Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SENTELLE.
Petitioner Global NAPs, Inc. (“GNAPs”) seeks review of a Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) ruling that GNAPs’ tariff for Internet-bound traffic was facially invalid under FCC regulations. GNAPs raises both procedural and substantive challenges to the FCC’s order. Specifically, GNAPs contends that the FCC violated its own rules and due process requirements in voiding the tariff, misconstrued the tariff terms, and improperly invalidated the tariff retroactively. We hold that the FCC did not deprive GNAPs of due process, did not exceed its authority by invalidating the tariff, and reasonably declared GNAPs’ tariff unlawful. Therefore we uphold the FCC’s order and deny the petition for review.
*254 I. Background
A. Statutory & Regulatory Context
1. Reciprocal Compensation
Under Section 251(b) of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, local exchange carriers (“LECs”) are required to “establish reciprocal compensation arrangements for the transport and termination of telecommunications.” 47 U.S.C. § 251(b)(5). This means that when a customer of Carrier X calls a customer of Carrier Y who is within the same local calling area, Carrier X pays Carrier Y for completing, or “terminating,” the call. The FCC interprets this requirement to apply only to local calls — that is, calls that originate and terminate within a local area. The reciprocal compensation requirement “do[es] not apply to the transport or termination of interstate or intrastate interexchange traffic.”
In re Implementation of the Local Competition Provisions in the Telecom. Act of 1996,
11 F.C.C.R. 15,499, 16,013 ¶ 1034,
Under the Act, carriers are expected to negotiate the rate and terms of reciprocal compensation. If the carriers are unable to reach agreement, they may submit the contested issues to arbitration by the relevant state public utility commission (“PUC”). 47 U.S.C. § 252(e)(1). Once the PUC approves an interconnection agreement, it is charged with interpreting and enforcing the agreement, but the PUC’s determinations are subject to review in federal court for consistency with the Act. See 47 U.S.C. § 252(e)(6).
In February 1999, the FCC published an order holding that Internet-bound calls to Internet Service Providers (“ISPs”) are not local on the theory that such traffic does not originate and terminate in the same local Sailing area, and is therefore not covered by the reciprocal compensation obligation.
See In re Implementation of the Local Competition Provisions in the Telecom. Act of 1996, Inter-carrier Compensation for ISP-Bound Traffic,
14 F.C.C.R. 3689,
2. Tariff Requirements
Under Section 201(b) of the Telecommunications Act, all interstate communications “charges, practices, classifications, and regulations” must be “just and reasonable.” 47 U.S.C. § 201(b). Carriers must publish rate tariffs before they go into effect. Published tariffs “must contain clear and explicit explanatory statements regarding the rates and regulations.” 47 C.F.R. § 61.2 (a). Tariffs may not “make reference to any other tariff publication or to any other document or instrument.” Id. at § 61.74(a). Tariffs filed by nondomi-nant carriers, such as GNAPs, take effect on only one day’s notice. Such tariffs receive streamlined review and are pre *255 sumed lawful by the Commission. Failure to comply with the relevant regulatory provisions “may be grounds for rejection” of the tariff. Id. at § 61.1(b).
B. Relevant Facts
GNAPs is a competitive local exchange carrier (“CLEC”) in several states. GNAPs and Intervenor Verizon, an LEC formerly known as Bell Atlantic, have interconnection agreements in several states. In April 1997, the two carriers entered into an interconnection agreement including a provision that “[rjeciprocal compensation only applies to the transport and termination of Local Traffic” defined as “a call which is originated and terminated within a given [Local Access and Transport Area or ‘LATA’] ” in Massachusetts. The parties did not agree as to whether the agreement’s reciprocal compensation provisions covered Internet-bound traffic, but agreed to abide by the interpretation of the Massachusetts Department of Telecommunications and Energy (“DTE”) — the Massachusetts PUC — of either the GNAPs-Verizon agreement or identical language in other agreements to. which Verizon was a party.
