Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 Industry Analysis and Technology Division Wireline Competition Bureau November 2013 This report is available for reference in the FCC’s Reference Information Center, Courtyard Level, 445 12th Street, SW, Washington, DC. Copies may be purchased by contacting Best Copy and Printing, Inc., 445 12th Street, SW, Room CY-B402, Washington, DC 20554, telephone (800) 378-3160, or via their website at www.bcpiweb.com. The report can also be downloaded from the Wireline Competition Bureau Statistical Reports Internet site at www.fcc.gov/wcb/stats. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 i Contents TEXT Introduction ............................................................................................................................................. 1 Retail local telephone service ................................................................................................................. 1 Service providers .................................................................................................................................... 3 Interconnected VoIP service ................................................................................................................... 6 Switched access lines .............................................................................................................................. 9 Wholesale relationships for switched access lines .................................................................................. 9 Remainder of the report ........................................................................................................................ 11 Technical Notes .................................................................................................................................... 33 Glossary ................................................................................................................................................ 35 FIGURES 1. Retail Local Telephone Service Connections, 2009 - 2012 ............................................................. 2 2. Wireline Retail Local Telephone Service Connections by Technology and Customer Type ................................................................................................................................. 3 3. Wireline Retail Local Telephone Service Connections by Customer Type and Regulatory Status ............................................................................................................................. 4 4. Wireline Retail Local Telephone Service Connections by Technology, Regulatory Status, and Customer Type .......................................................................................................................... 5 5. Interconnected VoIP Subscribership by Reported Service Features ................................................ 7 6. Technology of Internet Access Connections in Interconnected VoIP Broadband Bundles ............. 8 7. Technology of Retail Switched Access Lines .................................................................................. 9 8. Wholesale Relationships as Reported Respectively by CLECs and ILECs ................................... 10 TABLES 1. Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions .................................................. 12 2. Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by Customer Type .................... 13 3. End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by Customer Type ............................. 14 4. End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions Reported by Non-ILECs .................... 15 5. ILEC End-User (Retail) and Wholesale Switched Access Lines, VoIP Subscriptions, and UNEs ....................................................................................................................................... 16 6. End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by Type of Technology for Non-ILEC Providers ................................................................................................................. 17 7. Percentage of Switched Access Lines Presubscribed for Long Distance Service .......................... 18 8. Residential and Business Presubscribed Switched Access Lines ................................................... 19 9. Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State .................................... 20 10. Residential End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State ........................... 21 U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 ii 11. Business End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State ............................... 22 12. Non-ILEC Share of Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State ........................................................................................................................................... 23 13. Non-ILEC Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State .................. 24 14. ILEC Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State .......................... 25 15. Non-ILEC Methods of Providing Wireline Telephone Services by State ..................................... 26 16. Percentage of End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions Provided to Residential Customers by State ...................................................................................................... 27 17. Number of Reporting ILECs, Non-ILECs, and VoIP Providers by State ...................................... 28 18. Mobile Telephone Facilities-based Carriers and Mobile Telephony Subscribers ......................... 29 19. Percentage of ZIP Codes with CLECs or Non-ILEC VoIP Providers ............................................ 30 20. Percentage of Households in ZIP Codes with CLECs or Non-ILEC VoIP Providers ................... 30 21. Percentage of ZIP Codes with CLECs or Non-ILEC VoIP Providers by State ............................. 31 CHARTS 1. Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions .................................................. 12 2. Percent of Total Lines and VoIP Subscriptions that Serve Residential Customers........................ 13 3. VoIP Share of Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions ........................... 14 4. Non-ILEC End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions .......................................... 15 5. ILEC Total Lines and the Percent Provided to CLECs .................................................................. 16 6. End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by Type of Technology for Non-ILEC Providers ................................................................................................................. 17 7. Percent Presubscribed Interstate Long Distance Lines for ILECs.................................................. 18 MAP Reporting Non-ILEC Interconnected VoIP Providers and CLECs by 5-Digit Geographical ZIP Code ....................................................................................................... 32 Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 Introduction. The Commission has used FCC Form 477 to collect subscribership information from providers of local telephone service – the incumbent local exchange carriers (ILECs), competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs), and mobile telephony providers – for more than a decade.1 The Commission has required interconnected Voice over Internet Protocol (“interconnected VoIP”) service providers to report subscribership information since December 2008 because the use of VoIP technology is growing rapidly and it increasingly is used to provide local telephone service.2 This report summarizes the information collected about telephone services as of December 31, 2012. It demonstrates continued growth in subscribership to interconnected VoIP and mobile telephony services and continued decline in subscribership to traditional wired telephone services.3 Retail local telephone service. Retail local telephone service customers are served by two wireline technologies – “end-user” switched access lines and interconnected VoIP “subscriptions” – and by mobile wireless subscriptions. ? In December 2012, there were 96 million end-user switched access lines in service, 42 million interconnected VoIP subscriptions, and 305 million mobile subscriptions in the United States, or 443 million retail local telephone service connections in total. See Figure 1. 1 See the Technical Notes and the Glossary that appear at the end of this report for more-detailed information about the Form 477 and the meaning of terms used in this report. For an overview of program history for the telephone services data, see Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2008 (June 2010) at pp. 1-2, available at www.fcc.gov/wcb/iatd/comp.html . Readers who are interested in historical trends in the data should note the changes in reporting requirements that were effective in 2008 and earlier, in 200 5. 2 The FCC’s rules (at 47 C.F.R. § 9.3) state: An interconnected Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) service is a service that: (1) Enables real-time, two-way voice communications; (2) Requires a broadband connection from the user’s location; (3) Requires Internet protocol-compatible customer premises equipment (CPE); and (4) Permits users generally to receive calls that originate on the public switched telephone network and to terminate calls to the public switched telephone network. We note that the current interpretation of element (4) of the definition excludes the VoIP services that Skype offers in the United States, and subscribers to those services are not reported on Form 477. Prior to the December 2008 data, companies such as Vonage that solely provide interconnected VoIP service did not file Form 477. Telephone companies and cable companies that provided local exchange telephone service were required to file Form 477 but were not required to report interconnected VoIP subscriptions. However, some of these companies chose to include interconnected VoIP subscriptions in the number of retail (end-user) switched access lines that they reported. 