The shift continues for the traditional telecommunications companies away from copper based voice and DSL data services to wireless and fiber. One of the road blocks that appears to be loosening are the Carrier of Last Resort (COLR) rules for carriers.
COLR rules are currently set at the state level (not the Federal Communications Commission) and regulate that every American has access to telephones service along with other utilities like electricity and water. A number of states have either passed legislation or are considering legislation that would end traditional landline rules and allow these services to be replaced by wireless (cell) or Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) services. Bills have emerged in Mississippi, Kentucky, New Jersey and California. Ohio's Senate Bill 271 is a good example of legislation currently being reviewed by lawmakers to cut traditional landline services.
... besides preserving social contact, land-line phones are needed to protect seniors' health and safety. For instance, some seniors use the phone line to transmit routine health information from equipment in their home to their doctor's office.They can make an evaluation of a person's heart and how's it working, of their lungs, etc. That information would be very difficult to transmit over a cell phone.
This means that almost all of the remaining wires, networks or even the obligation to offer services over those wires and networks are all removed -- as much of this infrastructure is classified as "telecommunications". The Public Switched Telephone Networks, the utility, would suddenly be reclassified as an information service. Sayonara any telco rules, regulations and oh yes, your rights. Your service breaks... tough. Prices go up and there's no direct competition -- too bad. Networks weren't upgraded -- so what. Net Neutrality? Neutered.
Wireless service is great when it works. Wireless as carrier of last resort - someday yes but not just yet. AT&T has opened a window and the FCC now has an opportunity to step up and put a logical transitional process in place.
5 comments:
Last century, while telephone and electric companies were connecting us to their grids/networks, rural areas were last. There was concern that left to their respective business models, these companies would never get to sparsely populated areas. The REA (Rural Electrification Act) passed by Congress changed the landscape by providing incentives to serve rural areas. We clearly need something similar today, that recognizes the differences among customers and the variant motivations of providers. Such solutions usually have the many paying for the needs of the few. It's how we got here.
Agree Dennis - technologically we're not ready for this yet. This is the kind of stuff the FCC was put together to sort out.
I think making this a nationwide rule is not feasible yet. Considering how the typical service distributor for both the hardware needed to support the program (like electronic components for the handhelds and the network hardware needed to facilitate comms) and the service providers themselves are still in the process of fully developing technologies needed for it.
The states those who are considering legislation that would move to VoIP services to cut conventional telephony is somehow worth economical. VoIP services cut the cost to that extent that you can easily afford to make local, international or long distance calls at really genuine reasons.
Sadly, in early 2018, east coast urban area, high value target rich, cellular mobile telephones are preferred. Until torrential rain degrades cellular service, a mild earthquake triggers super "Mothers' Day" congestion, or the incessant VC equivalent helicopters jam UHF digital television and UHF/high UHF cellular telephony while doing executive transport. Then you'd better have copper land lines, because the internet+TV optical fibre system preferentially degrades voice service. So much for Bell System dialtone availability.
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