FierceWirelessFierceWirelessEuropeFierceDeveloperFierceMobileContentFierceBroadbandWirelessFierceVoIPFierceIPTVFierceTelecomFierceOnlineVideo

Free Newsletter

About | View Sample | Privacy

Court upholds FCC decision on special access fees

Tools

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit decided on Friday to uphold a 2007 FCC decision in which the commission eliminated price caps on fees that telcos such as AT&T and Verizon charge others to access their lines.

The ruling is blow to operators such as Sprint Nextel, U.S. Cellular and T-Mobile USA, which don't have wireline divisions and must pay competitors such as AT&T and Verizon fees to use their landlines to backhaul wireless traffic from the cell site to the switch. The ruling from the court clearly signals that decisions on "special access" fees are in the hands of the FCC.

Carriers such as Sprint T-Mobile and others, along with a coalition called No Choke Points (whose members include Clearwire and small independent LECs such as Covad Communications), claim the interconnection fees are a big barrier to broadband access, and have asked the FCC to review the matter.

For more:
- see this article
- see this article (sub. req.)

Related Articles:
Sprint, T-Mobile ask FCC to cap special access fees
4G backhaul--an opportunity and a dilemma
Verizon Wireless sues Sprint over interconnects

Bookmark and Share
Get Your FREE FierceWireless Email Newsletter:

Comments (3) | Post a comment
More stories about T-Mobile   Sprint   special access fees   Interconnection Fees   FCC  

Comments

Sue, you need to check your facts Sprint Nextel owns and operates a wire line network it is nationwide and also reached well over 100 international countires

Yes, but the access to and between the sprint towers and nodes are still delivered by LECs Local Exchange Carriers like ATT&Verizon

Yes, but the access to and between the sprint towers and nodes are still delivered by LECs Local Exchange Carriers like ATT&Verizon

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

More information about formatting options

What is 19 + 17?
To combat spam, please solve the math question above.