3 The presentation of mobile wireless telephone subscriber counts in this report does not constitute, or imply, Commission analysis of the extent to which wireline and mobile wireless telephone services are demand substitutes or complements in general or in any particular situation. In the Form 477 program, commercial mobile radio service (CMRS) carriers who own or operate wireless networks report both their retail telephone service customers and the retail customers of mobile wireless telephone service resellers. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 1 ? Over the three-year period presented in Figure 1, interconnected VoIP subscriptions increased at a compound annual growth rate of 17%, mobile telephony subscriptions increased at a compound annual growth rate of about 4%, and retail switched access lines declined at about 9% a year. 4 Figure 1 Retail Local Telephone Service Connections, 2009 - 2012 (In Thousands) ? Of the 138 million wireline retail local telephone service connections (including both switched access lines and interconnected VoIP subscriptions) in December 2012, 79 million (or 57%) were residential connections and 59 million (or 43%) were business connections. 5 See Figure 2. 4 The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) is a smoothed rate of growth calculated in three steps. First, divide the ending (December 2012) value by the beginning (December 2009) value. Second, raise the result of that division to a power equal to one divided by the number of years in the period (in this case, 3 years, so the power is 1/3). Third, subtract the number one from the result of the second step. 5 FCC Form 477 does not distinguish between residential and business subscribers to mobile telephony service. The information that Form 477 collects about mobile broadband service is summarized elsewhere; see Internet Access Services: Status as of December 31, 2012, available at www.fcc.gov/wcb/iatd/comp.html . U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 2 ? Cross-classified by technology and customer type, the 138 million wireline retail local telephone service connections in December 2012 were: 32% residential switched access lines, 37% business switched access lines, 25% residential interconnected VoIP subscriptions, and 6% business interconnected VoIP subscriptions. See Figure 2. Figure 2 Wireline Ret ail Local Telephone Service Connections by Technology and Customer Type as of December 31, 2012 (I n Thousands) Switched Access Interconnected Total Lines VoIP Residential 44,577 34,315 78,892 Business 51,535 7,646 59,180 Total 96,111 41,961 138,072 Figures may not add to totals due to rounding. Service providers. The Form 477 program – and this report – distinguishes ILEC operations from all other operations. ? Cross-classified by customer type (residential or business) and the service retailer’s regulatory status (ILEC or non-ILEC), the 138 million wireline retail local telephone service connections in December 2012 were: 35% ILEC residential service, 25% ILEC business service, 23% non-ILEC residential service, and 18% non-ILEC business service. See Figure 3. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 3 Figure 3 Wireline Retail Local Telephone Service Connections by Customer Type and Regulatory Status as of December 31, 2012 (In Thousands) Residential Business Total ILEC 47,640 34,476 82,115 Non - ILEC 31,253 24,704 55,957 Total 78,892 59,180 138,072 Figures may not add to totals due to rounding. ? Additionally cross-classified by technology, the 79 million wireline residential connections in December 2012 were: 52.6% ILEC switched access lines, 35.7% non-ILEC interconnected VoIP subscriptions, 3.9% non-ILEC switched access lines, and 7.8% ILEC interconnected VoIP subscriptions. Similarly, the 59 million wireline business connections were: 57.0% ILEC switched access lines, 30.1% non-ILEC switched access lines, 11.7% non-ILEC interconnected VoIP subscriptions, and 1.2% ILEC interconnected VoIP subscriptions. See Figure 4. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 4 Figure 4 Wi reline Retail Local Telephone Service Connections by Technology, Regulatory Status, and Customer Type as of December 31, 2012 (I n Thousands) Total Switched Access Interconnected Total Lines VoIP ILEC 75,251 6,864 82,115 Non-ILEC 20,860 35,097 55,957 Total 96,111 41,961 138,072 Residential ILEC 41,505 6,134 47,640 Non-ILEC 3,072 28,181 31,253 Residential Total 44,577 34,315 78,892 Business ILEC 33,746 730 34,476 Non-ILEC 17,789 6,916 24,704 Business Total 51,535 7,646 59,180 Figures may not add to totals due to rounding. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 5 Interconnected VoIP service. Form 477 identifies three types of information about retail interconnected VoIP service. ? First, interconnected VoIP service retailers distinguish between the interconnected VoIP subscriptions they sell to their broadband Internet access service customers (“broadband bundle” subscriptions, in this report) and all the other interconnected VoIP subscriptions that they sell (“standalone” subscriptions). ? Second, filers report whether or not interconnected VoIP subscriptions include, as a service feature, the capability to use the service over any broadband connection to which the customer has access, for example, at a hotel or vacation residence (“nomadic” functionality) . ? Third, filers identify the different broadband technologies (for example, cable modem Internet access service) in the broadband bundle. The Form 477 data cross-classify the first two of these three sets of information. See Figure 5. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 6 Figure 5 Interconnected VoIP Subscribership by Reported Service Features as of December 31, 2012 (In Thousands) Total Broadband Standalone Total Bundle VoIP Nomadic 769 3,432 4,201 Not nomadic 35,956 1,804 37,760 Total 36,725 5,236 41,961 ILEC Nomadic 33 18 51 Not nomadic 6,812 2 6,814 ILEC Total 6,845 20 6,864 Non - ILEC Nomadic 736 3,414 4,150 Not nomadic 29,144 1,802 30,947 Non-ILEC Total 29,880 5,217 35,097 Figures may not add to totals due to rounding. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 7 Form 477 collects the third type of information about retail interconnected VoIP service – the technology of the Internet access connection – for broadband bundles but not for standalone interconnected VoIP. See Figure 6.6 Figure 6 Technology of Internet Access Connections in Interconnected VoIP Broadband Bundles as of December 31, 2012 (I n Thousands) Technology ILEC Non - ILEC Total DSL or Other Wireline 3,556 2,822 6,378 FTTP 3,288 832 4,119 Cable Modem 1 25,968 25,969 Terrestrial Fixed Wireless # 49 49 Other 0 210 210 Total 6,845 29,880 36,725 # = Rounds to zero. Figures may not add to totals due to roun ding. 6 Internet Access Services: Status as of December 31, 2012 discusses types of Internet access connections in greater detail. The report is available at www.fcc.gov/wcb/iatd/comp.html . U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 8 Switched access lines. ILECs as a group predominantly deliver retail switched access lines over copper local loops. This appears also to be the case for those non-ILECs who report retail switched access lines. See Figure 7. Figure 7 Technology of Retail Switched Access Lines as of December 31, 2012 (In Thousands) Technology ILEC Non - ILEC Total FTTP 6,149 1,936 8,084 Coaxial Cable 176 1,765 1,941 Terrestrial Fixed Wireless 15 76 90 Copper Local Loop 68,912 17,083 85,995 Total 75,251 20,860 96,111 Figures may not add to totals due to rounding. Wholesale relationships for switched access lines. ILECs typically own the communications facilities over which they provide retail services. By contrast, CLECs use a range of methods: equipping ILEC UNE loops (“UNE-L”) as CLEC switched access lines,7 reselling services (for example, reselling ILEC 7 CLECs (as opposed to non-ILECs more generally) have certain regulatory rights to obtain ILEC local loops at cost- based UNE rates, which the CLEC may use to provide retail switched access lines or retail broadband Internet access connections. See C.F.R. § 51.307. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 9 switched access lines obtained at wholesale rates or reselling ILEC lines obtained under commercial agreements that replaced the UNE-Platform (“UNE-P”)), equipping leased ILEC special access circuits as switched access lines, and equipping local loops that the CLEC owns. ? CLECs reported using several methods to provide their nearly 21 million retail switched access lines in December 2012. They reported providing 37% of lines (or 7.7 million lines) by reselling ILEC wholesale or retail services. They reported providing 33% of lines (or 6.9 million lines) over ILEC facilities leased at regulated, cost-based rates (that is, as unbundled network elements, or UNEs). And they provided the remaining 30% of lines (or 6.3 million lines) over local loops that they owned. However, the information about wholesale relationships differs as reported by CLECs and by ILECs, as discussed in Figure 8. Figure 8 Whole sale Relationships as Reported Respectively by CLECs and ILECs as of December 31, 2012 (I n Thousands) CLEC ILEC Dif ference Retail Switched Access Lines provisioned over ILEC Services (reported by CLECs) Wholesale Switched Access Lines and UNEs provided to CLECs (reported by ILECs) Resold ILEC services 1 7,682 4,038 3,643 UNE - P 2 935 1 934 UNE - L3 5,946 2,913 3,033 Total ILEC UNEs 6,881 2,914 3,967 Total ILEC services 14,563 6,953 7,610 Figures may not add to totals due to rounding. 