3,000 and $4,000 per line, essentially betting that the government will keep access charges high. "Universal service charges" are a parallel system with the same issues, plus an overlay of waste. The E-rate, announced with the laudable goal of connecting the net to all schools and libraries, is larded with waste and corruption, about to be exposed by a Congressional committee. Four reporters have told me they are looking at it, but few have the time to do serious investigation. The New York Times had one story, and would find many more if they put someone like Jennifer Lee (a rising star in their D.C. office) to work. EditorialSmart regulation protects service,
fights waste DSL Prime strongly believes in universal service, including broadband. But the actual cost of universal voice service, including schools and libraries, is a small fraction of access and USF. The best way to save universal service is to actively and aggressively target it, eliminating waste and pork barrel spending. A good first step is to change some arbitrary rules that force schools and libraries to choose high-cost providers at public expense. 80 percent of the erate money doesn't go for Internet, but to pay for the school's regular phone charges. Smart buying, such as a national group that gets a great VoIP price, should be able to save an amazing amountprobably $300 million or so, a fifth of the budget right there. But rules, written largely by a board loaded with oldline carriers, currently prohibit this. Anyone who wants to defend universal service, including state regulators and honest public interest groups, should look first at fighting these ripoffs, not stopping VoIP.
Copyright 2004 Dave Burstein. "The power of the printing press belongs solely to those who own the presses"
The Internet is the cheapest printing press ever invented.
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