FEDERAL RESPONDENTS’ UNCITED RESPONSE TO THE AT&T PRINCIPAL BRIEF IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT NO. 11-9900 IN RE: FCC 11-161 ON PETITIONS FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF THE FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION WILLIAM J. BAER ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL ROBERT B. NICHOLSON ROBERT J. WIGGERS ATTORNEYS UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE WASHINGTON, D.C. 20530 SEAN A. LEV GENERAL COUNSEL PETER KARANJIA DEPUTY GENERAL COUNSEL RICHARD K. WELCH DEPUTY ASSOCIATE GENERAL COUNSEL LAURENCE N. BOURNE JAMES M. CARR MAUREEN K. FLOOD COUNSEL FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20554 (202) 418-1740 Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 1 i TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Authorities.......................................................................................... ii  Glossary ........................................................................................................... iv  Issue Presented .................................................................................................. 1  Counterstatement ............................................................................................... 2  A.  Regulatory Background ......................................................................... 2  B.  The Order On Review ........................................................................... 6  Summary of Argument .................................................................................... 10  Argument ......................................................................................................... 13  The FCC Reasonably Explained The Rationale For Its Interim Rule Governing Intercarrier Compensation For CLEC-VoIP Partnerships ......................................................................... 13  A.  The FCC Reasonably Distinguished Between CLEC- VoIP Partnerships And CLEC-Wireless Partnerships. ....................... 16  B.  The Interim Rule Preserves The Proper Incentives For Deployment Of IP Networks. .............................................................. 18  C.  The FCC Reasonably Explained That The Interim Rule Allows VoIP Providers To Make A Gradual Transition To Bill-and-Keep. ................................................................................ 23  Conclusion ....................................................................................................... 27  Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 2 ii TABLE OF AUTHORITIES CASES  Arkansas v. Oklahoma, 503 U.S. 91 (1992) .................................................... 23 AT&T Corp. v. FCC, 349 F.3d 692 (D.C. Cir. 2003) ....................................... 3 Aviva Life & Annuity Co. v. FDIC, 654 F.3d 1129 (10th Cir. 2011) ........................................................................................... 18 Citizens’ Comm. to Save Our Canyons v. United States Forest Serv., 297 F.3d 1012 (10th Cir. 2002) ............................................................................................................ 18 Competitive Telecomms. Ass’n v. FCC, 309 F.3d 8 (D.C. Cir. 2002) ........................................................................................... 25 IMC Kalium Carlsbad, Inc. v. Interior Bd. of Land Appeals, 206 F.3d 1003 (10th Cir. 2000) .................................................... 23 MCI Telecomms. Corp. v. FCC, 750 F.2d 135 (D.C. Cir. 1984) ..................................................................................................... 24 Nat’l Ass’n of Regulatory Util. Comm’rs v. FCC, 737 F.2d 1095 (D.C. Cir. 1984) .................................................................. 25 Nuvio Corp. v. FCC, 473 F.3d 302 (D.C. Cir. 2006) ........................................ 9 Rural Cellular Ass’n v. FCC, 588 F.3d 1095 (D.C. Cir. 2009) ..................................................................................................... 25 Sorenson Commc’ns, Inc. v. FCC, 659 F.3d 1035 (10th Cir. 2011) ........................................................................................... 13 Verizon California, Inc. v. FCC, 555 F.3d 270 (D.C. Cir. 2009) ....................................................................................................... 5 STATUTES  47 U.S.C. §153(51)..................................................................................... 5, 17 47 U.S.C. §251(a)(1) ......................................................................................... 5 REGULATIONS  47 C.F.R. §20.15(c) ........................................................................................... 3 Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 3 iii ADMINISTRATIVE DECISIONS  Access Charge Reform, 19 FCC Rcd 9108 (2004) ................ 3, 5, 9, 15, 16, 21 Implementation of Sections 3(n) and 332 of the Communications Act, 9 FCC Rcd 1411 (1994) ............................................. 3 IP-Enabled Services, 20 FCC Rcd 10245 (2005), pet. for review denied, Nuvio Corp. v. FCC, 473 F.3d 302 (D.C. Cir. 2006) ...................................................................... 9, 16 MTS and WATS Market Structure, 93 FCC 2d 241 (1983) ............................................................................................................ 