In news cheered by Wall St., BellSouth reported it had topped its own projections for reaching 200,000 DSL subscribers in 2000, exceeding goal by 15,000 in 46 markets. It also restated 2001 target of tripling DSL numbers to 600,000 in 63 markets by year- end. Company, which plans to announce 4th quarter and 2000 financial results Jan. 22, said it would expand central office and remote solutions for DSL deployment in coming year. It said goal was to increase coverage to more than 70% of households in its markets by year-end. BellSouth DSL is available now to more than 10 million phone lines and is expected to grow to more than 15 million by the end of the year.
Cal. Foundation for Taxpayer & Consumer Rights filed state lawsuit on behalf of people of Cal. seeking removal of PUC Comr. Henry Duque from office. Group alleged Duque violated state’s conflict-of-interest law that bars PUC members from holding financial interest in any PUC-regulated company. Suit in Cal. Superior Court, San Francisco County, alleges Duque violated law when he held stock in wireless firm Nextel Communications for several months last year. Although PUC doesn’t regulate wireless rates and entry, suit claimed Nextel holding violated law because company’s fortunes were directly affected by PUC decisions in matters such as numbering, interconnection, universal service. Suit said law without exception required that PUC members with financial interests in companies they regulate must vacate office. Cal. Attorney Gen. William Lockyer last month removed potential obstacle to group when he said he had no legal objection to group’s lawsuit plan.
As expected, satellite launch quota limiting Russian Proton flights ended with close of 2000. U.S.-Russian Launch Trade Agreement signed Sept. 1993 allowed unlimited number of flights on rocket. It originally allowed 9 western geosynchronous transfer orbit (GTO) satellite launches per year until number increased to 16 in 1996, then 20 in 1999, but provided for agreement to expire at end of 2000 unless govts. renewed quotas. After brief posturing by Congress, U.S. followed through with original intent of allowing quota to die at expiration date.
Tough luck for Arianespace Flight 137 continued Jan. 8 as launch of Eurasiasat 1 payload from Kourou was delayed 3rd time, this time by weather -- wind was determined to be unsafe at coastline and at altitude. Arianespace prepared for possible launch after our deadline Jan. 10. First scheduled launch Dec. 8 was delayed for mechanical reasons, rescheduled to Dec. 11 for additional verifications, then to Jan. 8.
Citing U.S. World Trade Organization (WTO) promises, former Commerce Secy. and U.S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor urged FCC to approve license transfers for proposed $34-billion VoiceStream-Deutsche Telekom merger. VoiceStream submitted Kantor statement before close of comment period on merger Mon. “This FCC proceeding is about more than the acquisition of a U.S. common carrier by a foreign company,” he said. “It is a test of the United States’ compliance with binding international legal obligations which were negotiated and entered into in good faith.” In acting on VoiceStream-DT application, FCC must move in way that’s consistent with U.S. obligations under WTO Basic Telecom Agreement (BTA), he said. “Failure to do so could invite initiation of a WTO dispute settlement action against the U.S. government and would establish for other WTO members an unwelcome precedent of noncompliance,” Kantor said. He warned that scope of sanctions under General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) wasn’t limited to sector in which violation was found. That means, Kantor said, that if U.S. were found to have violated GATS, “it could be liable for trade sanctions in any sector.” Also, if U.S. were to act in way that indicated backtracking on trade commitments, it could damage its negotiating power in current talks, such as GATS services negotiations, he said. FCC shouldn’t restrict access to U.S. telecom market “based on market conditions in other countries that do not affect competition in the United States,” he said. Binding U.S. commitments under BTA don’t hinge on other countries’ implementation of their own duties, he said. In other reply comments, Organization for International Investment rebutted concerns raised by Sen. Hollings (D-S.C.) and DT competitors such as Global TeleSystems and Novaxess. Hollings, ranking Democrat on Senate Commerce Committee, last month had renewed his call to FCC to reject application, underlining his opposition to telecom assets bought by companies with majority foreign govt. investment (CD Dec 18 p6). In other comments, Siemens advocated approval of merger, saying it would increase U.S. telephony competition. Transaction still awaits approvals of Dept. of Justice, FCC and Committee on Foreign Interests in U.S.
CTAM and Cablevision called for entries for 18th Annual Mark Awards competition with Feb. 9 deadline. Awards recognize marketing and advertising excellence in cable and telecom.
Motorola will provide 3rd-generation wireless network upgrades for Sprint PCS under infrastructure agreement, terms not disclosed. Motorola said it would provide CDMA equipment with interoperability specifications and cdma2000 1x high-speed packet data “in a significant portion” of Sprint wireless markets. It said upgrade orders cover Sprint operations in Charlotte, Chattanooga, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, O., Greensboro, N.C., Honolulu, Knoxville, Norfolk, Raleigh, Richmond. Separately, Motorola said it completed 3G calls in Sprint PCS lab in Kansas City as part of tests before commercial deployment of next-generation wireless systems. Most recent trial involved Motorola’s 4-carrier base station that uses interoperability standard to connect to packet data serving node.