On October 21, 1998, DTE ruled that Verizon was required to pay reciprocal compensation for the delivery of Internet-bound traffic by MCI WorldCom. Complaint of MCI WorldCom, Inc., D.T.E. 97-116 (Mass. D.T.E. Oct. 21, 1998). At the time, DTE directed Verizon to pay reciprocal compensation to other LECs with which it had similar agreements within the state. Shortly thereafter, however, the FCC published the Reciprocal Compensation Ruling declaring that Internet-bound traffic is interstate, not local. DTE responded on May 19, 1999 by vacating its October decision and declaring that Verizon was not required to pay reciprocal compensation for Internet-bound traffic, but may be required to pay compensation under the interconnection agreement. Complaint of MCI WorldCom, Inc., D.T.E. 97-116-C (Mass. D.T.E. May 19, 1999). On February 25, 2000, after this Court vacated the FCC’s order, DTE reaffirmed its May 1999 ruling, but this ruling is the subject of ongoing litigation. Complaint of MCI WorldCom, Inc., D.T.E. 97-116-D (Mass. D.T.E. Feb. 25, 2000).
On April 14, 1999, while the DTE proceedings were underway (and before the DTE vacated its initial decision) GNAPs filed a tariff imposing an $0,008 per minute charge on the delivery of all Internet-bound calls for which GNAPs “does not receive compensation ... under the terms of an interconnection agreement.” The tariff further provided that a carrier’s “[fjailure ... to actually compensate [GNAPs] for ISP-bound traffic as local traffic under the terms of an Interconnection Agreement shall constitute an election to compensate [GNAPs] under the terms of this Tariff.” On May 27, 1999, GNAPs billed Verizon under this tariff over $1.7 million for fifteen days of service. Verizon refused to pay.
C. The FCC Proceedings
On July 8,1999 Verizon filed a complaint against GNAPs’ tariff under Section 208 of the Communications Act. Verizon alleged that 1) the tariff was inconsistent with FCC rules insofar as the FCC exempted ISPs from access charges and provided for joint provision of access service to interex-change carriers, 2) the tariff preempted state determination of inter-carrier compensation for interstate Internet-bound traffic, 3) the tariff made Verizon an involuntary GNAPs customer, and 4) the tariff imposed excessive rates. Specifically, Verizon alleged “GNAPs has no right to circumvent the negotiation and arbitration process that the DTE and this Commission *256 have directed it to follow by unilaterally filing a federal tariff.” After a status conference, the FCC directed briefing on ten issues concerning the legality of the tariff and the applicability of specific FCC rules, including “why Global NAPs filed a federal tariff and whether that was reasonable.” In re Bell Atlantic-Delaware, Inc., E-99-22 (Aug. 19,1999).
On December 2, 1999, the FCC declared GNAPs’ tariff unlawful under section 201(b) and
void ab initio. In re Bell Atlantic-Delaware, Inc., et al. v. Global NAPs, Inc., Memorandum Opinion and Order,
15 F.C.C.R. 12,946,
On January 3, 2000, GNAPs petitioned for reconsideration of the FCC’s order. GNAPs raised several arguments. First, GNAPs argued that in basing its decision on grounds not raised by Verizon or briefed by either party, the FCC denied GNAPs its right to notice and due process and illegally relieved Verizon of its burden of proof. GNAPs further argued that the FCC, by voiding the tariff retroactively, illegally denied GNAPs just compensation for the interstate services it provided to Verizon. Finally, GNAPs claimed that the FCC’s order was wrong on the merits and the tariff was legal under the Act and applicable FCC regulations.
The FCC denied GNAPs’ petition on March 22.
In re Bell Atlantic-Delaware, Inc., et al. v. Global NAPs, Inc., Order on Reconsideration,
15 F.C.C.R. 5,997,
On March 24, 2000, GNAPs petitioned for review of both orders.
II. Notice
Petitioner GNAPs contends the FCC violated both its own rules and GNAPs’ due process rights by basing its ruling on legal arguments that were not presented by either party nor raised by the FCC in its August 1999 briefing order. According to GNAPs, only those issues pled to the Commission are properly before it. Therefore, GNAPs claims, the Commission was precluded from basing its decision on any other grounds. By doing otherwise, GNAPs claims the FCC violated its due process rights and the Order must be set aside.