1 Resold ILEC services include switched access lines made available to CLECs at wholesale rates, resold Centrex, Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN), or other ILEC ser vices, ILEC special access circuits channelized to provide CLEC retail switched access lines, and ILEC switched access lines provided to CLECs under commercial agreements that replaced UNE-P. (See note 2, below.) Filers are instructed to count the number of voice-grade channels the retail customer purchased, not the theoretical capacity of the circuit over which the service was delivered. ILECs generally do not know (and do not report) which ILEC leased special access circuits or other high -capacity circuits are being used to provide CLEC retail switched access lines (which the CLECs do report). 2 UNE-P was the combination of ILEC loop UNE, switching UNE, and transport UNE. The Commission directed CLECs to migrate their retail customers served by UNE-P to an alternative arrangement within 12 months of the effective data of the Triennial Review Remand Order, that is, by March 11, 2006. See C.F.R. § 51.319(d)(2)(ii). 3 ILECs report the number of UNE-L they provide to CLECs but do not convert any high-capacity UNE-L, such as DS1 UNE loops, into voice-grade equivalents. By contrast, CLECs report the number of switched access lines their retail customers purchase which the CLEC provisioned over UNE-L obtained from ILECs. Note, however, that a CLEC might use UNE-L only to provide broadband Internet access connections. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 10 Remainder of the report. The remainder of the report consists of tables and charts that update data presented in earlier reports in this series. We present national data first, followed by state-specific data and, finally, summary statistics of service-provider presence in individual ZIP Codes.8 * * * * We invite users of this information to provide suggestions for improved analysis of data presented in this report by using the attached customer response form or by sending comments to IATDreports@fcc.gov for subject: December 2012 local telephone data. We encourage users of this information to provide suggestions for improved data collection by participating in any formal proceedings undertaken by the Commission to solicit comments for improvement of FCC Form 477. 8 The appropriate interpretation of the ZIP Code-based information is discussed in the Technical Notes at the end of the report. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 11 ILEC Non-ILEC 0 0 0 Jun 2006 142,293 29,896 172,189 17.4 Dec 2006 138,834 28,626 167,460 17.1 Jun 2007 134,640 28,729 163,369 17.6 Dec 2007 129,693 28,725 158,418 18.1 Jun 2008 124,606 30,049 154,655 19.4 Dec 2008 118,496 44,267 162,763 27.2 Jun 2009 112,748 44,351 157,098 28.2 Dec 2009 107,018 45,927 152,945 30.0 Jun 2010 102,395 49,077 151,472 32.4 Dec 2010 97,497 52,155 149,652 34.9 Jun 2011 93,394 52,820 146,214 36.1 Dec 2011 89,428 53,891 143,319 37.6 Jun 2012 85,849 55,419 141,268 39.2 Dec 2012 82,115 55,957 138,072 40.5 1 Mandatory reporting by interconnected VoIP service providers started in December 2008. Previously, individual ILECs and CLECs included VoIP subscribers in reported switched access lines to a varying and largely unknown degree. Interconnected VoIP is distinguished from VoIP service more generally by permitting users to receive calls that originate on the public switched telephone network and to terminate calls to the public switched telephone network. See 47 C.F.R. § 9.3. Form 477 counts both switched access lines and interconnected VoIP subscriptions as the ma[imum number of calls that may be active simultaneously from the end user’s location under the purchased service plan. Provided by Date Some previously published data have been revised. Total Non-ILEC Share (In Millions) Table 1 Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions 1 Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions Chart 1 (In Thousands) 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 Jun 2006 Dec 2006 Jun 2007 Dec 2007 Jun 2008 Dec 2008 Jun 2009 Dec 2009 Jun 2010 Dec 2010 Jun 2011 Dec 2011 Jun 2012 Dec 2012 Non-ILEC 29.9 28.6 28.7 28.7 30.0 44.3 44.4 45.9 49.1 52.2 52.8 53.9 55.4 56.0 ILEC 142.3 138.8 134.6 129.7 124.6 118.5 112.7 107.0 102.4 97.5 93.4 89.4 85.8 82.1 ILEC Non-ILEC U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 12 0 0 0 0 Jun 2006 92,453 49,840 65.0 12,474 17,422 41.7 Dec 2006 89,167 49,667 64.2 12,211 16,415 42.7 Jun 2007 85,633 49,007 63.6 12,117 16,612 42.2 Dec 2007 81,798 47,894 63.1 12,051 16,675 42.0 Jun 2008 77,457 47,149 62.2 12,396 17,654 41.3 Dec 2008 72,786 45,711 61.4 25,049 19,218 56.6 Jun 2009 68,581 44,166 60.8 24,769 19,582 55.8 Dec 2009 64,613 42,405 60.4 26,793 19,134 58.3 Jun 2010 61,579 40,816 60.1 27,899 21,178 56.8 Dec 2010 58,194 39,303 59.7 28,851 23,304 55.3 Jun 2011 55,365 38,029 59.3 29,272 23,548 55.4 Dec 2011 52,530 36,897 58.7 30,285 23,607 56.2 Jun 2012 50,165 35,684 58.4 30,805 24,614 55.6 Dec 2012 47,640 34,476 58.0 31,253 24,704 55.9 Table 2 Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by Customer Type 1 Reporting Non-ILECsReporting ILECs Date (In Thousands) Percent of Total Lines and VoIP Subscriptions that Serve Residential Customers 1 Chart 2 % ResidentialBusiness 1 The December 2008 data are the first for which comprehensive reporting of interconnected VoIP subscribers was required. See footnote 1, Table 1. Business Residential % Residential Residential Some previously published data have been revised. 0 % 1 0% 2 0% 3 0% 4 0% 5 0% 6 0% 7 0% Jun 2006 Dec 2006 Jun 2007 Dec 2007 Jun 2008 Dec 2008 Jun 2009 Dec 2009 Jun 2010 Dec 2010 Jun 2011 Dec 2011 Jun 2012 Dec 2012 ILECs 65.0% 64.2% 63.6% 63.1% 62.2% 61.4% 60.8% 60.4% 60.1% 59.7% 59.3% 58.7% 58.4% 58.0% Non-ILECs 41.7% 42.7% 42.2% 42.0% 41.3% 56.6% 55.8% 58.3% 56.8% 55.3% 55.4% 56.2% 55.6% 55.9% ILECs Non-ILECs U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 13 Residential Business Total Residential Business Total Residential Business Total Dec 2008 78,180 62,839 141,019 19,655 2,090 21,744 97,835 64,929 162,763 Jun 2009 73,093 60,015 133,109 20,257 3,733 23,990 93,350 63,748 157,098 Dec 2009 68,614 58,335 126,949 22,793 3,204 25,996 91,406 61,539 152,945 Jun 2010 64,463 58,152 122,615 25,015 3,842 28,857 89,478 61,994 151,472 Dec 2010 60,010 57,874 117,884 27,036 4,733 31,768 87,045 62,607 149,652 Jun 2011 56,019 56,428 112,447 28,617 5,150 33,767 84,637 61,577 146,214 Dec 2011 51,920 54,729 106,649 30,895 5,775 36,670 82,815 60,504 143,319 Jun 2012 48,337 53,495 101,832 32,633 6,802 39,435 80,970 60,298 141,268 Dec 2012 44,577 51,535 96,111 34,315 7,646 41,961 78,892 59,180 138,072 Some previously published data have been revised. Figures may not sum to totals due to rounding. Chart 3 VoIP Share of Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions End-User Switched Access Lines VoIP Subscriptions Total Table 3 End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by Customer Type (In Thousands) Date Dec 2008 Jun 2009 Dec 2009 Jun 2010 Dec 2010 Jun 2011 Dec 2011 Jun 2012 Dec 2012 Residential 20.1% 21.7% 24.9% 28.0% 31.1% 33.8% 37.3% 40.3% 43.5% Business 3.2% 5.9% 5.2% 6.2% 7.6% 8.4% 9.5% 11.3% 12.9% Total 13.4% 15.3% 17.0% 19.1% 21.2% 23.1% 25.6% 27.9% 30.4% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% Residential Business Total U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 14 400 29,896 6,548 12,547 10,802 - 21.9 42.0 36.1 - 397 28,626 5,819 11,663 11,144 - 20.3 40.7 38.9 - 406 28,729 6,193 11,511 11,025 - 21.6 40.1 38.4 - 443 28,725 6,430 10,582 11,713 - 22.4 36.8 40.8 - 469 30,049 6,073 10,884 13,093 - 20.2 36.2 43.6 - 705 44,267 7,083 9,612 6,359 21,216 16.0 21.7 14.4 47.9 720 44,351 6,799 8,516 6,005 23,032 15.3 19.2 13.5 51.9 758 45,927 7,100 8,029 5,993 24,802 15.5 17.5 13.0 54.0 787 49,077 8,249 7,701 6,231 26,895 16.8 15.7 12.7 54.8 809 52,155 8,634 7,313 7,294 28,912 16.6 14.0 14.0 55.4 834 52,820 8,492 6,950 7,242 30,136 16.1 13.2 13.7 57.1 872 53,891 8,201 6,769 6,937 31,978 15.2 12.6 12.9 59.3 875 55,419 8,138 6,654 7,007 33,623 14.7 12.0 12.6 60.7 913 55,957 7,682 6,881 6,296 35,097 13.7 12.3 11.3 62.7 3 Lines provided over CLEC-owned "last-mile" facilities. Dec 2012 Some previously published data have been revised. Figures may not sum to totals due to rounding. Resold LEC service Jun 2011 1 See footnote 1, Table 1. CLEC- owned local loops Jun 2006 VoIP Non-ILEC End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions as of December 31, 2012 Jun 2009 Dec 2008 Reporting Non- ILECs End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions Chart 4 Jun 2012 Dec 2011 2 Includes unbundled network element (UNE) loops leased from an unaffiliated ILEC on a stand-alone basis and also UNE loops leased in combination with UNE switching or any other unbundled network element. Table 4 End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions Reported by Non-ILECs 1 (Lines and Subscriptions in Thousands) Acquired from other LECs Percent CLEC- owned local loops 3 End-User Switched Access Lines Resold LEC service VoIP ILEC UNEs Dec 2010 ILEC UNEs 2 Date Jun 2010 Jun 2007 Dec 2006 Dec 2009 Dec 2007 Jun 2008 Resold LEC service 13.7 % ILEC UNEs 12.3 % CLEC- owned local loops 11.3 % VoIP 62.7 % U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 15 Jun 2006 805 156,872 142,293 - 1,723 4,413 8,443 12,856 14,579 9.3 Dec 2006 814 151,958 138,834 - 1,613 4,408 7,103 11,511 13,124 8.6 Jun 2007 816 146,672 134,640 - 1,517 4,285 6,230 10,515 12,032 8.2 Dec 2007 805 140,808 129,693 - 1,460 4,122 5,534 9,655 11,115 7.9 Jun 2008 800 134,846 124,606 - 1,473 3,827 4,941 8,768 10,241 7.6 Dec 2008 777 128,288 117,968 529 3,209 3,844 2,740 6,583 9,792 7.6 Jun 2009 777 121,879 111,790 958 3,008 3,580 2,543 6,123 9,131 7.5 Dec 2009 766 116,070 105,824 1,194 2,988 3,668 2,396 6,063 9,051 7.8 Jun 2010 763 110,798 100,433 1,962 5,023 3,254 127 3,381 8,403 7.6 Dec 2010 754 105,386 94,641 2,856 4,712 3,124 53 3,177 7,889 7.5 Jun 2011 756 101,056 89,763 3,631 4,578 3,081 4 3,085 7,662 7.6 Dec 2011 756 96,890 84,735 4,693 4,366 3,028 68 3,097 7,463 7.7 Jun 2012 756 93,033 80,036 5,813 4,059 3,005 121 3,126 7,185 7.7 Dec 2012 753 89,068 75,251 6,864 4,038 2,913 1 2,914 6,953 7.8 2 Fewer ILECs were counted after mid-year 2007 primarily because FCC staff identified additional common-control relationships. 