FCC is holding first meeting of World Radio Conference (WRC) Advisory Committee Jan. 30, 10 a.m.-noon in Commission meeting room. International Bureau’s Planning & Negotiations Div. will take lead on FCC’s WRC efforts, with Julie Garcia directing preparations and serving as designated federal official to advisory panel. Brian Fontes, Cingular Wireless vp-federal regulation, and Jennifer Warren, Lockheed Martin senior dir.- telecom trade and regulatory affairs, are chmn. and vice-chmn. of committee. FCC said particular emphasis at next WRC in June 2003 will be on International Mobile Telecommunications-2000, terrestrial wireless interactive multimedia services, sharing in 40 GHz with aeronautical mobile-satellite services. FCC also expects focus on public protection and disaster relief, broadcasting-satellite interregional sharing, amateur and amateur satellite services, high frequency broadcasting, regulatory procedures for satellite networks. “Our priority during this WRC cycle is to successfully complete the domestic preparatory process in a time frame that allows the U.S. to be a leader at regional and international meetings,” International Bureau Chief Donald Abelson said. FCC also has created new Web site: http://fcc.gov/wrc-03.
Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Assn. (CTIA) urged FCC to continue to forego regulation of wireless intercarrier roaming, contending automatic roaming rule isn’t needed. Comments are in response to notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) in which FCC examines whether mandatory automatic roaming rule remains unnecessary. NPRM said agency wouldn’t mandate automatic roaming unless market forces along couldn’t ensure availability of competitive roaming services. “The Commission’s current roaming requirements have proven sufficient to foster cellular and PCS roaming services without imposing undue costs” on industry, CTIA said. National Telephone Cooperative Assn. (NTCA) didn’t ask FCC to implement mandatory automatic roaming requirement, but asked it to continue to monitor situation to “ensure that roaming agreements do not discriminate against small and rural CMRS providers.” NTCA said market appears to be working “and automatic roaming agreements are generally available where it is technically and economically feasible.” While rural carriers don’t have trouble striking roaming deals, sometimes terms are “unjust,” group said. In such cases, NTCA said, “the rural carrier pays more for the privilege to roam in the urban territory than the large carrier pays to roam in the rural territory.” Rural Ala. carrier Corr Wireless Communications went step further, saying market is “clearly not working on its own to prevent abuses of power.” “Small independent carriers do not have the economic clout to bargain with large carriers who have their own wide-area footprints for automatic roaming,” Corr wrote, citing alleged problems with Cingular Wireless. “This permits large carriers to engage in the very sort of bullying abuses which led” to regulatory curbs for wireline competitors, Corr said. Corr is asking agency to adopt automatic roaming rule that tracks basic interconnection obligations of common carriers under Telecom Act. Several commenters cited concerns about wireless consolidation, which they said creates less incentive for larger competitors to strike low priced roaming pacts.
Michael Brouder, ex-WBZL Miami, appointed dir.-creative services, WGN Cable, Chicago… Ronald Walter promoted to vp-govt. & cable relations, N. Y. Times Bcst. Group… Kathy Payne promoted to dir. of programming, Cox Communications… Bob Walker, ex-KQMB Salt Lake City, becomes program director, WKTI Milwaukee… Dave Wampler promoted to dir. of finance-central and eastern regions, CableRep Advertising… Philip Bouchard, ex-ThinkLink, appointed CFO-COO, Chapter 2… Bob Collet, ex-Teleglobe, named pres., Velocita… Jack Reily, ex-Broadview, appointed exec. vp-corporate development, Efficient Networks… Mona Klausing, ex-Novatel, named dir.-product mktg., Invertix… Craig Young, AT&T Canada vice chmn. and dir., joins board of Global Metro Networks… Joseph Armstrong, ex-State Of The Art Inc., appointed CFO, Sorrento Networks… Davis Masten, co-founder, Cheskin Research, elected to Truste board… Minoru Nakamura, ex-NTT PC Communications, appointed pres., AOL Japan… Alan Amico promoted to CPO, PeopleFirst.com… Marc Randall advanced to vp- engineering, Force10 Networks… Lance Simmens, ex-Small Business Administration, appointed dir.-govt. relations, Screen Actors Guild… Promoted at 20th Century Fox: Ted Gagliano to pres.- postproduction, Joe Hartwick to pres.-physical production… Travis Rutherford, ex-Dreamworks and Disney, appointed senior vp, MGM Consumer Products and Interactive Divs.