8 Petitions of Sprint PCS and AT&T Corp. For Declaratory Ruling Regarding CMRS Access Charges, 17 FCC Rcd 13192 (2002), pets. for review dismissed, AT&T Corp. v. FCC, 349 F.3d 692 (D.C. Cir. 2003) ...................................................................................... 3 Time Warner Cable Request for Declaratory Ruling, 22 FCC Rcd 3513 (Wireline Comp. Bur. 2007) .............................................................................................................. 5 Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 4 iv GLOSSARY CLEC Competitive Local Exchange Carrier FCC Federal Communications Commission ILEC Incumbent Local Exchange Carrier IP Internet Protocol LEC Local Exchange Carrier PSTN Public Switched Telephone Network VoIP Voice over Internet Protocol Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 5 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT NO. 11-9900 IN RE: FCC 11-161 ON PETITIONS FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF THE FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION FEDERAL RESPONDENTS’ UNCITED RESPONSE TO THE AT&T PRINCIPAL BRIEF ISSUE PRESENTED Some providers of voice telephone service (including many cable operators) use Voice over Internet Protocol (“VoIP”) technology. They often partner with competitive local exchange carriers (“CLECs”) to connect their customers to the public switched telephone network (“PSTN”). In the Order on review,1 the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) permitted CLECs in such circumstances, on a transitional basis, to collect access charges for functions that they or their retail VoIP partners perform. After a transition period, this interim compensation rule – like all other forms of “intercarrier compensation” addressed by the Order – will be replaced by a “bill-and-keep” framework under which carriers recover their network costs 1 Connect America Fund, 26 FCC Rcd 17663 (2011) (“Order”) (JA____). Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 6 2 from their subscribers (and, where necessary, explicit universal service subsidies), not from other carriers. AT&T generally supports the transition to bill-and-keep. But it seeks to have this Court second-guess the interim rule governing CLEC-VoIP partnerships. AT&T notes that this transitional rule differs from the compensation rule that the FCC historically has applied when a CLEC partners with a wireless carrier. AT&T maintains that the agency offered no reasoned explanation for treating VoIP providers differently from wireless carriers in this regard. AT&T’s petition for review presents a single issue: Whether the FCC adequately explained the rationale for its interim intercarrier compensation rule governing CLEC-VoIP partnerships. COUNTERSTATEMENT Although this case involves a narrow application of settled principles of administrative law, the factual and legal background is complex. We describe that background in detail below. A. Regulatory Background Historically, providers of long-distance telephone service have paid “access charges” to compensate local exchange carriers (“LECs”) for the cost of originating or terminating long-distance calls over the LECs’ wireline Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 7 3 networks. See FCC Preliminary Br. 4-5. Wireline LECs generally collect these access charges pursuant to tariffs. By contrast, for almost two decades, wireless telecommunications carriers have been barred from filing access charge tariffs. See Implementation of Sections 3(n) and 332 of the Communications Act, 9 FCC Rcd 1411, 1479-80 ¶¶178-179 (1994); 47 C.F.R. §20.15(c). Rather, they may collect access charges only pursuant to a contract with the carrier being charged.2 In the absence of such a contract, a CLEC that partners with a wireless carrier to provide access service “has no right to collect access charges for the portion of the service provided by the [wireless carrier].” Access Charge Reform, 19 FCC Rcd 9108, 9116 ¶16 (2004). Given these regulatory constraints on their ability to collect intercarrier compensation, wireless carriers “have long been operating pursuant to what are essentially bill-and-keep arrangements.” Order ¶737 (JA____). As a matter of longstanding “industry practice,” wireless carriers recover their network costs “from their end users,” not from other carriers. Sprint Declaratory Ruling, 17 FCC Rcd at 13199 ¶15. 2 Petitions of Sprint PCS and AT&T Corp. For Declaratory Ruling Regarding CMRS Access Charges, 17 FCC Rcd 13192, 13196-98 ¶¶8-12 (2002) (“Sprint Declaratory Ruling”), pets. for review dismissed, AT&T Corp. v. FCC, 349 F.3d 692 (D.C. Cir. 2003). Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 8 4 In recent years, a growing number of consumers have subscribed to VoIP service. This service, which is provided via Internet Protocol (“IP”) networks, allows users to “make real-time [phone] calls to, and receive calls from,” users of traditional telephone service. Order ¶63 (JA____). To offer these capabilities, VoIP providers (including cable operators that provide telephone service) must connect their customers to the PSTN (i.e., the network that LECs and wireless carriers use to provide telephone service). VoIP service currently is offered in two different ways. Some VoIP providers voluntarily submit to common carrier regulation; they obtain state certification as LECs, interconnect directly with the PSTN, and offer VoIP to subscribers on a common carrier basis. These carriers thus become regulated LECs subject to Title II of the Communications Act. See Cox Comments, Apr. 1, 2011, at 3 (JA____); FCC Principal USF Br. 26-27. Other VoIP providers do not hold themselves out as regulated LECs.3 A “non-LEC” VoIP provider typically partners with a CLEC, which interconnects with the facilities of other carriers and delivers calls from the PSTN to the non-LEC VoIP provider (and vice versa). See Comcast Comments, Aug. 24, 2011, at 5 3 The FCC has not yet decided whether the VoIP services at issue here are “telecommunications services” (subject to common carrier regulation under Title II of the Communications Act) or “information services” (which are covered by Title I of the Act). See Order ¶974 & n.2042 (JA____). Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 9 5 (JA____); Time Warner Cable Request for Declaratory Ruling, 22 FCC Rcd 3513, 3519 ¶13 (Wireline Comp. Bur. 2007). The partnerships between CLECs and VoIP providers are fundamentally different from the “partnerships” that wireless carriers formed with CLECs in the early 2000s in an effort “to overcome their ineligibility to tariff access charges.” See AT&T Br. 6. Wireless carriers entered into those arrangements “to do indirectly” what FCC rules forbade them to “do directly” (i.e., to collect tariffed access charges). Access Charge Reform, 19 FCC Rcd at 9116 n.57. By contrast, CLEC-VoIP partnerships are essential to the provision of VoIP service by non-LEC VoIP providers. Unlike wireless carriers, non- LEC VoIP providers have not been classified as “telecommunications carrier[s]” as defined by the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. §153(51). Therefore, they cannot perform certain functions that are integral to providing VoIP service – including interconnection with the PSTN.4 Without interconnection, VoIP providers would be unable to connect calls from their 4 The Communications Act does not require incumbent local exchange carriers (“ILECs”) like Verizon and AT&T to interconnect with non-LEC VoIP providers. Telecommunications carriers are only obligated to interconnect “with the facilities and equipment of other telecommunications carriers.” 47 U.S.C. §251(a)(1); see also Verizon California, Inc. v. FCC, 555 F.3d 270, 275 (D.C. Cir. 2009). Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 10 6 subscribers to users of traditional telephone service. Non-LEC VoIP providers must “rely on [their CLEC] partners” to obtain not only interconnection, but also “access to [telephone] numbers” for new customers and “compliance with 911 obligations.” Order ¶970 (JA____). Until this proceeding, the FCC had “declined to explicitly address the intercarrier compensation obligations associated with VoIP traffic.” Connect America Fund, 26 FCC Rcd 4554, 4745 ¶610 (2011) (“2011 NPRM”) (JA____, ____). These unresolved questions, which led to “billing disputes and litigation,” appeared to “be deterring innovation” and the “introduction of new IP services.” Id. ¶608 (JA____); see also id. nn.913-914 (JA____). To address this uncertainty, the FCC sought comment on “a range of approaches” concerning “the appropriate treatment of interconnected VoIP traffic for purposes of intercarrier compensation.” Id. ¶609 (JA____). B. The Order On Review In the Order, the FCC defined “the prospective intercarrier compensation obligations associated with VoIP-PSTN traffic.” Order ¶939 (JA____).5 Under the agency’s new intercarrier compensation rules, such 5 The agency defined “VoIP-PSTN traffic” as “traffic exchanged over PSTN facilities that originates and/or terminates in IP format.” Order ¶940 (JA____) (internal quotation marks omitted). The Order “does not address intercarrier compensation payment obligations for VoIP-PSTN traffic for any prior periods.” Id. n.1874 (JA____). Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 11 7 traffic “ultimately will be subject to a bill-and-keep framework,” and intercarrier compensation obligations will be eliminated. Id. ¶933 (JA____). AT&T “fully supports this aspect of the FCC’s decision.” Br. 9. Before bill-and-keep takes effect, however, transitional rules will govern intercarrier compensation for VoIP-PSTN traffic. During the multi- year transition period, VoIP-PSTN traffic will be subject to intercarrier compensation at rates prescribed by the FCC’s interim rules. Order ¶933 (JA____). When a non-LEC VoIP provider and its CLEC partner team up to transmit a telephone call to a VoIP subscriber, they provide services that are functionally indistinguishable from the service an ILEC provides when delivering a call from a VoIP user to a wireline service subscriber. The FCC concluded that, in these circumstances, CLEC-VoIP partnerships “should be entitled to charge the same intercarrier compensation as [ILECs] do” under the interim rules for VoIP-PSTN traffic. Order ¶970 (JA____).6 6 AT&T asserts that the challenged rule does not apply to certain types of VoIP service arrangements. Br. 2 n.2. The FCC has not yet ruled on this issue. Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 12 8 Unlike ILECs, non-LEC VoIP providers cannot file tariffs.7 They must “rely on [their CLEC] partners to charge tariffed intercarrier compensation charges.” Order ¶970 (JA____). To accommodate “these distinct circumstances,” and to ensure that CLEC-VoIP partnerships can collect the same intercarrier compensation as ILECs receive for providing comparable services, the FCC’s interim rules “permit a LEC to charge the relevant intercarrier compensation for functions performed by it and/or by its retail VoIP partner.” Id. (JA____-____). The FCC explained that it adopted this “symmetric approach to VoIP- PSTN intercarrier compensation” because it did “not want to disadvantage providers that already have made … investments” in IP networks. Order ¶968 (JA____). This approach was consistent with one of the Order’s principal goals: “to promote investment in and deployment of IP networks.” Id. The interim rules ensure that VoIP providers will have “the same opportunity, during the transition, to collect intercarrier compensation” for VoIP-PSTN traffic as providers that use traditional telecommunications infrastructure. Id. 7 “Only common carrier services can be tariffed.” MTS and WATS Market Structure, 93 FCC 2d 241, 314 ¶244 (1983). Non-LEC VoIP providers do not hold themselves out as common carriers. Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 13 9 The FCC rejected AT&T’s claim that “there is no basis for distinguishing the historical treatment of [wireless] providers” from the agency’s treatment of CLEC-VoIP partnerships under the interim rule. Order n.2024 (JA____). The agency noted that it had long prohibited wireless carriers from using CLEC “partners” to collect tariffed access charges for work performed by wireless carriers. Id.; see also Access Charge Reform, 19 FCC Rcd at 91115-16 ¶16 & n.57. By contrast, the agency had previously “endorsed” the formation of CLEC-VoIP partnerships. Order ¶970 (JA____). In particular, in 2005, it stated that VoIP providers could comply with 911 service obligations by partnering with CLECs to obtain interconnection with the PSTN. IP-Enabled Services, 20 FCC Rcd 10245, 10267 ¶38 (2005), pet. for review denied, Nuvio Corp. v. FCC, 473 F.3d 302 (D.C. Cir. 2006). Moreover, the record showed that some non-LEC VoIP providers – unlike wireless carriers – had recently received intercarrier compensation Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 14 10 payments.8 In light of this evidence, the FCC determined that the “immediate adoption of bill-and-keep for all VoIP-PSTN traffic would appear to be, in the aggregate, a … significant departure from the intercarrier compensation payments for VoIP traffic that have been made in the recent past.” Order ¶952 (JA____). The FCC crafted the interim VoIP-PSTN compensation rules to provide for a “measured transition” away from intercarrier compensation. Id. This sort of gradual transition to bill-and-keep, however, was unnecessary for wireless carriers, which have long operated under “bill-and-keep arrangements.” Id. ¶737 (JA____). SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT AT&T contends that the FCC’s interim intercarrier compensation rule arbitrarily distinguishes between CLEC-VoIP partnerships and CLEC- wireless partnerships. AT&T’s challenge rests on mischaracterizations of law and fact. 8 See Order n.1917 (JA____-____); Bright House Comments, Apr. 1, 2011, at 1, 7 (JA____, ____) (Verizon had previously made “substantial access charge payments” to CLECs that provide VoIP in partnership with cable operators like Bright House); Letter from Daniel Brenner, Counsel for Bright House, to Marlene Dortch, FCC, Sept. 28, 2011, at 2 (JA____) (Bright House estimated that an ILEC proposal for transitional intercarrier compensation for VoIP traffic would result in “a 90% reduction in intrastate access” revenues for cable operators that partner with CLECs to provide VoIP). Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 15 11 With respect to the law, AT&T claims that the FCC modified “settled” legal principles to favor cable VoIP providers over wireless carriers. To the contrary, the law governing intercarrier compensation for CLEC-VoIP partnerships was unsettled before the FCC issued the Order. Indeed, there was considerable dispute as to what intercarrier compensation rules (if any) applied to VoIP traffic generally. With respect to the facts, AT&T asserts that VoIP providers, like wireless carriers, historically had not collected intercarrier compensation. The record showed, however, that unlike wireless carriers, some VoIP providers have previously received intercarrier compensation payments through their CLEC partners. Against this legal and factual backdrop, the FCC reasonably explained that its interim rule treats CLEC-VoIP partnerships differently from CLEC- wireless partnerships because, in three important respects, VoIP and wireless service are not similarly situated. First, unlike wireless carriers, whose primary reason for “partnering” with CLECs in most cases is to evade the FCC’s prohibition on tariffed wireless access charges, non-LEC VoIP providers must partner with telecommunications carriers (such as CLECs) in order to provide voice telephone service on the PSTN. Because of the different purposes underlying Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 16 12 these arrangements, the FCC historically has treated them differently – forbidding CLECs from collecting tariffed access charges for work done by wireless carriers pursuant to revenue sharing arrangements, while endorsing the formation of CLEC-VoIP partnerships. The agency reasonably made the same sort of distinction when crafting its transitional intercarrier compensation rules for VoIP-PSTN traffic. Second, unlike conventional wireless voice service, VoIP service uses IP facilities. One of the Order’s prime objectives is “to promote investment in and deployment of IP networks.” Order ¶968 (JA____). Consistent with that goal, the interim rules give VoIP providers – which