4 ILEC loops provided with ILEC switching, including the combination of ILEC loop UNE, switching UNE, and transport UNE, collectively referred to as the UNE-Platform ("UNE-P"). In the Triennial Review Remand Order, which was adopted on December 15, 2004, the Commission directed CLECs to migrate their retail customers served by these methods to alternative arrangements by March 11, 2006, i.e., within 12 months of the date the order went into effect . See C.F.R. § 51.319(d)(2)(ii). 3 Sum of ILEC-reported end-user (retail) switched access lines, ILEC interconnected VoIP subscriptions, and ILEC wholesale switched access lines and UNEs provided to CLECs. ILEC Total (Retail and Wholesale) Lines and the Percent Provided to CLECs for Resale Chart 5 Table 5 ILEC End-User (Retail) and Wholesale Switched Access Lines, VoIP Subscriptions, and UNEs 1 (Lines, Subscriptions, and UNEs in Thousands) UNEs Date Total UNEs Resold Lines ILEC Total Lines 3 Without Switching VoIP Reporting ILECs 2 % of Total Lines Switched Access Lines and UNEs Provided to CLECs 1 See footnote 1, Table 1. Total UNEs & Resold Lines With Switching 4 End-User Switched Access Lines Some previously published data have been revised. 0. 0% 2. 0% 4. 0% 6. 0% 8. 0% 10 .0% 12 .0% 14 .0% 0 20 ,00 0 40 ,00 0 60 ,00 0 80 ,00 0 10 0,0 00 12 0,0 00 14 0,0 00 16 0,0 00 18 0,0 00 Jun 2006 Dec 20 06 Jun 2007 Dec 20 07 Jun 2008 Dec 20 08 Jun 2009 Dec 20 09 Jun 2010 Dec 20 10 Jun 2011 Dec 20 11 Jun 2012 Dec 20 12 ILEC Total Lines Percent Provided to CLECs U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 16 Table 6 End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by Type of Technology for Non-ILEC Providers 1 (In Thousands) Date Coaxial Cable 2 Other Technology Total Jun 2006 6,070 23,826 29,896 20.3 Dec 2006 6,751 21,875 28,626 23.6 Jun 2007 7,730 21,000 28,729 26.9 Dec 2007 8,385 20,340 28,725 29.2 Jun 2008 9,352 20,697 30,049 31.1 Dec 2008 20,108 24,158 44,267 45.4 Jun 2009 21,547 22,804 44,351 48.6 Dec 2009 23,171 22,756 45,927 50.5 Jun 2010 24,339 24,738 49,077 49.6 Dec 2010 25,877 26,278 52,155 49.6 Jun 2011 26,645 26,175 52,820 50.4 Dec 2011 27,776 26,115 53,891 51.5 Jun 2012 28,541 26,878 55,419 51.5 Dec 2012 29,318 26,639 55,957 52.4 (In Thousands) 1 See footnote 1, Table 1. 2 Reported end-user switched access lines and interconnected VoIP connections that terminate on coaxial cable at the end user's premises. Starting, systematically, with the December 2008 data, interconnected VoIP service providers report subscriptions they sold in a bundle with cable modem Internet access service. For December 2008 and later dates, FCC staff used other Form 477 data to estimate the number of standalone VoIP subscriptions that terminated on coaxial cable at the end user's premises. Percent Coaxial Cable End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by Type of Technology for Non-ILEC Providers Chart 6 Some previously published data have been revised. 0 5 ,0 00 1 0, 00 0 1 5, 00 0 2 0, 00 0 2 5, 00 0 3 0, 00 0 Jun 2006 Dec 20 06 Jun 2007 Dec 20 07 Jun 2008 Dec 20 08 Jun 2009 Dec 20 09 Jun 2010 Dec 20 10 Jun 2011 Dec 20 11 Jun 2012 Dec 20 12 Coaxia l Cable Other Technology U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 17 ILEC CLEC Total Residential Jun 2007 65 86 68 Dec 2007 65 87 68 Jun 2008 66 88 69 Dec 2008 68 80 69 Jun 2009 69 80 70 Dec 2009 70 76 71 Jun 2010 70 76 71 Dec 2010 69 77 69 Jun 2011 69 78 70 Dec 2011 68 78 69 Jun 2012 66 76 66 Dec 2012 65 78 66 Business Jun 2007 48 72 54 Dec 2007 49 70 54 Jun 2008 49 72 55 Dec 2008 44 70 51 Jun 2009 43 72 51 Dec 2009 43 71 51 Jun 2010 44 73 53 Dec 2010 50 76 59 Jun 2011 52 80 62 Dec 2011 52 75 59 Jun 2012 51 74 59 Dec 2012 51 74 59 Total Jun 2007 59 78 62 Dec 2007 59 77 63 Jun 2008 59 79 63 Dec 2008 59 73 61 Jun 2009 59 74 61 Dec 2009 60 72 62 Jun 2010 60 74 62 Dec 2010 61 76 64 Jun 2011 62 80 66 Dec 2011 61 75 64 Jun 2012 59 75 62 Dec 2012 59 74 62 Table 7 Percentage of Switched Access Lines Presubscribed for Long Distance Service Chart 7 Percent Presubscribed Interstate Long Distance Lines for ILECs Some previously published data have been revised. 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% Jun 2007 Dec 2007 Jun 2008 Dec 2008 Jun 2009 Dec 2009 Jun 2010 Dec 2010 Jun 2011 Dec 2011 Jun 2012 Dec 2012 Residential Business U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 18 ILEC CLEC Total Residential Presubscribed 27,127 2,388 29,515 Not Presubscribed 14,378 684 15,062 All Lines 41,505 3,072 44,577 Percent Presubscribed 65% 78% 66% Business Presubscribed 17,281 13,090 30,372 Not Presubscribed 16,464 4,698 21,163 All Lines 33,746 17,789 51,534 Percent Presubscribed 51% 74% 59% Total Presubscribed 44,408 15,478 59,886 Not Presubscribed 30,843 5,382 36,225 All Lines 75,251 20,860 96,111 Percent Presubscribed 59% 74% 62% ILEC Total CLEC Total Residential Presubscribed 29,517 2,591 32,107 Not Presubscribed 15,429 801 16,230 All Lines 44,946 3,391 48,337 Percent Presubscribed 66% 76% 66% Business Presubscribed 17,858 13,667 31,525 Not Presubscribed 17,232 4,738 21,970 All Lines 35,090 18,405 53,495 Percent Presubscribed 51% 74% 59% Total Presubscribed 47,374 16,258 63,632 Not Presubscribed 32,661 5,539 38,200 All Lines 80,036 21,796 101,832 Percent Presubscribed 59% 75% 62% Some previously published data have been revised. Figures may not sum to totals due to rounding. Table 8 December 31, 2012 June 30, 2012 Residential and Business Presubscribed Switched Access Lines (In Thousands) U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 19 Alabama 1,133 0 68 1,201 334 61 277 673 1,874 36 Alaska 228 0 # 228 * 2 1 * * * American Samoa 9 0 0 9 0 0 0 0 9 0 Arizona 1,224 0 1 1,224 553 119 606 1,278 2,503 51 Arkansas 696 0 30 725 107 24 135 266 991 27 California 10,153 2 912 11,067 2,118 759 3,240 6,117 17,184 36 Colorado 1,207 0 0 1,207 369 100 594 1,063 2,271 47 Connecticut 930 # 130 1,060 190 69 581 840 1,900 44 Delaware 225 # 53 279 52 20 111 183 462 40 District of Columbia 543 # 18 561 233 25 105 362 924 39 Florida 4,170 2 570 4,743 1,410 477 2,165 4,052 8,795 46 Georgia 2,266 # 189 2,455 779 176 694 1,649 4,104 40 Guam 40 0 0 40 * * * * * * Hawaii 390 # 6 397 48 8 104 159 556 29 Idaho 375 0 0 375 71 20 77 168 544 31 Illinois 3,196 0 310 3,507 609 237 1,188 2,033 5,540 37 Indiana 1,566 2 109 1,677 214 82 478 773 2,451 32 Iowa 817 # # 817 169 30 172 372 1,190 31 Kansas 602 0 36 638 187 38 212 437 1,075 41 Kentucky 1,087 0 24 1,111 218 25 267 510 1,621 31 Louisiana 1,079 # 68 1,147 271 61 337 669 1,816 37 Maine 367 0 # 367 139 13 146 298 666 45 Maryland 1,605 2 386 1,993 454 128 541 1,123 3,117 36 Massachusetts 1,513 1 283 1,797 818 157 1,021 1,996 3,793 53 Michigan 2,028 0 212 2,240 352 196 1,056 1,604 3,844 42 Minnesota 1,348 # 2 1,350 458 67 580 1,105 2,455 45 Mississippi 658 # 31 690 82 27 118 228 917 25 Missouri 1,559 0 152 1,711 236 61 331 629 2,340 27 Montana 282 0 # 282 42 7 101 151 433 35 Nebraska 443 0 0 443 193 24 134 351 794 44 Nevada 632 0 15 646 126 66 320 512 1,158 44 New Hampshire 278 0 1 279 109 39 248 396 675 59 New Jersey 2,018 2 476 2,496 820 198 1,567 2,585 5,081 51 New Mexico 523 0 0 523 64 21 110 195 717 27 New York 4,108 4 712 4,824 1,776 265 3,208 5,250 10,074 52 North Carolina 2,390 # 84 2,474 702 125 880 1,706 4,181 41 North Dakota 201 0 0 201 80 3 38 122 323 38 Northern Mariana Isl. 15 0 0 15 0 0 0 0 15 0 Ohio 2,791 0 165 2,957 505 109 1,032 1,646 4,602 36 Oklahoma 832 0 37 869 253 53 299 604 1,473 41 Oregon 833 0 0 833 230 67 401 699 1,532 46 Pennsylvania 3,370 2 423 3,796 1,337 251 1,287 2,875 6,671 43 Puerto Rico 583 0 0 583 105 18 115 239 822 29 Rhode Island 179 # 62 240 189 27 97 312 553 57 South Carolina 1,119 0 64 1,183 291 65 312 667 1,850 36 South Dakota 197 0 # 197 135 5 72 211 408 52 Tennessee 1,413 0 99 1,512 570 89 507 1,165 2,677 44 Texas 5,493 1 666 6,159 1,065 329 1,409 2,804 8,963 31 Utah 502 0 0 502 151 43 291 485 988 49 Vermont 218 0 # 218 42 12 74 129 346 37 Virgin Islands 49 0 0 49 0 * * * * * Virginia 2,080 1 351 2,432 708 184 678 1,570 4,002 39 Washington 1,491 # 1 1,492 370 138 825 1,334 2,826 47 West Virginia 559 0 0 559 104 16 169 289 849 34 Wisconsin 1,492 # 97 1,589 277 76 486 840 2,429 35 Wyoming 145 0 1 146 17 5 64 86 232 37 Nationwide 75,251 20 6,845 82,115 20,860 5,217 29,880 55,957 138,072 41 Bundled with Internet Stand- alone VoIP purchased as Bundled with Internet Table 9 Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State as of December 31, 2012 (In Thousands) Non-ILEC % of Total State Total Total Switched Access Lines Non-ILECsILECs VoIP purchased as Stand- alone Switched Access Lines # = Rounds to zero. * = Data withheld to maintain firm confidentiality. Total U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 20 Alabama 705 0 62 768 71 52 228 351 1,119 31 Alaska 109 0 0 109 * 1 1 * * * American Samoa 4 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 4 0 Arizona 703 0 0 703 252 80 374 705 1,408 50 Arkansas 414 0 27 441 12 18 103 133 574 23 California 5,169 2 785 5,955 416 487 2,336 3,238 9,194 35 Colorado 719 0 0 719 20 71 470 561 1,280 44 Connecticut 482 # 118 600 37 52 513 602 1,202 50 Delaware 112 # 51 163 3 17 105 125 288 43 District of Columbia 96 # 12 108 11 11 43 65 173 38 Florida 2,336 2 522 2,860 43 374 1,909 2,326 5,186 45 Georgia 1,235 # 161 1,396 75 138 570 783 2,179 36 Guam 22 0 0 22 * * * * * * Hawaii 205 0 0 205 # 6 84 91 296 31 Idaho 225 0 0 225 18 9 52 79 305 26 Illinois 1,566 0 257 1,823 54 187 999 1,240 3,063 40 Indiana 882 0 101 982 47 63 420 530 1,512 35 Iowa 520 # # 520 64 24 108 196 717 27 Kansas 331 0 