Rep. Boucher Seeks Shorter Interval To 'Port' Home Phone Numbers
April 21 2009 - 9:41AM
Dow Jones News
The chairman of a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee has
joined the chorus of wireless telecommunication companies, state
regulators and consumer advocates that want the Federal
Communications Commission to shorten the time it takes to transfer
a consumer's landline phone number from one company to another.
In a letter sent Monday to FCC Acting Chairman Michael Copps,
House Energy and Commerce Telecommunications Subcommittee Chairman
Rick Boucher, D-Va., asked the FCC to "swiftly" adopt a rule to
reduce what is now a four-day interval to 48 hours.
Telecommunications companies supporting the effort are asking
for a 24-hour standard.
The FCC is considering making the change before Julius
Genachowski, Obama's nominee for FCC chairman, is installed.
Genachowski is awaiting Senate confirmation for the post.
People familiar with the issue say the change is one that can be
approved easily by the current three-member commission, which will
soon have new faces. The item has been on the FCC's docket for
years.
The process of moving a landline number, known as "porting," can
take up to a week if the transaction occurs near a weekend. The
long wait time puts off customers who otherwise would be lured by
new, cheaper phone products such as "triple play" offers from cable
companies.
By contrast, wireless carriers say they can "port" cellphone
numbers between cellular providers in a few hours.
The push to shorten the porting period has been revived this
year by T-Mobile USA, a unit of Deutsche Telekom AG (DT). Sales of
T-Mobile's $10-a-month at-home Internet phone have been hampered by
the long wait to port a home phone number.
Comcast Corp. (CMCSA) also has met with FCC officials to
advocate for a one-day porting interval. Comcast's bundled package
of Internet, phone, and cable service can be self-installed
immediately by new customers once their desired phone number is
available.
Last week, the advocacy groups Consumers Union and Public
Knowledge weighed in, asking the FCC for a one-day interval. "When
the porting interval is unnecessarily long - as is presently the
case - the process can be gamed by incumbent phone companies to
hobble competition and discourage innovation," the letter said.
Smaller phone companies like Windstream Corp. (WIN) have told
FCC officials the costs of shortening the porting period are too
great, requiring them to automate their systems or hire more staff.
The FCC is likely to waive the deadline in such instances.
Boucher said the FCC should give those firms a chance to recover
the costs of any upgrades they require.
-By Fawn Johnson, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9263;
fawn.johnson@dowjones.com