CompSouth complained about AT&T’s changes to terms and conditions of its special access tariffs in a filing before the Tennessee Regulatory Authority. “CompSouth submits that these 20% to 30% increases in the price of A&T’s special access services are unjust, unreasonable, discriminatory, and anti-competitive and that AT&T’s announced intention to discontinue offering these services to competitive carriers is unreasonable, discriminatory, and anti-competitive,” the group of CLECs said in its filing (http://1.usa.gov/KoOZo4). CompSouth asked the Tennessee regulators to consider the legality of AT&T’s tariff amendments and whether they are necessary for a transition to IP services, as AT&T has contended. “CompSouth’s complaint in Tennessee against AT&T’s anti-competitive proposal to eliminate long-term special access discount plans raises a number of important questions that AT&T must answer,” Karen Reidy, Comptel vice president-regulatory affairs, told us in a statement. “In addition to pointing out the harmful impact of AT&T’s unilateral, unjustified, price increase for these services, which impacts consumers’ ability to obtain competitive robust, innovative and high-quality services, CompSouth effectively challenges AT&T claims that it is not feasible to offer these services after it transitions to IP and calls on AT&T to explain how it will provide alternative wholesale offerings to competitors.” “We continue to meet with our customers in a good-faith effort to address their needs,” an AT&T spokeswoman told us. “As the transition to more robust and efficient Internet-based network and services moves forward, we will remain flexible in attempting to meet their needs."
A Minnesota state lawmaker accused the state of not doing enough to further high-speed broadband access, and plans a listening tour throughout the state early this month. State Sen. Matt Schmit, a member of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, scheduled his first session with residents for 3 p.m. Monday at the North Branch Regional Library in North Branch, Minn., and continues at stops through Jan. 10, according to a news release Thursday (http://bit.ly/1bCfpJ9). “There’s been a lot of talk, but very little action,” Schmit said in a statement. “Despite a great deal of philanthropic activity and admirable work by our local providers and co-ops, our statewide infrastructure investments aren’t keeping pace and we're lagging increasingly behind the curve.” The meetings will help set the 2014 legislative agenda on broadband, his office said.
The Kentucky Public Service Commission reminded western Kentucky customers to begin dialing phone numbers using 10 digits. The area code 364 will be overlaid in regions using the 270 area code, which will make 10-digit dialing mandatory starting Feb. 1, the PSC said in a news release Thursday (http://1.usa.gov/1a4c4X8).