32 363 74 25 144 243 605 40 Kentucky 663 0 20 683 60 18 236 314 996 31 Louisiana 616 # 59 674 68 48 252 368 1,042 35 Maine 260 0 0 260 9 10 131 150 410 37 Maryland 745 2 371 1,118 97 90 433 620 1,738 36 Massachusetts 740 1 272 1,012 46 124 960 1,130 2,142 53 Michigan 1,020 0 180 1,200 71 168 957 1,196 2,396 50 Minnesota 904 # # 904 87 53 379 519 1,423 36 Mississippi 378 0 27 405 19 22 104 146 550 26 Missouri 927 0 129 1,056 25 47 258 330 1,386 24 Montana 176 0 # 176 13 4 72 89 265 33 Nebraska 246 0 0 246 83 15 83 180 427 42 Nevada 358 0 13 371 2 47 242 292 663 44 New Hampshire 180 0 0 180 3 32 235 270 449 60 New Jersey 962 2 446 1,411 53 149 1,351 1,554 2,965 52 New Mexico 332 0 0 332 7 15 81 103 436 24 New York 2,134 4 657 2,795 163 158 2,655 2,976 5,771 52 North Carolina 1,437 # 74 1,511 23 96 759 878 2,389 37 North Dakota 130 0 0 130 40 2 7 50 179 28 Northern Mariana Isl. 7 0 0 7 0 0 0 0 7 0 Ohio 1,600 0 138 1,738 57 72 888 1,017 2,756 37 Oklahoma 478 0 33 511 118 33 213 365 876 42 Oregon 525 0 0 525 19 49 346 414 938 44 Pennsylvania 2,071 2 388 2,461 108 202 1,183 1,492 3,954 38 Puerto Rico 430 0 0 430 1 12 93 106 536 20 Rhode Island 101 # 61 162 68 17 66 152 314 48 South Carolina 693 0 54 747 56 41 263 359 1,107 32 South Dakota 122 0 # 122 73 4 64 141 263 54 Tennessee 855 0 86 941 59 74 431 564 1,505 37 Texas 2,829 1 574 3,403 107 236 1,121 1,465 4,868 30 Utah 293 0 0 293 17 27 171 215 508 42 Vermont 151 0 0 151 4 10 70 85 236 36 Virgin Islands 31 0 0 31 0 * * * * * Virginia 1,109 1 326 1,436 144 125 456 725 2,162 34 Washington 910 # # 911 42 103 730 875 1,786 49 West Virginia 369 0 0 369 18 13 154 184 554 33 Wisconsin 818 0 79 897 41 58 424 522 1,419 37 Wyoming 69 0 1 70 4 3 46 53 123 43 Nationwide 41,505 18 6,116 47,640 3,072 3,791 24,390 31,253 78,892 40 Non-ILECs Stand- alone Bundled with Internet Stand- alone Bundled with Internet Total Switched Access Lines VoIP purchased as Total # = Rounds to zero. * = Data withheld to maintain firm confidentiality. Table 10 Residential End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State as of December 31, 2012 (In Thousands) State ILECs Total Non-ILEC % of Total Switched Access Lines VoIP purchased as U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 21 Alabama 428 0 5 433 263 9 49 322 755 43% Alaska 119 0 # 119 * # # * * * American Samoa 5 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 5 0 Arizona 520 0 1 521 302 39 233 574 1,094 52 Arkansas 281 0 3 284 95 6 32 133 417 32 California 4,984 0 127 5,111 1,702 272 904 2,879 7,990 36 Colorado 488 0 0 488 349 30 124 503 991 51 Connecticut 448 0 12 460 153 17 68 238 698 34 Delaware 114 0 2 116 48 4 6 58 174 33 District of Columbia 447 0 5 453 221 14 62 297 750 40 Florida 1,834 0 48 1,883 1,367 104 256 1,726 3,609 48 Georgia 1,032 0 27 1,059 704 38 124 866 1,925 45 Guam 18 0 0 18 * 0 * * * * Hawaii 185 # 6 191 48 2 19 69 260 26 Idaho 150 0 0 150 54 10 24 89 239 37 Illinois 1,631 0 53 1,684 555 50 189 794 2,477 32 Indiana 685 2 9 695 167 19 58 243 938 26 Iowa 297 # # 297 106 6 64 176 473 37 Kansas 271 0 4 275 113 13 69 195 470 41 Kentucky 424 0 5 428 158 7 31 197 625 31 Louisiana 464 0 9 473 203 13 85 301 774 39 Maine 107 0 # 107 130 3 15 149 256 58 Maryland 860 0 15 876 357 38 108 503 1,379 37 Massachusetts 773 0 12 785 771 33 62 866 1,651 52 Michigan 1,008 0 32 1,040 281 28 99 408 1,448 28 Minnesota 444 # 2 446 371 14 201 586 1,032 57 Mississippi 281 # 4 285 63 5 14 82 367 22 Missouri 632 0 23 655 211 14 73 299 953 31 Montana 106 0 0 106 30 3 29 62 167 37 Nebraska 196 0 0 196 110 9 52 171 367 47 Nevada 274 0 1 276 124 18 78 220 496 44 New Hampshire 98 0 1 99 107 7 12 126 225 56 New Jersey 1,055 0 30 1,085 767 48 216 1,031 2,116 49 New Mexico 190 0 0 190 57 6 28 91 281 32 New York 1,974 0 55 2,029 1,614 107 553 2,274 4,303 53 North Carolina 953 0 10 963 678 29 121 829 1,792 46 North Dakota 71 0 0 71 40 1 31 72 144 50 Northern Mariana Isl. 8 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 8 0 Ohio 1,191 0 27 1,218 448 37 144 629 1,847 34 Oklahoma 353 0 4 358 134 20 85 239 597 40 Oregon 309 0 0 309 211 18 55 285 594 48 Pennsylvania 1,299 0 35 1,334 1,229 49 104 1,383 2,717 51 Puerto Rico 153 0 0 153 104 6 22 133 286 46 Rhode Island 77 0 1 78 120 9 31 161 239 67 South Carolina 426 0 10 436 235 24 49 308 744 41 South Dakota 75 0 # 75 62 1 7 70 145 48 Tennessee 558 0 13 571 511 15 76 602 1,173 51 Texas 2,664 0 92 2,756 959 93 288 1,339 4,096 33 Utah 210 0 0 210 134 16 120 270 480 56 Vermont 66 0 # 66 38 2 4 43 110 40 Virgin Islands 18 0 0 18 0 * * * * * Virginia 971 0 25 996 564 59 222 845 1,841 46 Washington 581 # # 581 328 36 95 459 1,040 44 West Virginia 190 0 0 190 86 3 15 105 295 36 Wisconsin 674 # 17 692 237 19 63 318 1,010 32 Wyoming 76 0 0 76 13 1 18 33 109 30 Nationwide 33,746 2 728 34,476 17,789 1,425 5,491 24,704 59,180 42 Non-ILECs Stand- alone Bundled with Internet Stand- alone Bundled with Internet Total Switched Access Lines VoIP purchased as Total # = Rounds to zero. * = Data withheld to maintain firm confidentiality. Table 11 Business End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State as of December 31, 2012 (In Thousands) State ILECs Total Non-ILEC % of Total Switched Access Lines VoIP purchased as U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 22 Alabama 16 % 21 % 21 % 24 % 28 % 30 % 31 % 32 % 34 % 36 % Alaska * * * * * * * * * * American Samoa 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Arizona 37 40 40 42 44 46 46 48 49 51 Arkansas 14 18 19 20 22 22 24 24 26 27 California 15 22 23 25 27 28 30 32 34 36 Colorado 19 31 32 34 36 39 40 42 44 47 Connecticut 15 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43 44 Delaware 18 30 31 32 34 35 37 38 39 40 District of Columbia 15 20 20 21 31 32 34 35 37 39 Florida 14 27 28 31 36 39 40 42 44 46 Georgia 17 25 26 27 31 33 34 36 38 40 Guam * * * * * * * * * * Hawaii 18 18 19 21 22 24 24 26 27 29 Idaho 11 17 18 19 25 28 26 27 29 31 Illinois 14 24 24 25 27 30 32 33 35 37 Indiana 11 18 19 20 23 25 27 28 30 32 Iowa 19 22 22 24 26 27 28 29 30 31 Kansas 28 31 31 32 34 36 37 38 40 41 Kentucky 18 25 27 28 29 33 32 35 31 31 Louisiana 21 23 25 27 30 32 33 34 37 37 Maine 24 30 33 36 38 39 40 42 42 45 Maryland 15 25 26 27 28 30 31 32 35 36 Massachusetts 25 39 40 42 44 49 52 53 55 53 Michigan 20 29 30 33 34 36 38 39 40 42 Minnesota 22 31 32 34 36 37 38 43 43 45 Mississippi 11 16 17 20 23 25 22 23 24 25 Missouri 15 18 18 20 22 23 24 25 26 27 Montana 19 21 22 23 24 26 29 31 33 35 Nebraska 31 34 35 38 39 42 42 42 43 44 Nevada 26 30 31 33 36 39 40 42 43 44 New Hampshire 25 42 45 49 51 54 55 56 57 59 New Jersey 18 34 36 38 40 46 47 49 50 51 New Mexico 9 14 15 17 19 21 22 24 26 27 New York 31 41 42 44 46 49 50 51 52 52 North Carolina 20 24 25 27 33 35 36 37 39 41 North Dakota 24 32 31 35 36 38 37 38 38 38 Northern Mariana Isl. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ohio 23 25 26 28 29 31 32 33 34 36 Oklahoma 27 30 30 34 35 38 39 40 41 41 Oregon 18 31 32 34 36 39 41 42 44 46 Pennsylvania 21 30 30 32 35 38 40 41 42 43 Puerto Rico 19 22 25 22 26 25 25 25 27 29 Rhode Island 50 52 53 54 54 58 60 59 59 57 South Carolina 19 23 24 26 30 32 32 33 35 36 South Dakota 32 36 36 44 45 47 48 50 51 52 Tennessee 18 25 25 28 33 36 37 39 41 44 Texas 18 22 22 23 24 25 27 28 30 31 Utah 21 26 32 34 36 38 39 44 45 49 Vermont 13 24 23 27 29 31 34 35 35 37 Virgin Islands 0 * 0 * * * * * * * Virginia 23 31 32 34 33 35 36 37 38 39 Washington 16 30 32 35 37 40 42 44 46 47 West Virginia 16 22 24 27 29 30 31 32 33 34 Wisconsin 24 26 26 27 27 30 31 32 33 35 Wyoming 19 21 21 22 24 26 29 33 36 37 Nationwide 19 % 27 % 28 % 30 % 32 % 35 % 36 % 38 % 39 % 41 % 2012 Dec Table 12 Non-ILEC Share of Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State 1 Jun 2011 Dec 2008 JunDec JunDecJun Jun * = Data withheld to maintain firm confidentiality. NA = Not available. Some previously published data have been revised. 1 See footnote 1, Table 1. State 2009 Dec 2010 U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 23 Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Alabama 352 463 453 494 594 622 620 634 644 673 Alaska * * * * * * * * * * American Samoa 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Arizona 1,129 1,227 1,173 1,193 1,236 1,244 1,203 1,228 1,243 1,278 Arkansas 175 220 224 230 248 250 257 253 261 266 California 3,101 4,607 4,764 4,857 5,166 5,342 5,515 5,655 5,899 6,117 Colorado 449 847 825 837 884 929 944 967 1,011 1,063 Connecticut 291 630 644 680 706 751 782 799 826 840 Delaware 85 166 166 165 173 174 177 179 182 183 District of Columbia 136 183 180 190 300 314 337 343 347 362 Florida 1,276 2,748 2,737 2,907 3,525 3,729 3,690 3,848 3,940 4,052 Georgia 764 1,174 1,133 1,173 1,370 1,410 1,427 1,496 1,572 1,649 Guam * * * * * * * * * * Hawaii 115 114 117 125 128 138 137 147 153 159 Idaho 79 123 117 123 159 177 149 150 164 168 Illinois 875 1,667 1,614 1,634 1,658 1,826 1,899 1,909 2,007 2,033 Indiana 313 565 562 592 647 691 719 750 763 773 Iowa 273 309 310 322 344 354 360 362 370 372 Kansas 375 419 413 408 429 436 440 437 443 437 Kentucky 331 497 508 521 546 621 591 636 526 510 Louisiana 449 491 507 539 602 642 640 635 701 669 Maine 181 233 250 274 282 283 285 293 294 298 Maryland 479 868 891 911 912 961 981 1,015 1,103 1,123 Massachusetts 871 1,602 1,592 1,643 1,695 1,967 2,198 2,169 2,306 1,996 Michigan 927 1,458 1,451 1,501 1,518 1,576 1,580 1,586 1,618 1,604 Minnesota 572 877 864 905 927 942 956 1,107 1,061 1,105 Mississippi 122 184 184 214 252 267 227 227 234 228 Missouri 471 523 518 553 598 611 606 611 628 629 Montana 96 101 103 104 109 117 127 137 146 151 Nebraska 274 299 302 332 330 359 348 342 349 351 Nevada 372 420 411 416 451 476 471 493 505 512 New Hampshire 167 347 351 376 388 395 397 396 404 396 New Jersey 866 1,946 1,986 2,004 2,104 2,464 2,530 2,574 2,626 2,585 New Mexico 75 123 128 138 157 168 171 177 188 195 New York 3,125 4,563 4,578 4,710 4,807 5,295 5,222 5,212 5,306 5,250 North Carolina 953 1,101 1,137 1,200 1,480 1,557 1,535 1,589 1,640 1,706 North Dakota 76 113 104 123 126 129 124 124 123 122 Northern Mariana Isl. