| ==Phrack Inc.== |
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| Volume One, Issue Four, Phile #7 of 11 |
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| Centrex Renaissance |
| "The Regulations" |
| By Leslie Albin * (See Note) |
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| From: On Communications |
| (October 1985, Vol. 2,No. 10) |
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| By Jester Sluggo |
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| Regulatory changes across the country have made new bargain |
| available to telecommunications users. Centrex -- the homely old |
| central office service AT&T planned to bury only a couple of |
| years ago -- has been regroomed, revitalized and often |
| rebaptized. |
| As Centrex, Centron, Caroline or Essx -- the various |
| regional trade names of Centrex service -- it is cheaper and more |
| powerful than ever in mosy parts of the country. |
| The bargain will only get better in regions where the Bell |
| operating companies (BOC) have seized on Centrex not only as a |
| logical step in their progression toward an integrated services |
| digital network, but also as a key to the lucrative |
| telecommunications aftermarket -- as long as those regulatory |
| changes do not shift. |
| The Centrex service the regional BOC's were left with after |
| divestiture was deliberately undernourished, as part of AT&T's |
| migration strategy to bolster sales of Western Electric private |
| branch exchanges. Centrex was lacking in technology and |
| marketing innovation, and users were abandoning it. |
| But, in a little more than a year and a half, the RBOC's |
| (Regional Bell Operating Companies) have managed to win over |
| state regulators to the idea of a thriving Centrex, gaining their |
| approval of trunk equivalency rates, innovative tariffs, rate |
| stabilization plans, actual detariffing and -- in one case -- |
| complete deregulation. |
| At the federal level, challenges to this revitalization have |
| been rebuffed or have stalled before the FCC, and the RBOCs are |
| pitching for greater leeway in providing the customer premises |
| equipment to go with their Centrex service. |
| "The regulators have been bending over backward to give |
| Centrex every competitive advantage," said Albert Angel, a lawyer |
| with the Washing D.C. firm of Wood, Lucksinger & Epstein, which |
| represents the North American Telecommunications Association |
| (NATA). |
| "Ultimately, there will be a clear finding that the |
| preferential treatment of Centrex is not justified," added Angel, |
| and should that happen, Centrex customers -- even those with |
| price stability packages -- could find themselves committed to a |
| service beset by escalating rates. |
| Most of the federal issues involving Centrex regulation |
| developed as a response to actions taken in the states. For |
| instance, NATA has sternly objected to "trunk equivalency" rates |
| authorized by a number of state commissions. |
| The concept evolved when the FCC imposed its $6 monthly |
| customer access line charge on new Centrex lines along with |
| regular business lines. Because Centrex uses lines much less |
| efficiently than a PBX does, "the net impact is very different on |
| a Centrex subscriber than it is on a PBX subscriber," said Greg |
| Laken, division manager of Centrex and central office services |
| for Bell Atlantic Corp. Centrex requires one twisted pair for |
| each station, whereas a PBX requires one trunk for six or seven |
| stations. |
| Trying to keep Centrex viable with a built-in customer |
| access line charge burden six to seven times greater than that |
| incurred by a comparable PBX would have been a tough proposition. |
| Bell Atlantic's BOCs, like virtually every other BOC in the |
| country, won permission from state regulators to offset the |
| higher line charges for Centrex so that customers would pay at |
| the same level as owners of similarly sized PBXs. |
| To NATA, this amounts to nothing more than "taxing all |
| other customers for the benefit of Centrex customers," NATA |
| attorney Angel said. But the FCC decided in summer 1985 that the |
| trunk equivalency rates do not undermine its access charge |
| policy. and the lower rates for Centrex users remain in effect. |
| Beyond whittling down customer access line charges, a number |
| of BOCs have had fresh Centrex tariffs approved by state |
| commissions that chop the service's rates and offer innovative |
| pricing schemes. Bell Atlantic's BOCs, for instance, have won |
| approval for tariffs cutting Centrex rates 30% to 35%. "The net |
| effect," said Lakin, "is that it is a very price-competitive |
| entry." |
| To NATA, the service's price competitiveness arises from |
| the BOCs' continuing monopoly position in the local market, |
| although BOC officials state firmly that Centrex is not priced |
| below cost and, in fact, generates revenue to subsidize other |
| services. |
| According to Angel, a Washington, D.C. residential customer |
| pays a cost-justified rate of between $15 and $17 for the local |
| loop and central office switching capability. A Centrex customer |
| using an identical local loop connected to the same central |
| office pays only $12. Many of the new tariffs being filed by the |
| BOCs recognize two of Centrex's traditional headaches: |
| instability and distance sensitivity. |
| Now many of the new tariffs offer users price guarantees and |
| incentives for signing the long-term contracts that give |
