Infrastructure

FCC Proposed Rule: Reforming Legacy Telecom Regulations for All-IP Network Transition

🇺🇸United States··Proposed Rule·High Impact·View source ↗

AI-generated summary for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. See the original source for the authoritative text.

🇬🇧 English

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) aimed at accelerating the U.S. telecommunications industry's transition from legacy Time-Division Multiplexing (TDM) networks to modern all-IP infrastructure. The central proposal is to move remaining intercarrier compensation (ICC) charges — fees carriers pay each other for exchanging traffic — to a 'bill-and-keep' framework, meaning carriers would no longer charge each other for terminating calls, and these charges would be detariffed entirely. The FCC also proposes to eliminate ex ante (pre-approval) pricing regulation and mandatory tariffing of end-user charges, currently known as Telephone Access Charges (TACs). This would give carriers greater flexibility to set rates for end users without prior regulatory approval. Following the ICC transition to bill-and-keep, the Commission is seeking comment on phasing out Connect America Fund Intercarrier Compensation (CAF ICC) support, which currently subsidizes carriers in high-cost areas. Additionally, the NPRM proposes removing regulatory obligations — including tariffing requirements and outdated account information exchange rules — for interstate and international long-distance services, on the basis that these markets are already competitive and no longer require legacy oversight. The Commission also seeks input on eliminating TDM-era regulations that would become obsolete in an all-IP environment. The FCC is inviting public comment on all proposals and encourages stakeholders to suggest ways to promote modernization while maintaining competition, efficiency, and service quality. The Commission has emphasized a thoughtful transition approach given the complexity of the reforms and the importance of maintaining broad connectivity.

AI-generated summary. May contain errors. Refer to official sources for legal decisions.

Key Changes

  • Proposed elimination of remaining intercarrier compensation (ICC) charges via transition to bill-and-keep framework, ending mutual termination fees between carriers
  • Proposed detariffing of ICC charges, removing mandatory FCC tariff filing requirements for carrier-to-carrier compensation
  • Proposed elimination of ex ante pricing regulation and mandatory tariffing of Telephone Access Charges (TACs) paid by end users

+ 3 more changes with Pro

Obligations

What this law requires

high

Transition intercarrier compensation (ICC) charges from current tariffed framework to bill-and-keep model where carriers no longer charge each other for terminating calls

Telecommunications carriers engaging in intercarrier traffic exchange
operational
high

Detariff all remaining ICC charges and remove them from tariff filings

Telecommunications carriers with tariffed ICC arrangements
operational
medium

Submit comments to FCC on transition plans for phasing out Connect America Fund Intercarrier Compensation (CAF ICC) support following ICC transition to bill-and-keep

Telecommunications carriers receiving CAF ICC support and other interested stakeholders
reporting
high

Eliminate ex ante (pre-approval) pricing regulation for end-user charges, allowing carriers to set Telephone Access Charges (TACs) rates without prior FCC approval

Telecommunications carriers providing end-user services
operational
high

Remove tariffing requirements for interstate and international long-distance services

Telecommunications carriers providing interstate and international long-distance services
operational

Affected Parties

Incumbent local exchange carriers (ILECs) and competitive LECs receiving or paying ICC chargesLong-distance and interexchange carriers (IXCs) subject to interstate tariff obligations+5 more…

Tags

FCC,intercarrier compensation,all-IP transition