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ohio 1,365 1,473 1,450 1,492 1,550 1,615 1,563 1,589 1,607 1,646 Oklahoma 474 521 504 570 572 621 619 617 627 604 Oregon 300 575 563 582 615 631 650 659 690 699 Pennsylvania 1,423 2,205 2,176 2,201 2,422 2,650 2,759 2,787 2,847 2,875 Puerto Rico 186 210 234 170 244 231 228 224 226 239 Rhode Island 301 317 311 311 308 353 383 360 356 312 South Carolina 399 478 497 535 622 645 623 640 657 667 South Dakota 124 140 136 183 188 193 199 209 211 211 Tennessee 523 756 726 791 966 1,020 1,051 1,084 1,122 1,165 Texas 1,919 2,387 2,358 2,372 2,452 2,498 2,556 2,586 2,723 2,804 Utah 211 274 342 353 362 371 375 427 439 485 Vermont 47 90 91 102 110 116 126 129 128 129 Virgin Islands 0 * # * * * * * * * Virginia 1,043 1,443 1,476 1,565 1,463 1,497 1,523 1,527 1,542 1,570 Washington 471 1,031 1,025 1,095 1,162 1,221 1,229 1,257 1,323 1,334 West Virginia 141 196 214 235 248 269 270 280 287 289 Wisconsin 744 770 755 771 728 791 794 804 814 840 Wyoming 51 54 53 54 58 62 68 79 86 86 Total 30,049 44,267 44,351 45,927 49,077 52,155 52,820 53,891 55,419 55,957 # = Rounds to zero. * = Data withheld to maintain firm confidentiality. Some previously published data have been revised. 1 See footnote 1, Table 1. 2008 State Table 13 Non-ILEC Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State 1 20102009 2011 2012 (In Thousands) U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 24 Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Alabama 1,861 1,746 1,665 1,579 1,506 1,438 1,386 1,322 1,263 1,201 Alaska 294 289 282 273 271 260 257 247 243 228 American Samoa 11 10 10 10 10 10 9 9 9 9 Arizona 1,943 1,847 1,741 1,649 1,563 1,476 1,409 1,343 1,279 1,224 Arkansas 1,069 1,021 982 941 904 865 827 789 756 725 California 17,149 16,345 15,555 14,796 14,118 13,455 12,786 12,197 11,614 11,067 Colorado 1,973 1,873 1,758 1,656 1,569 1,473 1,409 1,329 1,270 1,207 Connecticut 1,632 1,540 1,463 1,389 1,326 1,268 1,214 1,165 1,111 1,060 Delaware 396 380 363 344 331 317 307 297 288 279 District of Columbia 788 737 714 697 680 679 644 627 595 561 Florida 7,932 7,440 6,918 6,491 6,138 5,798 5,508 5,259 4,992 4,743 Georgia 3,675 3,468 3,304 3,156 3,011 2,881 2,779 2,659 2,561 2,455 Guam 62 54 51 49 48 48 45 42 40 40 Hawaii 516 512 489 473 455 444 431 419 406 397 Idaho 609 582 550 514 486 455 433 404 395 375 Illinois 5,562 5,342 5,086 4,812 4,581 4,313 4,078 3,852 3,705 3,507 Indiana 2,665 2,547 2,434 2,300 2,186 2,064 1,945 1,894 1,780 1,677 Iowa 1,162 1,113 1,077 1,024 987 940 917 882 850 817 Kansas 977 939 899 858 820 774 737 700 669 638 Kentucky 1,542 1,458 1,387 1,352 1,317 1,272 1,238 1,195 1,155 1,111 Louisiana 1,710 1,634 1,561 1,489 1,426 1,369 1,318 1,255 1,205 1,147 Maine 579 542 519 482 463 438 428 407 401 367 Maryland 2,792 2,588 2,520 2,403 2,333 2,262 2,193 2,128 2,062 1,993 Massachusetts 2,609 2,493 2,369 2,238 2,149 2,065 1,991 1,926 1,858 1,797 Michigan 3,719 3,514 3,323 3,113 2,952 2,757 2,619 2,513 2,382 2,240 Minnesota 2,006 1,922 1,826 1,725 1,666 1,583 1,537 1,468 1,419 1,350 Mississippi 1,018 963 922 879 848 813 783 752 723 690 Missouri 2,568 2,465 2,367 2,259 2,162 2,055 1,961 1,866 1,788 1,711 Montana 406 387 371 351 342 327 318 302 295 282 Nebraska 606 584 564 543 521 501 489 474 460 443 Nevada 1,042 972 911 856 809 759 719 691 673 646 New Hampshire 507 470 435 385 366 342 326 312 304 279 New Jersey 3,936 3,734 3,519 3,288 3,112 2,937 2,807 2,700 2,587 2,496 New Mexico 783 754 713 682 651 618 595 569 546 523 New York 6,902 6,557 6,234 5,900 5,653 5,416 5,258 5,099 4,943 4,824 North Carolina 3,715 3,519 3,335 3,189 3,045 2,886 2,779 2,691 2,584 2,474 North Dakota 248 241 233 224 220 213 210 206 204 201 Northern Mariana Isl. 18 17 17 16 16 16 15 15 15 15 Ohio 4,537 4,326 4,124 3,914 3,719 3,515 3,342 3,172 3,100 2,957 Oklahoma 1,267 1,215 1,169 1,117 1,070 1,022 981 939 907 869 Oregon 1,359 1,286 1,210 1,140 1,080 1,003 949 895 881 833 Pennsylvania 5,494 5,243 5,029 4,771 4,571 4,387 4,217 4,055 3,894 3,796 Puerto Rico 786 755 698 610 706 707 689 655 625 583 Rhode Island 302 292 281 270 264 260 255 252 245 240 South Carolina 1,728 1,629 1,561 1,488 1,429 1,368 1,330 1,284 1,236 1,183 South Dakota 261 251 244 233 227 217 212 205 202 197 Tennessee 2,436 2,297 2,170 2,061 1,962 1,846 1,774 1,681 1,599 1,512 Texas 9,020 8,673 8,307 7,999 7,678 7,360 7,046 6,725 6,431 6,159 Utah 811 776 725 690 657 614 586 554 529 502 Vermont 323 289 299 280 265 253 245 237 234 218 Virgin Islands 62 61 59 57 59 58 56 53 49 49 Virginia 3,422 3,265 3,160 3,050 2,944 2,811 2,705 2,633 2,518 2,432 Washington 2,509 2,367 2,211 2,071 1,962 1,815 1,722 1,621 1,572 1,492 West Virginia 752 714 677 637 606 628 603 588 580 559 Wisconsin 2,336 2,246 2,156 2,051 1,970 1,874 1,807 1,715 1,665 1,589 Wyoming 218 209 200 190 183 175 168 160 153 146 Total 124,606 118,496 112,748 107,018 102,395 97,497 93,394 89,428 85,849 82,115 Some previously published data have been revised. 1 See footnote 1, Table 1. State 2008 2009 2010 2011 Table 14 ILEC Total End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions by State 1 (In Thousands) 2012 U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 25 Non-ILEC Methods of Providing Wireline Telephone Services by State as of December 31, 2012 State Resold LEC service ILEC UNEs CLEC-owned local loops VoIP Subscriptions 1 Total Alabama 94 151 89 339 673 Alaska * * * * * American Samoa 0 0 0 0 0 Arizona 146 88 319 725 1,278 Arkansas 25 19 63 159 266 California 1,094 528 497 3,999 6,117 Colorado 158 142 69 694 1,063 Connecticut 58 48 85 650 840 Delaware 31 20 1 131 183 District of Columbia 155 42 35 130 362 Florida 570 574 266 2,642 4,052 Georgia 234 387 158 870 1,649 Guam * * * * * Hawaii 28 3 17 112 159 Idaho 19 25 27 97 168 Illinois 263 229 117 1,425 2,033 Indiana 66 66 83 559 773 Iowa 46 37 86 203 372 Kansas 40 35 112 250 437 Kentucky 79 72 67 292 510 Louisiana 86 102 83 398 669 Maine 23 58 59 159 298 Maryland 242 133 79 669 1,123 Massachusetts 298 197 324 1,178 1,996 Michigan 105 197 50 1,252 1,604 Minnesota 121 202 135 647 1,105 Mississippi 39 35 8 145 228 Missouri 61 121 54 392 629 Montana 7 10 25 109 151 Nebraska 69 9 115 158 351 Nevada 69 37 19 386 512 New Hampshire 37 47 25 287 396 New Jersey 352 173 296 1,765 2,585 New Mexico 32 11 21 131 195 New York 693 453 631 3,473 5,250 North Carolina 274 295 132 1,005 1,706 North Dakota 4 16 60 42 122 Northern Mariana Isl. 0 0 0 0 0 Ohio 151 171 183 1,141 1,646 Oklahoma 77 52 124 351 604 Oregon 55 121 55 468 699 Pennsylvania 495 414 428 1,538 2,875 Puerto Rico 12 * * 134 239 Rhode Island 31 17 140 124 312 South Carolina 104 115 72 377 667 South Dakota 9 6 120 77 211 Tennessee 190 244 136 595 1,165 Texas 362 439 263 1,739 2,804 Utah 53 69 29 334 485 Vermont 7 19 16 86 129 Virgin Islands * * * * * Virginia 318 163 227 862 1,570 Washington 101 186 85 963 1,334 West Virginia 36 53 15 185 289 Wisconsin 53 176 48 563 840 Wyoming 5 7 5 69 86 Total 7,682 6,881 6,296 35,097 55,957 1 See footnote 1, Table 1. (In Thousands) * = Data withheld to maintain firm confidentiality. Figures may not sum to totals due to rounding. Table 15 U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 26 State ILECs Non-ILECs Total Alabama 64% 52% 60% Alaska 48 * * American Samoa 44 NA 44 Arizona 57 55 56 Arkansas 61 50 58 California 54 53 54 Colorado 60 53 56 Connecticut 57 72 63 Delaware 58 68 62 District of Columbia 19 18 19 Florida 60 57 59 Georgia 57 47 53 Guam 55 * * Hawaii 52 57 53 Idaho 60 47 56 Illinois 52 61 55 Indiana 59 69 62 Iowa 64 53 60 Kansas 57 56 56 Kentucky 61 62 61 Louisiana 59 55 57 Maine 71 50 62 Maryland 56 55 56 Massachusetts 56 57 56 Michigan 54 75 62 Minnesota 67 47 58 Mississippi 59 64 60 Missouri 62 52 59 Montana 62 59 61 Nebraska 56 51 54 Nevada 57 57 57 New Hampshire 65 68 67 New Jersey 57 60 58 New Mexico 63 53 61 New York 58 57 57 North Carolina 61 51 57 North Dakota 65 41 55 Northern Mariana Isl. 47 NA 47 Ohio 59 62 60 Oklahoma 59 60 59 Oregon 63 59 61 Pennsylvania 65 52 59 Puerto Rico 74 44 65 Rhode Island 68 49 57 South Carolina 63 54 60 South Dakota 62 67 64 Tennessee 62 48 56 Texas 55 52 54 Utah 58 44 51 Vermont 69 66 68 Virgin Islands 63 * * Virginia 59 46 54 Washington 61 66 63 West Virginia 66 64 65 Wisconsin 56 62 58 Wyoming 48 62 53 Nationwide 58 56 57 * = Data withheld to maintain firm confidentiality. NA = Not applicable. Table 16 Percentage of End-User Switched Access Lines and VoIP Subscriptions Provided to Residential Customers by State as of December 31, 2012 U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 27 State ILECs Non-ILECs Total 1 VoIP Providers 2 Alabama 20 130 143 105 Alaska 17 25 41 25 American Samoa 1 0 1 0 Arizona 15 128 139 112 Arkansas 20 94 110 76 California 15 185 196 157 Colorado 26 146 169 121 Connecticut 2 108 108 93 Delaware 1 86 87 72 District of Columbia 1 90 91 73 Florida 10 216 221 168 Georgia 27 180 197 141 Guam 1 6 7 5 Hawaii 2 45 46 41 Idaho 18 85 97 72 Illinois 44 186 219 144 Indiana 29 137 157 105 Iowa 134 130 235 82 Kansas 39 120 145 95 Kentucky 17 134 143 106 Louisiana 10 114 118 89 Maine 7 71 75 56 Maryland 2 146 146 119 Massachusetts 4 133 134 109 Michigan 25 138 154 110 Minnesota 47 131 163 100 Mississippi 13 103 110 81 Missouri 31 125 148 98 Montana 17 73 83 57 Nebraska 30 89 111 67 Nevada 12 103 113 92 New Hampshire 6 90 96 75 New Jersey 3 151 151 125 New Mexico 16 91 100 72 New York 26 171 185 141 North Carolina 19 155 165 122 North Dakota 23 64 80 44 Northern Mariana Isl 1 0 1 0 Ohio 33 156 179 124 Oklahoma 38 102 135 77 Oregon 23 120 139 98 Pennsylvania 22 170 183 143 Puerto Rico 1 19 19 17 Rhode Island 1 77 78 60 South Carolina 17 128 134 97 South Dakota 29 63 83 49 Tennessee 18 140 153 111 Texas 51 214 247 158 Utah 13 95 105 80 Vermont 7 69 75 59 Virgin Islands 1 4 5 4 Virginia 15 141 150 118 Washington 16 143 155 124 West Virginia 6 89 92 78 Wisconsin 40 138 162 102 Wyoming 9 77 81 61 Nationwide 753 913 1,442 591 2 The providers reporting interconnected VoIP subscribers in a state are a subset of the ILECs and non-ILECs in that state. Table 17 Number of Reporting ILECs, Non-ILECs, and VoIP Providers by State as of December 31, 2012 1 Providers that report both ILEC and non-ILEC operations in a state are counted once in the ILECs column and once in the Non-ILECs column and once in the Total column for that state. Either type of operations might report interconnected VoIP subscribers. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 28 J un Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Jun Dec Alabama 10 16 % 3,887 3,960 4,003 4,228 4,211 4,328 4,350 4,486 4,545 4,549 Alaska 11 5 480 383 544 586 590 608 619 634 642 649 American Samoa * * * * * * * * * * * * Arizona 9 11 4,936 4,983 5,005 5,101 5,268 5,285 5,402 5,523 5,686 5,774 Arkansas 8 25 2,446 2,530 2,576 2,519 2,485 2,673 2,773 3,155 3,185 2,963 California 14 5 31,946 32,177 32,215 32,938 33,548 33,839 34,299 34,835 35,103 35,616 Colorado 12 9 4,066 4,311 4,357 4,503 4,647 4,687 4,705 4,759 4,817 4,878 Connecticut 8 8 2,959 3,030 3,047 3,123 3,192 3,230 3,305 3,353 3,379 3,418 Delaware 9 9 775 778 779 803 859 851 881 892 899 903 District of Columbia 7 10 1,047 1,096 1,116 1,183 1,227 1,249 1,273 1,346 1,376 1,400 Florida 11 10 15,809 16,158 16,425 16,744 16,895 17,251 17,613 17,893 18,135 18,369 Georgia 12 16 8,142 8,322 8,562 8,863 8,869 9,063 9,137 9,647 10,051 10,054 Guam 5 2 * * * * * * 139 * 154 153 Hawaii 7 6 1,115 1,184 1,196 1,216 1,248 1,252 1,274 1,295 1,313 1,339 Idaho 12 8 1,125 1,167 1,180 1,221 1,269 1,277 1,293 1,321 1,346 1,363 Illinois 14 13 10,634 10,919 11,070 11,523 11,604 12,057 12,259 12,689 12,898 12,859 Indiana 12 13 4,824 4,956 4,983 5,205 5,289 5,410 5,496 5,572 5,670 5,786 Iowa 67 10 2,245 2,319 2,336 2,432 2,466 2,535 2,559 2,654 2,714 2,777 Kansas 12 17 2,326 2,421 2,430 2,466 2,491 2,560 2,570 2,649 2,686 2,696 Kentucky 11 15 3,343 3,445 3,439 3,631 3,654 3,726 3,754 3,810 3,879 3,976 Louisiana 12 18 3,896 4,012 4,053 3,993 3,953 4,340 4,876 5,412 5,336 4,898 Maine 7 24 972 1,012 1,006 1,065 1,040 1,124 1,090 1,176 1,192 1,204 Maryland 10 15 5,124 5,234 5,260 5,323 5,500 5,560 5,665 6,018 6,146 6,116 Massachusetts 7 10 5,624 5,749 6,027 6,171 6,367 6,316 6,419 6,522 6,626 6,703 Michigan 10 15 7,821 8,027 8,171 8,576 8,690 8,861 9,391 9,239 9,292 9,598 Minnesota 10 13 4,164 4,345 4,254 4,439 4,611 4,704 4,782 4,934 5,063 5,154 Mississippi 9 14 2,252 2,312 2,361 2,345 2,322 2,440 2,516 2,656 2,718 2,656 Missouri 11 15 4,835 4,940 4,985 5,129 5,141 5,309 5,458 5,627 5,708 5,668 Montana 9 15 723 748 707 802 783 846 803 862 880 888 Nebraska 12 9 1,451 1,496 1,508 1,515 1,566 1,523 1,542 1,646 1,668 1,675 Nevada 10 13 2,249 2,268 2,325 2,393 2,417 2,453 2,490 2,556 2,595 2,611 New Hampshire 9 14 1,045 1,080 1,075 1,125 1,141 1,170 1,171 1,204 1,212 1,225 New Jersey 9 7 7,834 8,008 8,036 8,158 8,624 8,601 8,786 8,915 8,933 9,015 New Mexico 10 8 1,555 1,536 1,550 1,624 1,668 1,689 1,662 1,687 1,716 1,737 New York 11 12 17,260 16,702 18,193 18,882 19,303 19,504 19,938 20,199 20,387 20,715 North Carolina 14 13 7,428 8,024 7,865 8,108 8,259 8,526 8,513 9,102 9,206 8,983 North Dakota 9 11 541 581 562 618 590 623 615 640 666 683 Northern Mariana Isl. * * * * * * * * * * * * Ohio 12 13 9,357 9,565 9,456 10,059 10,236 10,511 10,936 11,118 11,381 11,549 Oklahoma 15 23 2,808 2,889 2,988 3,077 3,109 3,188 3,259 3,429 3,593 3,940 Oregon 9 9 3,007 3,084 3,112 3,235 3,297 3,340 3,355 3,420 3,456 3,519 Pennsylvania 15 13 9,895 10,214 10,455 10,867 11,070 11,424 11,401 11,576 11,704 11,956 Puerto Rico 6 9 2,502 2,624 2,706 2,807 2,879 3,014 3,004 2,989 2,969 3,047 Rhode Island 7 16 874 888 880 893 906 920 935 957 999 1,050 South Carolina 15 17 3,573 3,323 3,702 3,896 3,848 3,935 3,987 3,781 3,901 4,326 South Dakota 9 12 611 631 613 681 681 728 690 724 741 750 Tennessee 11 13 5,791 5,518 5,676 5,914 6,041 6,193 6,236 6,368 6,445 6,484 Texas 20 8 20,390 21,008 21,403 21,849 22,201 23,030 23,482 23,721 24,102 24,553 Utah 9 6 2,046 2,095 2,109 2,166 2,220 2,251 2,276 2,326 2,368 2,409 Vermont 6 18 421 435 398 463 431 485 471 507 519 518 Virgin Islands 4 13 * * * * * * 117 117 * 113 Virginia 10 10 6,242 6,856 6,596 7,250 7,440 7,595 7,622 7,774 7,839 7,914 Washington 10 9 5,461 5,624 5,671 5,816 5,965 6,022 6,118 6,248 6,314 6,424 West Virginia 9 23 1,236 1,295 1,315 1,401 1,406 1,500 1,506 1,650 1,671 1,603 Wisconsin 14 13 3,966 4,265 4,317 4,546 4,599 4,730 4,895 4,929 4,949 5,043 Wyoming 10 11 457 484 429 517 501 526 514 532 541 545 Nationwide 180 11 % 255,729 261,284 265,332 274,283 278,918 285,118 290,318 297,268 301,521 304,881 resellers and therefore double counted in the data. Consequently, December 2012 carrier counts are somewhat lower than recently published carrier counts. 1 Percentage of mobile telephony subscribers purchasing their service subscriptions from a mobile wireless reseller. 2 0 1 1 * = Data withheld to maintain firm confidentiality. December 2011 and June 2012 data have been revised to remove subscribers inappropriately reported by mobile wireless State 200 8 Table 18 Mobile Telephone Facilities-based Carriers and Mobile Telephony Subscribers 2 0 1 2 Subscribers (In Thousands) 20 0 9 2 0 1 0 Dec 201 2 Carriers % Resold 1 U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 29 Zero 18.3 % 7.7 % 8.7 % 9.3 % 7.1 % 6.9 % 7.2 % 7.6 % 7.6 % 6.9 % One 11.6 9.2 10.1 10.1 8.7 8.6 8.7 8.0 7.6 7.4 Two 8.6 7.8 7.9 7.6 7.4 7.6 7.6 6.5 6.6 6.3 Three 6.3 6.4 6.1 6.2 6.2 6.3 6.4 5.8 5.8 5.6 Four 5.0 5.4 5.4 5.2 5.2 5.5 5.5 5.3 5.1 5.0 Five 4.1 4.8 4.6 4.5 4.7 5.0 5.1 4.6 4.7 4.6 Six 3.5 4.2 4.0 3.8 4.2 4.2 4.3 4.5 4.1 4.3 Seven 3.2 3.6 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 4.0 3.6 3.7 3.8 Eight 3.0 3.2 3.1 3.0 3.4 3.5 3.4 3.3 3.3 3.2 Nine 2.7 2.8 2.6 2.7 2.8 3.0 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.0 Ten or More 33.6 44.7 44.0 44.0 46.6 45.7 44.8 47.7 48.3 49.9 Zero 2.6 % 0.4 % 0.5 % 0.6 % 0.4 % 0.4 % 0.4 % 0.4 % 0.4 % 0.0 % One 2.4 0.9 1.2 1.2 0.9 0.8 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.4 Two 2.4 1.2 1.3 1.3 1.0 1.1 1.1 0.8 0.8 0.6 Three 2.4 1.3 1.4 1.4 1.3 1.2 1.2 1.0 1.0 0.7 Four 2.2 1.3 1.5 1.5 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.1 1.0 0.8 Five 2.2 1.6 1.4 1.5 1.4 1.4 1.5 1.2 1.2 0.9 Six 2.1 1.7 1.5 1.5 1.3 1.5 1.4 1.2 1.2 1.0 Seven 2.3 1.8 1.5 1.6 1.4 1.5 1.7 1.3 1.3 1.2 Eight 2.8 1.7 1.8 1.6 1.6 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.4 1.3 Nine 2.7 1.6 1.6 1.7 1.6 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.2 Ten or More 75.9 86.6 86.2 86.1 87.9 87.4 87.6 89.4 89.5 92.0 1 See footnote 1, Table 1. Demographic data were created by geographically merging contemporaneous TomTom ZIP Code Boundary and Inventory Files with census block group-level population data from Census. Figures may not add to 100% due to rounding. 2 An affiliate entity that reports both CLEC end-user switched access lines and interconnected VoIP subscribers in a state reports a single list of ZIP Codes in which it has any such customers and is counted once in each listed ZIP Code. Percentage of ZIP Codes with CLECs or Non-ILEC VoIP Providers 1 Dec Table 20 Percentage of Households in ZIP Codes with CLECs or Non-ILEC VoIP Providers 1 2012 Dec Number of Providers 2 2011 DecJunDec 2008 20112010 Jun DecJunJun 2012 Table 19 Jun DecJun JunDec Number of Providers 2 2010 2008 2009 Dec 2009 JunJun DecDecJun U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 30 Alabama 4 % 17 % 4 % 3 % 3 % 4 % 4 % 4 % 57 % Alaska 56 29 1 2 2 1 1 0 7 Arizona 5 12 4 2 3 2 3 2 68 Arkansas 14 38 7 6 3 5 3 2 21 California 1 8 3 3 4 3 2 3 72 Colorado 8 21 6 3 2 2 2 2 55 Connecticut 0 3 3 3 2 3 3 6 76 Delaware 0 2 3 0 2 3 3 3 83 District of Columbia 0 7 14 0 0 0 0 0 79 Florida 0 2 1 2 2 2 1 2 87 Georgia 2 12 4 5 4 4 4 4 60 Hawaii 2 16 10 3 8 4 3 4 49 Idaho 7 33 8 5 5 6 4 3 30 Illinois 5 23 8 5 5 4 3 2 43 Indiana 3 16 7 7 6 5 4 4 48 Iowa 26 40 5 4 4 3 1 1 15 Kansas 15 37 6 4 5 3 3 2 26 Kentucky 6 28 6 5 7 6 5 5 33 Louisiana 2 17 5 5 4 4 2 3 57 Maine 6 21 9 8 6 7 6 7 31 Maryland 0 3 3 3 5 4 3 4 74 Massachusetts 0 3 2 1 2 2 1 2 86 Michigan 1 10 5 6 5 6 4 4 59 Minnesota 12 32 7 5 4 3 2 2 33 Mississippi 1 10 4 5 5 5 5 4 60 Missouri 17 31 6 5 4 3 3 2 29 Montana 34 38 4 3 2 2 2 1 15 Nebraska 19 46 6 5 3 2 2 2 15 Nevada 5 18 2 5 2 3 3 3 60 New Hampshire 0 3 2 5 6 6 10 3 66 New Jersey 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 2 93 New Mexico 19 32 6 6 3 2 3 2 27 New York 1 10 3 4 4 4 4 4 65 North Carolina 1 11 6 5 4 4 4 4 61 North Dakota 43 45 2 1 1 1 1 0 6 Ohio 0 6 5 5 6 6 5 4 62 Oklahoma 13 26 5 4 4 4 3 2 39 Oregon 7 22 5 6 5 5 2 3 45 Pennsylvania 1 15 6 6 6 3 5 3 55 Puerto Rico 0 7 8 6 16 20 13 16 14 Rhode Island 0 5 5 4 3 4 1 9 68 South Carolina 3 12 3 5 2 4 2 3 66 South Dakota 38 45 2 3 1 1 2 1 9 Tennessee 2 16 4 5 5 3 3 3 57 Texas 5 17 4 4 3 3 3 2 58 Utah 8 27 3 5 4 3 2 2 48 Vermont 2 32 6 10 4 8 4 6 27 Virginia 3 19 6 7 5 5 4 3 48 Washington 4 18 5 4 3 2 3 3 58 West Virginia 5 27 12 7 8 7 5 3 25 Wisconsin 6 29 7 6 6 4 3 3 37 Wyoming 13 49 4 3 4 2 3 2 19 Nationwide 7 % 19 % 5 % 5 % 4 % 4 % 3 % 3 % 50 % State as of December 31, 2012 Percentage of ZIP Codes with CLECs or Non-ILEC VoIP Providers by State Five EightZero One - Three Four Table 21 Number of Providers Nine Ten or More Six Seven U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 31 SymbologyNumber of Reporting ProvidersZero1 to 34 to 67 or moreZero Delivery Areas Reporting Non-ILEC Interconnected VoIP Providers and CLECsby 5-Digit Geographical ZIP Code as of December 31, 2012 P u e r t o R i c or t i H a w a i ii i A l a s k al The data in this map represent the number of service providersreporting they have at least one business or residential voicecustomer in each ZIP Code, using either switched access orinterconnected VoIP (excluding ILEC connections). Sources: FCC Form 477 and TomTom Multinet