provide service via IP networks – “the same opportunity” to collect intercarrier compensation for VoIP-PSTN traffic as carriers that provide service over traditional wireline networks. Id. The FCC explained that it did not want to penalize providers that have already deployed IP networks. Id. This rationale for the interim rules does not apply to conventional wireless voice service, which is not provided over IP facilities. Third, unlike wireless carriers (which have been operating under bill- and-keep arrangements since the 1980s), some non-LEC VoIP providers have received intercarrier compensation payments over the years. The FCC Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 17 13 explained that the interim rule is designed to ensure a “measured transition” away from intercarrier compensation. Order ¶935 (JA____). Ultimately, in deciding how to handle VoIP-PSTN traffic for purposes of intercarrier compensation, the FCC confronted a choice. It could treat VoIP providers like wireless carriers and preclude them from collecting access charges indirectly via a CLEC partner. Or it could treat VoIP providers like wireline carriers and adopt a framework for a measured transition away from the compensation that some providers are receiving. The agency chose the latter course. It reasoned that this approach would best promote the deployment of IP networks. AT&T disagrees with the agency’s approach, but that policy disagreement provides no legal basis for the Court to disturb the FCC’s reasonable policy judgment. ARGUMENT THE FCC REASONABLY EXPLAINED THE RATIONALE FOR ITS INTERIM RULE GOVERNING INTERCARRIER COMPENSATION FOR CLEC-VOIP PARTNERSHIPS. The FCC explained why its interim rule governing CLEC-VoIP partnerships treats VoIP providers differently from wireless carriers. AT&T’s claim to the contrary (Br. 16-23) is baseless. Because the rule challenged by AT&T is “merely transitional, [the Court’s] review is especially deferential.” Sorenson Commc’ns, Inc. v. FCC, 659 F.3d 1035, Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 18 14 1046 (10th Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted). Applying this deferential standard of review, the Court should deny AT&T’s petition. AT&T’s argument rests on two fundamentally flawed premises. First, AT&T maintains that “wireless carriers and cable VoIP providers occupied” the same “bill-and-keep” position “for many years.” Br. 13. That is incorrect. While wireless carriers “have long been operating” under “bill- and-keep arrangements” that provided for no intercarrier compensation, Order ¶737 (JA____), some VoIP providers have received intercarrier compensation payments in the past. Id. n.1917 (JA____). Second, AT&T wrongly asserts that pre-existing FCC rules barred CLECs from collecting intercarrier compensation for services rendered by their retail VoIP partners. Br. 11 n.7, 19. Contrary to AT&T’s contention (Br. 11), FCC rules were not “settled on this point.” Indeed, before the FCC issued the Order in this proceeding, it had “declined to explicitly address the intercarrier compensation obligations associated with VoIP traffic.” 2011 NPRM ¶610 (JA____). Because the agency had not previously resolved whether VoIP providers may collect access charges under FCC rules, it had never decided whether CLECs could collect intercarrier compensation for work done by their retail VoIP partners. By contrast, because FCC rules do not authorize wireless carriers to file access tariffs or impose access charges, Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 19 15 the FCC has expressly precluded CLECs from collecting tariffed access charges for services provided by their wireless carrier partners. Access Charge Reform, 19 FCC Rcd at 9116 n.57 (“We will not interpret our rules or prior orders in a manner that allows [wireless] carriers to do indirectly that which we have held they may not do directly.”). Simply put, AT&T mistakenly assumes that before the Order, VoIP providers and wireless carriers were similarly situated. The FCC recognized that they were not. It reasonably explained that its interim compensation rule for CLEC-VoIP partnerships treats VoIP service differently from wireless service for three reasons: (1) non-LEC VoIP providers – unlike wireless carriers – must partner with telecommunications carriers (such as CLECs) in order to provide voice telephone service; (2) VoIP service – unlike conventional wireless service – is provided over IP facilities, and a primary goal of the Order is to promote the deployment of such facilities; and (3) VoIP providers – unlike wireless carriers – have recently received intercarrier compensation payments, and therefore would be adversely affected by a sudden transition to bill-and-keep. These considerations fully justified the FCC’s distinction between VoIP and wireless service for purposes of transitional intercarrier compensation. Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 20 16 A. The FCC Reasonably Distinguished Between CLEC- VoIP Partnerships And CLEC-Wireless Partnerships. There is no merit to AT&T’s claim that the FCC provided “no coherent rationale” for treating CLEC-VoIP partnerships differently from CLEC- wireless partnerships. Br. 23. In the Order, the agency pointed out the fundamental differences between those two types of arrangements, and explained why those differences supported distinct approaches. As the FCC explained, CLEC-wireless “partnerships” are often created solely to evade FCC rules and collect access charges, while CLEC-VoIP partnerships are vital to the effective provision of telephone service by non-LEC VoIP providers. The FCC has long “prohibited [wireless] providers from partnering with [CLECs] to collect access charges in the absence of a contract” with the carrier being charged. Order n.2024 (JA____). In most cases, the principal purpose of such arrangements is to circumvent the longstanding FCC rule barring wireless carriers from filing access tariffs. See Access Charge Reform, 19 FCC Rcd at 9116 ¶16 & n.57. In stark contrast, the agency “has endorsed” CLEC-VoIP partnerships. Order ¶970 (JA____) (citing IP-Enabled Services, 20 FCC Rcd at 10267 ¶38). Without such partnerships, VoIP providers that are not LECs would be unable to provide VoIP service. Because those providers are not Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 21 17 “telecommunications carrier[s],” 47 U.S.C. §153(51), they cannot perform certain functions that are essential to providing VoIP service – including interconnection with the PSTN. See note 4 above. Non-LEC VoIP providers must “rely on [their CLEC] partners” to obtain “interconnection, access to [telephone] numbers [for new customers], and compliance with 911 obligations.” Order ¶970 (JA____). Wireless carriers do not need a CLEC partner to perform these functions. Because wireless carriers are telecommunications carriers, they can obtain interconnection directly. Thus, AT&T ignores the “relevant distinction … between wireless and VoIP providers” in this context: Non- LEC VoIP providers must use a “LEC middleman” to interconnect; wireless carriers need not. See Br. 20. Furthermore, as AT&T concedes, wireless carriers “typically address” numbering and 911 compliance issues “themselves.” Id. That is not an option for non-LEC VoIP providers; they must rely on their CLEC partners to handle those matters. The Court should reject AT&T’s assertion that the Order must be remanded because the FCC failed to acknowledge or address AT&T’s concern about “competitive bias.” Br. 18. When AT&T opposed adoption of the interim rules, it argued that they would “arbitrarily tilt the regulatory playing field” in favor of VoIP providers by making an “arbitrary distinction” Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 22 18 between VoIP and wireless service. Br. 17 (quoting Letter from Robert Quinn, Jr., AT&T, to Marlene Dortch, FCC, Oct. 21, 2011, at 2, 4 (JA____, ____)). The FCC explained, however, that the differences between CLEC- VoIP partnerships and CLEC-wireless partnerships justified the distinction drawn by the interim VoIP compensation rule. Order ¶970 & n.2024 (JA____) (citing AT&T’s October 21, 2011 letter). That explanation fully satisfies the applicable standard of review, even though the agency made no specific reference to AT&T’s claim of “competitive bias.” As this Court has held, even when an agency does not “expressly” analyze a particular issue, a reviewing court must “uphold a decision of less than ideal clarity if the agency’s path may reasonably be discerned.” Citizens’ Comm. to Save Our Canyons v. United States Forest Serv., 297 F.3d 1012, 1034 (10th Cir. 2002) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Aviva Life & Annuity Co. v. FDIC, 654 F.3d 1129, 1133 & n.3 (10th Cir. 2011). B. The Interim Rule Preserves The Proper Incentives For Deployment Of IP Networks. Broadband services that provide high-speed Internet access “have become crucial to our nation’s economic growth, global competitiveness, and civic life.” Order ¶3 (JA____). Thus, one of the Order’s primary goals “is to promote investment in and deployment of IP networks.” Id. ¶968 (JA____). Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 23 19 Consistent with that goal, the FCC sought to ensure that its transitional intercarrier compensation rules for VoIP-PSTN traffic would not “disadvantage” providers that use IP facilities. Order ¶968 (JA____). This rationale for transitional intercarrier compensation does not apply to wireless carriers, which do not use IP facilities to originate or terminate conventional wireless service. To preserve the appropriate incentives for deployment of IP networks, the agency reasonably decided that all VoIP providers (LECs and non-LECs alike) should have the same opportunity to benefit from intercarrier compensation as wireline service providers during the transition to bill-and- keep. Accordingly, the agency adopted “a symmetric approach to VoIP- PSTN intercarrier compensation.” Order ¶968 (JA____). In particular, the Order makes clear that an entity that “uses [IP] facilities to transmit [VoIP- PSTN] traffic” from the caller’s premises or to the called party’s premises may impose “origination [or] termination charges … under [the] transitional Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 24 20 intercarrier compensation framework.” Id. ¶969 (JA____) (internal quotation marks omitted).9 The FCC recognized that non-LEC VoIP providers “are not carriers that can tariff intercarrier compensation charges.” Order ¶970 (JA____). Those VoIP providers must “rely on [their CLEC] partners to charge tariffed intercarrier compensation charges.” Id. To ensure that non-LEC VoIP providers were not disadvantaged relative to providers of non-IP wireline services, the FCC decided to “permit a LEC to charge the relevant intercarrier compensation for functions performed by it and/or by its retail VoIP partner.” Id. (JA____-____). This decision did not represent “an