Trade Law Daily is a service of Warren Communications News.

Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Assn. (CTIA) urged FCC to ...

Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Assn. (CTIA) urged FCC to continue to forego regulation of wireless intercarrier roaming, contending automatic roaming rule isn’t needed. Comments are in response to notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) in which FCC examines whether mandatory…

Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article

Timely, relevant coverage of court proceedings and agency rulings involving tariffs, classification, valuation, origin and antidumping and countervailing duties. Each day, Trade Law Daily subscribers receive a daily headline email, in-depth PDF edition and access to all relevant documents via our trade law source document library and website.

automatic roaming rule remains unnecessary. NPRM said agency wouldn’t mandate automatic roaming unless market forces along couldn’t ensure availability of competitive roaming services. “The Commission’s current roaming requirements have proven sufficient to foster cellular and PCS roaming services without imposing undue costs” on industry, CTIA said. National Telephone Cooperative Assn. (NTCA) didn’t ask FCC to implement mandatory automatic roaming requirement, but asked it to continue to monitor situation to “ensure that roaming agreements do not discriminate against small and rural CMRS providers.” NTCA said market appears to be working “and automatic roaming agreements are generally available where it is technically and economically feasible.” While rural carriers don’t have trouble striking roaming deals, sometimes terms are “unjust,” group said. In such cases, NTCA said, “the rural carrier pays more for the privilege to roam in the urban territory than the large carrier pays to roam in the rural territory.” Rural Ala. carrier Corr Wireless Communications went step further, saying market is “clearly not working on its own to prevent abuses of power.” “Small independent carriers do not have the economic clout to bargain with large carriers who have their own wide-area footprints for automatic roaming,” Corr wrote, citing alleged problems with Cingular Wireless. “This permits large carriers to engage in the very sort of bullying abuses which led” to regulatory curbs for wireline competitors, Corr said. Corr is asking agency to adopt automatic roaming rule that tracks basic interconnection obligations of common carriers under Telecom Act. Several commenters cited concerns about wireless consolidation, which they said creates less incentive for larger competitors to strike low priced roaming pacts.