Level 3 Communications completed its acquisition of tw telecom, said the acquirer in a news release Friday. The companies had argued through the regulatory approval process that the deal would make the combined company more competitive, a position with which the FCC agreed in granting approval last week (see 1410270047). Level 3 President Jeff Storey said "the combination of tw telecom's rich metro footprint with Level 3's global network, positions the company to provide local-to-global business solutions and deliver a world-class customer experience." The release said tw telecom stockholders are receiving $10 of cash and 0.7 shares of Level 3 common stock for each share of tw telecom common stock owned.
Verizon and AT&T’s appeal of FCC denial of their petition to forbear requiring them to maintain a uniform system of accounts was denied Friday in a decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. The companies “have long argued that, in light of the existing price cap regime, the Commission’s accounting rules are unnecessary,” the decision said. The commission said the accounting is still needed for a number of reasons, including its need to regulate pole attachment rates and interstate access rates, the decision said. The FCC’s interpretation is “permissible,” Senior Circuit Judge Laurence Silberman wrote. Judges David Tatel and Janice Brown concurred. Neither AT&T nor Verizon commented after the decision. Also, Verizon responded to Public Knowledge Senior Vice President Harold Feld’s blog post that forbearance is so easy it makes him “want to puke.” Verizon on its blog Monday pointed to last Friday’s U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit decision turning down Verizon and AT&T’s petition challenging the commission’s denial of a forbearance petition ([Ref. 1410310055]). The court and the FCC “have provided more evidence that the forbearance process is nauseating, but not because it is easy,” wrote Verizon Senior Vice President for Public Policy Craig Silliman.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th District reversed and remanded Thursday a 2013 ruling by the U.S. District Court in Miami against Palm Beach Golf Center in its lawsuit against Pompano Beach dentist John Sarris over an unsolicited fax from Sarris. Palm Beach Golf Center claimed the fax violated the Telephone Consumer Protection Act and that the transmission had clogged the golf center’s phone and fax connections. District Judge Kathleen Williams had ruled in favor of Sarris in a summary judgment. Palm Beach Golf Center claimed in its appeal that it could prove the fax had congested its wireline connections even though employees weren’t at the business when it transmitted. District Judge Robert Hinkle partially dissented in the appeals court’s ruling, saying one unsolicited fax wasn’t sufficient to merit Palm Beach Golf Center’s separate common-law claim. “Surely the days when messages are received this way are near an end,” he said.
The FCC Form 477 filing interface, which closed Oct. 7 for technical improvements (see 1410080027), will remain closed until at least Nov. 10, said a public notice posted Tuesday in docket 11-10. After the site reopens, in about two weeks, the Wireline Bureau will release a PN announcing the new filing deadline for the form, which will be no less than 14 days after the notice, the bureau said. The form is used for local phone competition and broadband reporting.
Level 3’ acquisition of tw telecom was approved by shareholders of both companies at separate meetings Tuesday, said a Level 3 news release. The deal was approved by 86.2 percent of tw telecom shareholders, and 99.7 percent of Level 3 shareholders, said Level 3 Tuesday. It expects to complete the acquisition Nov. 5, the release said. The FCC recently OK'd the deal (see 1410270047).
Securus’ objection to rival Pay-Tel’s request for Securus’ unredacted cost study documents on inmate calling services was rejected by the FCC Wireline Bureau, in an Oct. 1 order posted Tuesday in docket 11-10. Securus had said the “confidential information in the documents is competitively sensitive, and the company will suffer “substantial and irreparable harm” if Pay Tel’s outside counsel receives them, the order said. Pay-Tel responded with sworn declarations from its president that the counsel is not involved in competitive decisionmaking, the order said. Securus had to provide Pay-Tel with the data by Oct. 6, the order said.
Last week’s opening of the filing period for the FCC’s rural broadband experiments “marks a historic occasion,” Wireline Deputy Chief Carol Mattey said in a blog post Wednesday. The commission for the first time is using a competitive bidding process to award about $100 million in Connect America Fund support for broadband in rural America. Even before the Nov. 7 end of the application period, the bureau has “learned a lot from these experiments,” in doing outreach to potential bidders, creating the application form and “getting the online system up and running,” she wrote. In the future, “we’ll be learning about competitive interest to build networks to rural communities that will deliver services that far exceed the Commission’s current performance standards,” she wrote. “And I’m sure we will learn something unexpected that will help the Commission make decisions regarding the design of the Phase II auction that will occur after the offer of model-based support to price cap carriers.”
The E-rate eligible services list (ESL) for funding year 2015 released in an FCC Wireless Bureau order Tuesday incorporates the changes the FCC made in July’s modernization order (see 1407140044), including the elimination of some legacy services in both Category One and Two. Among the “outdated, legacy and other non-broadband” services no longer eligible for support are Web hosting, email and paging. Category One voice services are being phased out, and Category Two support for LAN/WLAN-focused components, basic maintenance of eligible broadband internal connections components, and managed internal broadband services is limited, the order said. In response to comments that past versions of the ESL were “too long, difficult to understand, and confusing to work with,” the new list will not include the ESL glossary, special eligibility conditions or the ineligible services that had been posted at the end of each category of service, the order said. In response to comments applicants may not be aware of the services that are no longer eligible for E-rate support, the list includes a chart of those services in an appendix, the order said. The ESL also clarifies that multi-protocol label switching (MPLS) is eligible for Category One E-rate support, and the language in the list about digital transmission and Internet access services emphasizes that the commission understands flexibility is needed to provide support for services that facilitate high-speed connectivity, said the order. The ESL also redefines caching, which is eligible for Category Two support.
The deadline for public comments on the current and potential availability of communications services in the Arctic region was extended to Dec. 3, the NTIA said in a notice in the Federal Register on Tuesday. Comments had been due by Nov. 3.
Customers of the largest U.S. consumer-facing Internet service providers “experienced dramatically poor performance” when connecting to core Internet transit infrastructure, according to a report by the Measurement Lab Consortium. The performance was often “well below" the FCC’s four-year-old "definition of 'broadband,'” said a New America Foundation Open Technology Institute news release about the report Tuesday. “The careful work done by M-Lab researchers exposes patterns of severe Internet performance degradation across the US, and suggests that ISP business relationships are a source of these problems,” said Vint Cerf, M-Lab steering committee member, in the release. “This is the first work of its kind, using open data and reproducible methods to expose complex performance issues at scale.