| telephone companies some stability in their Centrex base. |
| By locking in rates and either capping the associated costs |
| or typing their increase to the Department of Labor's cost-of- |
| living index, BOCs have been able to offer customers much of the |
| same predictability that a PBX does. Most tariffs give customers |
| the choice of three-, five- or seven-year contracts, the |
| incentives rising with the length of the agreement. |
| Centrex customers in the Chicago Loop area, for instance, |
| were paying a $12.52 per-line monthly charge if their system used |
| 250 lines. Under a tariff approved last fall, however, those |
| customers saw the monthly charge drop to $10.94 and could drive |
| it down even further by signaling long-term contracts: $10.09 |
| per-line under a three-year agreement, $9.84 under a five-year |
| agreement and $9.54 under a seven-year agreement. |
| "Slightly less than half of our 400,000-line total base has |
| gone on contract," said Lee Armagost, Illinois Bell's division |
| manager for tariffs and costs. And the concepts success is |
| continuing." |
| For all of the BOCs' success in winning lower Centrex rates, |
| some companies have fared even better -- they have convinced |
| state regulators to detariff Centrex service for new customers |
| and, in one case, to deregulate it entirely. |
| Northwestern Bell seems to be the current detariffing and |
| deregulating champion among the BOCs, having won approval for |
| detariffed Centron service in all of its states except Iowa. |
| Iowa simply deregulated it. |
| While detariffing allows the BOCs more freedom to negotiate |
| with large Centron customers, deregulating takes Centron |
| assets, expenses and revenues right out of the rate base and |
| removes the service from the regulators purview. |
| According to Tom Smith, vice-president and chief executive |
| officer of Northwestern Bell Iowa, the company's first move |
| toward deregulation occurred in 1983, when the Iowa State |
| Legislature passed a Bell-inspired bill that called for |
| competitive services to be deregulated. The following year, |
| Northwestern Bell succeeded in getting in getting more |
| legislation passed that declared Centron ready for detariffing |
| because of its competitive nature. |
| After reviewing the legislature's actions, the State |
| Commerce Commission decided that if the lawmakers were convinced |
| Centrex was competitive and services were to be deregulated, it |
| would skip over the detariffing of Centrex and simply deregulate |
| it, Smith said. |
| What followed was what Smith called "nine months of |
| intensive work," as regulators, company officials and consultants |
| from Anderson & Co. sorted out the procedures for carving Centrex |
| away from the rate base and set up safeguards against cross- |
| subsidies. |
| "A central office is not something that has this little |
| compartment that says 'for service A' and that little compartment |
| that says 'for service B'" Smith said of the accounting problem. |
| NATA agrees with that description and, according to NATA |
| attorney Angel, argues that because competitive Centrex services |
| must operate commingled with regulated facilities, the FCC should |
| halt the detariffing and deregulating of the service or order it |
| to be sequestered in a separate subsidiary with other competitive |
| products. |
| But the FCC has not acted on NATA's complaint. Meanwhile, |
| the first customer has signed up for Iowa's deregulated Centron |
| -- the state of Iowa itself. |
| The state had solicited bids to replace its Capitol Hill |
| complex's Centrex service in Des Moines when deregulated Centron |
| became available. The new rates negotiated by Northwestern Bell |
| and the state's staff produced a savings of about $1 million for |
| the state over the three-year life of the contract, according to |
| Glen Anderson Jr., director of state communications for Iowa. |
| While Anderson called the deregulated Centron service prices |
| "a dramatic savings," he also pointed out another incentive for |
| signing up. |
| "The other factor was political," he said. "We did not have |
| an appropriation to proceed with the procurement of a switch." |
| When the Centron agreement runs out, the state will be in |
| the market for a PBX again. A member of Anderson's staff said |
| the staff remains convinced it can enhance its own program with |
| its own switch. |
| At some BOCs, the once feature-poor Centrex has caught up |
| with PBXs in many respects. Where telephone companies are |
| pushing digital capabilities onto their networks, they are also |
| pushing digital capabilities onto Centrex. Pacific Bell, for |
| instance, can offer fully digital Centrex service from many of |
| its metropolitan central offices. |
| A number of BOCs concur with Bell Atlantic's position that |
| digital Centrex is a natural rung on the ladder to an ISDN -- |
| among them Pacific Bell and New York Telephone Co. Many are |
| upgrading Centrex service with PBX-like features short of fully |
| digital service, including several versions call forwarding, call |
| waiting and speed dialing. Given the current strictures in the |
| FCC's Second Computer Inquiry and the Modified Final Judgement, |
| the expanded features list was bound to be called into question. |
| NATA, which has been leading the charge against the changes |
| in Centrex service, is fighting its battle on four fronts at the |
| FCC: |
| 1) Last fall, it asked the FCC either to halt the |
| detariffing and deregulation of Centrex by the states or order a |