abrupt change” from “settled” law, as AT&T claims (Br. 11). The FCC had not previously addressed whether a CLEC could collect intercarrier compensation for services provided by its retail VoIP partner. Furthermore, the sort of joint billing arrangement authorized by the interim rule was not unprecedented. The FCC has long recognized that “a [CLEC] may bill [a long-distance carrier] on behalf of itself and another carrier for jointly provided access services” so long as 9 AT&T claims to find the FCC’s symmetrical approach “perplexing” because the agency has not classified VoIP as a Title II common carrier service. Br. 22 n.9. But it made perfect sense for the FCC to create sufficient incentives for deployment of IP networks by all providers of voice telephone service, whether or not those providers are subject to Title II. Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 25 21 “each carrier” in the partnership charges “only what it is entitled to collect from the [long-distance carrier] for the [access] service it provides.” Access Charge Reform, 19 FCC Rcd at 9115-16 ¶16 (emphasis added).10 To be sure, the FCC for years has barred CLECs from collecting tariffed access charges on behalf of wireless carriers. But the agency based that prohibition on the fact that wireless carriers – which have long been barred from filing access charge tariffs – “had no independent right to collect” access charges absent a contract with the carrier being charged. Access Charge Reform, 19 FCC Rcd at 9116 ¶16. The FCC has never made any such finding with respect to VoIP providers. To the contrary, in this proceeding, the agency made clear that VoIP providers are prospectively entitled to intercarrier compensation during the transition to bill-and-keep. Order ¶¶968-970 (JA____-____). If VoIP providers are LECs (i.e., if they provide VoIP service on a common carrier basis), they may file their own intercarrier compensation tariffs. If VoIP providers do not hold themselves out as LECs, their CLEC partners may levy 10 In the past, the agency had expressed concern that joint billing arrangements “could result in double billing,” but the new intercarrier compensation rules “include measures to protect against double billing.” Order ¶970 (JA____-____). Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 26 22 charges to obtain intercarrier compensation for services rendered by non-LEC VoIP providers. Id. ¶970 (JA____-____). In short, the FCC determined that VoIP providers are prospectively eligible to receive intercarrier compensation, including compensation for access traffic, even if they have no contract with the carrier paying compensation. The agency has never made a similar finding for wireless carriers. AT&T complains that the interim rule governing CLEC-VoIP partnerships created an “asymmetry” between VoIP providers and wireless carriers. Br. 19. But if the FCC had adopted the approach advocated by AT&T (i.e., treating VoIP providers like wireless carriers), it would have created an asymmetry between VoIP providers and wireline carriers – the very sort of asymmetry that bill-and-keep (which AT&T generally supports) is designed to eliminate. Under that scenario, wireline carriers would collect more intercarrier compensation than CLEC-VoIP partnerships (because such partnerships could not collect tariffed access charges for any service provided by the retail VoIP partner). By providing for less compensation for IP-based services, AT&T’s proposed framework would dampen incentives for the deployment and use of modern IP networks. Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 27 23 Because the FCC historically has treated wireline carriers differently from wireless carriers for purposes of intercarrier compensation, any interim mechanism short of a flash-cut transition to bill-and-keep for all telephone service providers must inevitably result in some “asymmetry.” The question for the FCC was: Which approach would best serve the agency’s policy objectives? The FCC reasonably explained that it could most effectively promote the deployment of IP networks during the transition to bill-and-keep by giving VoIP providers “the same opportunity … to collect intercarrier compensation” for VoIP-PSTN traffic as carriers that provide service over traditional wireline networks. Order ¶968 (JA____). The Court should not disturb this reasonable policy judgment. See IMC Kalium Carlsbad, Inc. v. Interior Bd. of Land Appeals, 206 F.3d 1003, 1012 (10th Cir. 2000) (the Court’s role is not “to decide which policy choice is the better one, for it is clear that Congress has entrusted such decisions to the [agency]”) (quoting Arkansas v. Oklahoma, 503 U.S. 91, 114 (1992)). C. The FCC Reasonably Explained That The Interim Rule Allows VoIP Providers To Make A Gradual Transition To Bill-and-Keep. Unlike wireless carriers, both wireline carriers and VoIP providers have received intercarrier compensation. Indeed, notwithstanding the uncertainty surrounding compensation obligations for VoIP traffic, the record Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 28 24 contained evidence that some non-LEC VoIP providers recently received intercarrier compensation payments.11 This evidence refutes AT&T’s assertion (Br. 13) that VoIP providers, like wireless carriers, have been operating under a “bill-and-keep” regime “for many years.” In light of this evidence, the FCC reasonably determined that the “immediate adoption of bill-and-keep for all VoIP-PSTN traffic would