Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge RANDOLPH.
For nearly a decade the Federal Communications Commission has attempted to restructure payphone compensation in compliance with the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-104, 110 Stat. 56. The 1996 Act required the Commission to “establish a per call compensation plan to ensure that all payphone service providers are fairly compensated for each and every completed intrastate and interstate call using their payphone[J” 47 U.S.C. § 276(b)(1)(A). On three prior occasions we have ruled on various aspects of the Commission’s payphone compensation plan.
Illinois Pub. Telecommunications Ass’n v. FCC,
At the heart of these proceedings is the compensation of coinless calls - those calls in which the caller, instead of depositing money in the payphone, dials an access number or a toll free number. In 1996 the Commission designed a system in which the long-distance carrier handling the coin-less call reimburses the payphone service provider on a flat-rate, per phone basis.
1
Implementation of the Pay Telephone Reclassification and Compensation Provisions of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Report and Order,
11 F.C.C.R. 20,-541,
In response to the petitions of various parties challenging the First Order, we vacated and remanded the 35 cent per call compensation rate for coinless calls.
Illinois,
In 2002 the Commission, still addressing the
Illinois
remand, further revised the per call estimate to 22.9 cents per call for the Interim and Intermediate Periods.
Implementation of the Pay Telephone Reclassification and Compensation Provisions of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Fourth Order on Reconsideration and Order on Remand,
17 F.C.C.R. 2020 ¶ 7,
AT&T then filed this action seeking judicial review of the Fifth Order in which the Commission denied MCI’s petition for reconsideration.
The general rule is that an agency’s denial of a petition for reconsideration is not subject to judicial review.
ICC v. Bhd. of Locomotive Engineers,
AT&T’s interpretation of § 276(b)(1) is impossible. On the face of it, the provision simply established a temporal mandate - 9 months. Section 276(b)(1) says nothing about the decision whether to grant a petition for reconsideration. It speaks only to how long the Commission may take for its initial actions and for proceedings, if any, after it has granted a petition for reconsideration. The evident purpose of Congress was to speed things up. Yet AT&T’s version of § 276(b)(1) would only slow things down. We therefore cannot read § 276(b)(1) as departing - solely for the purpose of restructuring the payphone market - from the long-standing rule that the Commission may in its discretion deny a petition for reconsideration.
The Fifth Order, as a denial of reconsideration, is thus not subject to judicial review unless it falls within some exception to the general rule. The Supreme Court described such an exception in
Locomotive Engineers:
when the request for agency reconsideration rested on “new evidence or changed circumstances that rendered the agency’s original order inappropriate.”
The supposed new evidence consisted of the following. In May 2002, after the Fourth Order issued, MCI filed a reply to comments on its petition for reconsideration of the Fourth Order. MCI’s reply cited its internal data for completed payphone calls in the first quarters of 1998, 1999, 2000 and 2001, which it said showed that calls per payphone have been declining over time. For the same purpose, MCI also cited data from Southwestern Bell (“SBC”), a regional Bell operating company (“RBOC”), dealing with the routing of payphone calls to long-distance carriers or other carriers for the fourth quarters of 1997, 1998, 2000 and the third quarter of 2001. SBC had filed this data in March 2002 in compliance with the Commission’s request of December 20, 2001. The Commission sought the information from SBC and other RBOCs so that it could, as it did in the Fifth Order, determine the allocation of per-payphone payments among long-distance carriers. See Fifth Order, 17 F.C.C.R. 21,274 ¶ 49.
According to AT&T, not only the SBC data MCI cited in its reconsideration reply but also all the data submitted by the other RBOCs in March 2002 constitute new evidence warranting an exception to the rule that reconsideration denials are not renewable.
4
This misapprehends the law. The petition for reconsideration must present the allegedly new evidence to the agency; even if the party does so and even if the evidence is in fact newly discovered, a court will reverse an agency’s denial of reconsideration only “in the most extraordinary circumstances,”
Bowman Transp., Inc. v. Arkansas-Best Freight Sys., Inc.,
Here neither MCI’s petition for reconsideration, nor anyone else’s, relied on March 2002 data supplied by any of the RBOCs other than SBC. It follows that the only question is whether the SBC data constituted new evidence, that is, facts relating to events occurring after the Fourth Order or facts unknown to AT&T which could not have been known by the exercise of ordinary diligence.