| separation of commingled facilities. The FCC has not acted on |
| the complaint. |
| 2) Soon after filing that complaint, NATA filed another -- |
| this one questioning the provision of competitive, enhanced |
| features by a regulated, basic telephone company. The FCC acted |
| on that complaint last summer, deciding that features such as |
| speed dialing, call forwarding and customer station changes are |
| adjuncts to basic service and can be offered by a regulated |
| telephone company under Computer II. Only customer-dialed |
| account recording was found to be and enhanced service, but the |
| BOCs can request waivers to continue offering it. |
| Until the waiver requests are considered, the FCC has |
| granted immediate, temporary waivers so the BOCs can continue |
| providing customer-dialed account recording to existing customers |
| -- including the U.S. Army. Meanwhile, the BOCs and NATA are |
| seeking reconsideration of the FCC's decision in petitions the |
| FCC will address this month or next, according to the FCC staff |
| member handling the issue. |
| 3) Late last year, NATA asked the FCC to to stop Ameritech |
| and Nynex Corp. equipment subsidiaries from selling basic phone |
| services, including Centrex, through their unregulated customer |
| premises equipment subsidiaries. |
| When the FCC agreed to permit the joint marketing, it did so |
| with the provision that non-Bell companies would also be signed |
| up as sales agents for the basic services. As evidence of the |
| problem, NATA pointed to the sparse number of non-Bell sales |
| agents being signed up and the revenue moving from the BOCs to |
| their sister customer premises equipment subsidiaries in the form |
| of sales commissions. The FCC has not acted on the complaint or |
| NATA's original petition seeking a reversal of the sales agent |
| decision. |
| Bell Atlantic, backed by the majority of RBOCs, is seeking |
| FCC permission for an inverted version of the sales agent |
| decision that would let Bell Atlantic serve as sales agent for |
| another vendor's customer premises equipment when submitting |
| Centrex bids. |
| 4) In July 1985, NATA filed an even more sweeping |
| complaint, a Centrex pricing action that argues that the BOCs |
| are using their monopoly power to favor Centrex over other |
| customers and to the detriment of PBX suppliers. |
| The complaint bridges a number of issues, including trunk |
| equivalency rates, pricing below cost and Computer II concerns. |
| The BOCs argued that Centrex is a state concern and, although the |
| FCC has preempted state jurisdiction in other matters, the FCC |
| paused to consider the jurisdictional question -- a pause that |
| could last six months or extend "indefinitely," according to |
| lawyers working on the matter. |
| NATA attorneys do not seem daunted by the chilly reception |
| they've gotten at the FCC, apparently expecting the temperature |
| to rise as regulators worry less about the viability of the |
| divested BOCs and begin to examine the economics of Centrex. |
| "All rates apart from Centrex are rising dramatically. |
| Centrex rates are decreasing," NATA attorney Angel said. "The |
| BOCs would have you believe that Centrex provides a subsidy to |
| other services. But, in fact, documented studies show just the |
| opposite, that Centrex derives a subsidy." |
| If Centrex is priced below cost, why are the BOCs so |
| delighted with it? According to Angel, the answer lies in the |
| financial structure of a regulated utility. "Centrex uses many |
| more loops than necessary. This leads to new construction |
| budgets, which lead to new investment, which leads to a rate of |
| return for the investors." Investors, Angel added, "make make |
| money by putting loop and plant all over the place." |
| NATA's objections to the recent changes in Centrex rates and |
| services, objections that do not extend to opposition to |
| traditional Centrex, have generally been characterized by BOC |
| officials and regulators as protectionist actions taken by a PBX |
| industry that did not really want the full competitive |
| environment for which it clamored. |
| "NATA is frequently described as the whiner in the corner, |
| as though it holds all the cards," Angel said. The seven RBOCs |
| are far better financed, he added, yet, "they have been |
| successful in painting themselves as the underdogs." |
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| * Note: Leslie Albin is a freelance writer based in Chevy Chase, |
| Maryland. |
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| Watch for Part 1 of Centrex Renaissance: "The Technology". |
| Written by John D. Bray. |
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| The above text was written primarily for people in marketing |
| telephone technologies. In the interest of the phreaking world, |
| I hope that you can focus on the business side of |
| telecommunications which may be in your future. There are more |
| to PBX's than 0-700-456-1001. Any comments, questions, or |
| corrections can be e-mailed to me at Metal Shop Private, or to: |
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| J. Sluggo |
| P.O. Box 93 |
| East Grand Forks, MN 56721 |
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| This file is dedicated to Bambi for bringing me my fondest |
| memories -- There is "No One Like You!" -- The Scorpions. |
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| / luggo !! |
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