appear to be, in the aggregate, a … significant departure from the intercarrier compensation payments for VoIP traffic that have been made in the recent past.” Order ¶952 (JA____). To avert the disruption that such a sudden change might cause, the agency explained that it would provide for a “measured transition away from carriers’ reliance on intercarrier compensation as a significant revenue source.” Id. In crafting its interim rules for VoIP intercarrier compensation, the FCC properly took into account “the ability of [VoIP providers] to adjust financially to changing policies” and “the unfairness of abruptly shifting policies.” MCI Telecomms. Corp. v. FCC, 750 F.2d 135, 141 (D.C. Cir. 1984). The interim rules – including the rule governing CLEC-VoIP 11 See note 8 above. On reconsideration, the FCC found additional evidence that VoIP providers collected originating access charges before the Order was issued. Connect America Fund, 27 FCC Rcd 4648, 4661 ¶33 & nn.92-93 (2012) (JA____, ____). Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 29 25 partnerships – are sensibly designed to minimize “upheaval in the industry.” Id. The FCC’s desire to avoid “market disruption pending broader reforms” justified its adoption of the interim rules to ensure a smooth transition to bill-and-keep for VoIP providers. See Rural Cellular Ass’n v. FCC, 588 F.3d 1095, 1106 (D.C. Cir. 2009); Competitive Telecomms. Ass’n v. FCC, 309 F.3d 8, 14 (D.C. Cir. 2002). The agency reasonably concluded that the move to bill-and-keep should “be accomplished gradually to permit [VoIP providers] to adjust to the new pricing system, thus preserving the efficient operation of the interstate telephone network during the interim.” See Nat’l Ass’n of Regulatory Util. Comm’rs v. FCC, 737 F.2d 1095, 1135-36 (D.C. Cir. 1984). There was no need to provide for such a gradual transition for wireless carriers, which already operate under “bill-and-keep arrangements.” Order ¶737 (JA____). The FCC’s ultimate objective is to move all telephone service providers from the current intercarrier compensation system to the sort of bill-and-keep framework that wireless carriers have been using for years. See id. ¶¶736-737 (JA____). It would have been entirely counterproductive for the FCC to move wireless carriers in the opposite direction – replacing their existing bill-and-keep arrangements with the sort Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 30 26 of intercarrier compensation regime that the agency is in the process of reforming. Nor was the FCC required to move to the other extreme – mandating an immediate transition to bill-and-keep for VoIP providers, even though the record shows that at least some VoIP providers (unlike wireless carriers) were receiving intercarrier compensation. In sum, the FCC made a reasonable policy judgment regarding transitional intercarrier compensation. That judgment should be upheld. Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 31 27 CONCLUSION AT&T’s petition for review should be denied. Respectfully submitted, WILLIAM J. BAER ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL ROBERT B. NICHOLSON ROBERT J. WIGGERS ATTORNEYS UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE WASHINGTON, D.C. 20530 SEAN A. LEV GENERAL COUNSEL PETER KARANJIA DEPUTY GENERAL COUNSEL RICHARD K. WELCH DEPUTY ASSOCIATE GENERAL COUNSEL /s/ James M. Carr LAURENCE N. BOURNE JAMES M. CARR MAUREEN K. FLOOD COUNSEL FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20554 (202) 418-1740 March 18, 2013 Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 32 CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE Certificate of Compliance With Type-Volume Limitations, Typeface Requirements, Type Style Requirements, Privacy Redaction Requirements, and Virus Scan 1. This brief complies with the type-volume limitation of the Second Briefing Order. It does not exceed 15% of the size of the brief to which it is responding. The Uncited AT&T Principal Brief was certified to be 5,050 words in length. Therefore, the FCC may file a response brief up to 5,807 words in length. This brief contains 4,893 words, excluding the parts of the brief exempted by Fed. R. App. P. 32(a)(7)(B)(iii). 2. This brief complies with the typeface requirements of Fed. R. App. P. 32(a)(5) and 10th Cir. R. 32(a) and the type style requirements of Fed. R. App. P. 32(a)(6) because this filing has been prepared in a proportionally spaced typeface using Microsoft Word 2010 in 14-point Times New Roman font. 3. All required privacy redactions have been made. 4. This brief was scanned for viruses with Symantec Endpoint Protection, version 11.0.7200.1147, updated on March 17, 2013, and according to the program is free of viruses. /s/ James M. Carr James M. Carr Counsel March 18, 2013 Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 33 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that on March 18, 2013, I caused the foregoing Federal Respondents’ Uncited Response to the AT&T Principal Brief to be filed by delivering a copy to the Court via e-mail at FCC_briefs_only@ca10.uscourts.gov. I further certify that the foregoing document will be furnished by the Court through (ECF) electronic service to all parties in this case through a registered CM/ECF user. This document will be available for viewing and downloading on the CM/ECF system. /s/ James M. Carr James M. Carr Counsel March 18, 2013  Appellate Case: 11-9900 Document: 01019020706 Date Filed: 03/18/2013 Page: 34