Id.; see Southwestern Bell,
We believe the data MCI cited to the Commission falls into neither category. The SBC data covered a period dating back more than four years before the Fourth Order issued at the end of January 2002. AT&T has not shown that this data was nonexistent prior to the Fourth Order. Still less has AT&T offered any cogent reason why it, or some other party, could not have requested the Commission to seek the data from SBC, as the Commission did on its own in December 2001. It is not enough to point out that “March
*510
comes after January.” Pet. Reply Br. at 7. In order to constitute new facts under the Commission’s rules the petitioner must have exercised ordinary diligence to learn of them. So too under
Locomotive Engineers:
the failure to have the evidence placed before the agency in the original proceeding must be of “no fault” of the petitioner.
The alleged decline in call volume was not news. AT&T claims the decline began in 1998, years before the Fourth Order. In its petition for reconsideration, MCI relied on figures published in a newspaper article in November 2001. MCI attached other newspaper articles from February 2001 and May 2001 discussing the decline. The SBC data therefore did not relate to events occurring after the Fourth Order and it did not relate to “facts unknown to” AT&T. 47 C.F.R. § 1.106(b)(2)(i) & (ii).
AT&T rests its “newly discovered evidence” claim on the alternative ground that a “public notice seeking comments in advance of the
Fourth Order
sought information solely with respect to the Interim Period [November 7, 1996, to October 6, 1997]” rather than the Post-Intermediate Period beginning in April 1999. Pet. Reply Br. at 7. Although this sounds like an inadequate-notice-and-opportunity-to-comment claim under the Administrative Procedure Act, 6 U.S.C.
§ 553(h); see Sprint Corp. v. FCC,
As to the notice itself, it dealt with the RBOCs’ challenge to payphone compensation issues relating to the Interim Period.
RBOC/GTE Payphone Coalition Files Proposal for Setting Payphone Compensation for Interim Period in Pay Telephone Reclassification and Compensation Proceeding, Public Notice,
15 F.C.C.R. 18,122,
The parties to the proceedings leading to the Fourth Order must have realized that call volume after April 1999 would be relevant. The subject was on the table from the time of the initial Notice of Proposed Rulemaking requesting comment on payphone compensation.
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,
11 F.C.C.R. 6716, 61 Fed. Reg. 31,481,
When we ask, as the Commission’s rules require and as Locomotive Engineers instructs us to, whether AT&T could have urged the Commission to consider declining call volume before it issued the Fourth Order, the answer is yes. The SBC data MCI brought to the Commission’s attention in asking for reconsideration was therefore not new evidence within the Commission’s rules or Locomotive Engineers and it was hardly earth-shattering in any event. Rather than suggesting a steady decline in call volume during the Post-Intermediate Period, SBC’s data showed that there were more calls per payphone in the third quarter of 2001 than in the fourth quarter of 2000. The SBC data also was inconclusive regarding whether call volume per payphone had declined since April 1999 (the beginning of the Post-Intermediate Period). 6
We therefore hold that the Commission’s denial of reconsideration in the Fifth Order is not renewable. This does not leave AT&T completely without recourse. The Commission has initiated a new rule-making proceeding on payphone compensation, at the request of the American Public Communications Council.
See Request to Update Default Compensation Rate for Dial-Around Calls from Payphones,
18 F.C.C.R. 22,811,
The petition for review is denied.
Notes
. Much of the background on the Commission’s efforts at payphone compensation is set forth in
APCC,
. The original text incorrectly stated "January 31, 2001” instead of "January 31, 2002.”
See Erratum,
14 F.C.C.R. 2545,
. Section 405(a) provides that if the Commission grants reconsideration, it is limited to taking “newly discovered evidence, evidence which has become available only since the original taking of evidence, or evidence which the Commission ... believes should have been taken in the original proceeding.”
. AT&T does not claim that MCI’s own data qualified as new evidence.
. The RBOCs provided total call volume data and then subdivided that figure into dial-around calls (which are at issue here), local coin calls and "other” calls. Id. ¶ 151.
. An overall decline in call volume does not necessarily translate into a decline in call volume per payphone. It may have been, as the RBOCs argued in opposing reconsideration, that payphone providers removed payphones as use dropped off, leaving only payphones that were generating the highest volumes.