Post 2012.12.u03. Prepared by the Federal Communications Commission,Wireline Competition Bureau, Industry Analysis and Technology Division U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 32 Technical Notes General Detailed information about FCC Form 477 reporting requirements is available at www.fcc.gov/form477. See Glossary for definitions of terms used in this report. Counting lines and subscribers ? Form 477 counts both switched access lines and interconnected VoIP subscriptions as the maximum number of calls that may be active, simultaneously, from the end user’s location under the purchased service plan. All VoIP subscriptions discussed in this report are interconnected VoIP subscriptions. ? Form 477 data may not count all VoIP phone connections to Internet Protocol Private Branch Exchange (IP PBX) equipment that is owned by business end users because of the variety of ways the IP PBX may connect to the public switched telephone network. Holding company-subsidiary relationships ? When counting service providers who have any retail customers in a particular geography (for example, a state or a ZIP Code), we count a holding company or common-control entity no more than once in any specified sub-category of total providers. ? Nationwide counts of providers are unique counts for any specified sub-category of total providers (for example, all non-ILECs or all interconnected VoIP providers); an entity operating in multiple states is counted only once. ILEC-CLEC affiliations ? Lines from CLECs who have ILEC affiliates are handled at the state level in one of several ways. We place the lines into the non-ILEC category if the affiliate is an ILEC other than AT&T or Verizon. Lines from CLEC affiliates of AT&T and Verizon are allocated between the ILEC and non-ILEC categories based on staff estimates if the CLEC operates in the AT&T or Verizon ILEC service area in the state, respectively. ZIP Code-based information ? Wireline service providers report whether they have at least one residential or business customer in each ZIP Code, using either switched access or interconnected VoIP. This contrasts with the census tract-based broadband reporting requirements the Commission adopted in 2008. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 33 ? The report includes summary statistics of the presence of competitors to the ILEC, or ILECs, in individual ZIP Codes. These entities are CLECs or interconnected VoIP providers who are not affiliated with the ILEC, or ILECs, who serve end users in that ZIP Code. However, because providers may not offer service across an entire ZIP Code and because different providers may target different customer segments in areas where they provide service, we cannot conclude that the number of providers identified as delivering wireline service within a ZIP Code represents the number of options available to any specific customer within that ZIP Code. We further note that these data on the number of providers in a ZIP Code do not indicate whether a particular provider is offering service solely over its own last-mile facilities or is using the facilities of another carrier or entity. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 34 Glossary Term Definition Broadband bundle The purchase, from the same or affiliated retailers, of interconnected VoIP service and broadband Internet access service, either for a single price or for separate prices. Cable modem service A service which offers customers access to the Internet over a cable system at broadband speeds. Circuit switching A method of completing electronic communications in which a transmission path is established for dedicated use by a communication; the basis of the public switched telephone network (PSTN). CLEC Competitive Local Exchange Carrier: A new LEC that operates within the service area of an ILEC. DSL Digital Subscriber Line: A digital local loop, typically using copper facilities, that frequently is used to offer customers access to the Internet at broadband speeds. End users Residential, business, institutional, or government entities that use services for their own purposes and who do not resell such services to other entities. Fixed wireless service A radio communication service between specified fixed points. FTTP or FTTH Fiber to the Premises (Home): A network access architecture in which optical fiber is deployed all the way to the customer’s premises (home). Internet access service Service that provides end users access to the Internet. ILEC Incumbent Local Exchange Carrier: A company or cooperative that was providing telephone service in a localized area, typically on a monopoly basis, prior to enactment of the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Internet protocol or IP A language and set of formal rules that govern how packets transit the Internet. Interconnected VoIP or iVoIP A service that enables real-time, two-way voice communications; requires a broadband connection from the user’s location; requires Internet- protocol compatible customer premises equipment; and permits users generally to receive calls that originate on the public switched telephone network and to terminate calls to the public switched telephone network. LEC Local Exchange Carrier: A company that provides telephone service within a localized area and access services that connect its customers to long-distance (Interexchange Carrier) networks. Local loop The physical connection between the customer’s premises and the telephone company’s local switching office, typically provided using copper, fiber, or a combination of copper and fiber facilities. Mobile wireless service A radio communication service between mobile and fixed stations, or between mobile stations. Nomadic interconnected VoIP A service whose terms allow use over any broadband connection available to the subscriber (such as at a hotel or vacation residence); by contrast, a non-nomadic service subscription must be used over a single predetermined broadband connection. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 35 Non-ILEC Any provider of communications services who does not have ILEC regulatory status. Other ILEC An ILEC who is not an RBOC. Other wireline All copper-wire based transmission technologies other than DSL technologies; Ethernet over copper and T-1 are examples. OTT Over-the-top: Interconnected VoIP service provided by entities that neither own nor operate telecommunications facilities. Packet switching A method of completing electronic communications in which the information is disassembled into discrete packets that are transmitted independently and later reassembled; IP is an example. PBX Private Branch Exchange: A telephone switch that is owned or leased by the telephone company’s customer and generally located on the customer’s premises. Retail local telephone service Retail switched access lines and interconnected VoIP subscriptions. Retail switched access lines Switched access lines for which an end user is the customer. Standalone interconnected VoIP The purchase of interconnected VoIP service without the purchase of broadband Internet access service from the same retailer, or from an affiliated retailer. Special access circuit A dedicated, non-switched circuit (connection or line) provided by an ILEC, commonly used to connect an end user to another communications service provider; also frequently used by wireless service providers to connect cell towers to mobile switching centers (MSCs). Switched access line A service connection between an end user and the local telephone company’s switch; the basis of plain old telephone service (POTS). Total ILEC lines The sum of ILEC-reported retail switched access lines, interconnected VoIP subscriptions, wholesale switched access lines, and UNEs provided to CLECs. UNE Unbundled Network Element: A physical or functional element of an ILEC network that must be provided to a CLEC at a cost-based price, as provide for in the Telecommunications Act of 1996. UNE-L UNE-Loop: An ILEC unbundled local loop provided to a CLEC at a cost-base price. UNE-P UNE-Platform: The combination of ILEC unbundled local loop, switching, and transport, provided to a CLEC at cost-based prices. Wholesale switched access lines Local telephone service provided to an unaffiliated telephone company, which resells the service to end users; typically provided by an ILEC to a CLEC. ZIP Code A five-digit geographical ZIP Code. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 36 5353 Customer Response Publication: Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2012 You can help us provide the best possible information to the public by completing this form and returning it to the Industry Analysis and Technology Division of the FCC's Wireline Competition Bureau. 1. Please check the category that best describes you: ____ press ____ current telecommunications carrier ____ potential telecommunications carrier ____ business customer evaluating vendors/service options ____ consultant, law firm, lobbyist ____ other business customer ____ academic/student ____ residential customer ____ FCC employee ____ other federal government employee ____ state or local government employee ____ Other (please specify) 2. Please rate the report: Excellent Good Satisfactory Poor No opinion Data accuracy (_) (_) (_) (_) (_) Data presentation (_) (_) (_) (_) (_) Timeliness of data (_) (_) (_) (_) (_) Completeness of data (_) (_) (_) (_) (_) Text clarity (_) (_) (_) (_) (_) Completeness of text (_) (_) (_) (_) (_) 3. Overall, how do you Excellent Good Satisfactory Poor No opinion rate this report? (_) (_) (_) (_) (_) 4. How can this report be improved? 5. May we contact you to discuss possible improvements? Name: Telephone #: To discuss the information in this report, contact: 202-418-0940 or for users of TTY equipment, call 202 -418-0484 Fax this response to or Mail this response to 202-418-0520 FCC/ WCB/ IATD, Mail Stop 1600 F Washington, DC 20554