Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
Telecom

Bill Proposes Market-Oriented Telecom Regulation System

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Bill Proposes Market-Oriented Telecom Regulation System

According to Steven Titsch, senior fellow, IT and telecom policy for The Heartland Institute, a nonprofit research organization based in Chicago, the act represents Congress' best and soundest approach to federal and state telecom policy reform so far. "It calls for a single, unified, minimally pervasive approach to telecom regulation," he said.


Tips to Integrate Social Media into Your Day-to-Day Media Monitoring
Is social media part of your PR and marketing strategy? This white paper is filled with tips on how to listen to conversations about your brand in the media (social media, print, TV and internet) using the latest tools and techniques. Download Now.

A new teleommunications reform bill which would create a market-oriented regulatory system -- treating Internet telephony the same as conventional phone service -- is moving through Congress, experts tell the E-Commerce Times.

The bill is sponsored by Senator Jim DeMint (R-S.C.). According to a statement from the senator, the Digital Age Communications Act, or DACA, would regulate telecommunications "like any other industry," protecting consumers and restricting "unfair" competition.

Same Regulations

What's more, the bill treats all telecom services that are alike from the consumer's perspective the same, including VoIP. That means all providers of phone services, whether over wireline, wireless, or cable, would have to comply with the same regulations.

The bill would, moreover, force all service providers to contribute equally to the universal service fund (USF) which subsidizes telephone service in rural areas that are not commercially viable for many phone companies. The bill would also phase out cable franchises in four years, opening the cable market to competition.

The bill demonstrates the growing momentum in Congress to update the 1996 Telecommunications Act, experts said.

According to Steven Titsch, senior fellow, IT and telecom policy for The Heartland Institute, a 21-year-old nonprofit research organization based in Chicago, the act represents Congress' best and soundest approach to federal and state telecom policy reform so far.

"Rather than attempt to shoehorn regulations designed for an era of monopoly phone service to fit a competitive market for integrated broadband services, DACA is a ground-up restructuring of the regulatory regime. It calls for a single, unified, minimally pervasive approach to telecom regulation," Titsch told the E-Commerce Times in an e-mail.

A Bold Approach?

Furthermore, Titsch said, the DACA is by far the boldest among the telecommunications bills introduced in Congress. "Yet ironically, it is also the simplest. It seeks neither to shackle service providers nor coddle them. The bill respects market forces and does not assume that, to create opportunities for one group, the government must penalize others," he said.

There was opposition to the measure, however.

The United States Telecom Association (USTelecom) vociferously objected to the bill. A statement by senior vice president for government and regulatory affairs Ed Merlis said that "we are gravely concerned by its universal service provisions that would reduce and cap the Fund and abdicate responsibility for this important program to the states."

Until now, Congress has considered services running over Internet Protocol (IP) networks to be "information" rather than "communications" services, and exempted them from regulations and taxes it has imposed on conventional telecom businesses.

Some industry leaders worry that treating VoIP as an ordinary phone service, if it ends such exemption, could harm innovation and growth in IP services.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Gene J. Koprowski


More by Gene J. Koprowski

Mobile Phone Network Operators React to WiFi Threat
September 09, 2006
"From a strategic and financial standpoint, the routing of traffic through the IP network significantly enhances network quality and capacity, and reduces the OPEX (operational expenditures) that carriers expend on backhaul," noted ABI Research analyst Stuart Carlaw.
Apple's 'Special Event' Has Rumor Mill Churning
September 06, 2006
Apple surprised technology journalists and Wall Street analysts Tuesday with an e-mail saying there would be a "special event" next week. Embedded within the Apple invitation is an interesting image of spotlights shining upon the Apple logo with the words, "It's Showtime," printed beneath it. This is giving many analysts a Hollywood kind of feeling.
Restless IT Workers Looking for New Jobs
September 04, 2006
"Tech workers who stayed put in their jobs over several years of uncertainty in our industry are clearly looking to move on now that we're in a period of growth," said Neill Hopkins, vice president, skills development, CompTIA.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network