The FCC’s rules require that a petitioner plead “[a]ll matters concerning a claim ... fully and with specificity.” 47 C.F.R. § 1.720(a). As interpreted by the FCC, these rules bar a complainant from amending or otherwise “introducing new issues late in the development of the case.”
In re Implementation of the Telecom. Act of 1996,
12 F.C.C.R. 22,497, 22,-597 ¶ 241,
The FCC responds to GNAPs’ procedural claims by arguing that it voided GNAPs’ tariff based on legal theories that were “antecedent” to those raised by Verizon. The FCC could not determine the reasonableness of the tariff without determining what it covered, and that question was indeterminate given the ongoing DTE proceedings. We agree. Though the precise legal theories relied upon by the Commission were different than those raised by Verizon, GNAPs cannot credibly argue that the effect of the ongoing state proceeding on GNAPs’ tariff and Verizon’s payment obligations was not squarely before the agency. GNAPs cites
Virginia State Corp. Comm’n v. MCI,
14 F.C.C.R. 4744,
There is no dispute that the FCC declared GNAPs’ tariff unlawful “for reasons other than those asserted” by Verizon.
Order
at ¶ 14. This does not, however, mean that GNAPs was deprived due process. Even assuming that the FCC violated its own rules, GNAPs had adequate opportunity to meet the charges on reconsideration. GNAPs addressed the substance of the FCC’s findings in its petition for reconsideration (while claiming not to), and identified no significant evidence that might have changed the FCC’s conclusions. Unless we are given concrete reason to believe otherwise, we will trust that an agency properly discharged its obligation to reconsider those issues presented in a petition for reconsideration; “we cannot consider the reconsideration to have been a sham.”
U.S. Satellite Broad. Co. v. FCC,
III. Merits
A. Standard of Review
Under the APA, a reviewing court must uphold an FCC order unless it is found to be “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). This is a “deferential standard” that “presume[s] the validity of agency action.”
Southwestern Bell Tel. Co. v. FCC,
B. The Tariff
The FCC found GNAPs’ tariff to be ambiguous and to contain an impermissible cross-reference. Either is a sufficient ground to declare the tariff illegal. GNAPs maintains that a proper reading of its tariff shows that it is not ambiguous and does not contain an impermissible cross-reference. Whereas the FCC and Verizon contend that the tariff is conditional on another document — the referenced interconnection agreement — GNAPs maintains that the tariff is conditional on whether GNAPs was actually paid for carrying the traffic, irrespective of the reason. GNAPs claims the tariff is not unclear or ambiguous, as carriers will know whether they paid GNAPs and therefore will know whether the tariff applies. For the same reason, GNAPs claims, the tariff should not be read to contain an impermissible cross-reference in violation of 47 C.F.R. § 61.74(a).
The FCC clearly has the better of this argument. 47 C.F.R. § 61.74(a) provides that “no tariff publication filed- with the Commission may make reference to any other tariff publication or to any other document or instrument.” The relevant portion of the tariff reads: “This tariff applies to all ISP-bound traffic for which [GNAPs] does not receive compensation from the Delivering LEC under the terms of an interconnection agreement.” (Emphasis added.) From these words it is unmistakable that the application of the tariff is contingent upon whether GNAPs is paid “under the terms of an interconnection agreement.” If GNAPs receives payment for some other reason, this would not satisfy the condition, and payment would still be due under the tariff. The tariff, on its face, violates the FCC’s rule. Any reasonable construction of the tariffs language would require a customer to consult the interconnection agreement to determine whether the tariff applied.
The FCC also reasonably concluded that the tariff violates 47 C.F.R. § 61.2(a) which provides that tariffs must be clear and explicit “[i]n order to remove all doubt as to their proper application.” When GNAPs filed the tariff, the DTE proceedings were still underway. As a result, it remained unclear whether the GNAPs-Verizon interconnection agreement required compensation for Internet-bound traffic. If a party could not know whether compensation was due under the agreement, it could not know whether any payment to GNAPs was “under the terms of an interconnection agreement.” If a party could not reasonably ascertain the “proper application” of the tariff at the time it was filed, the tariff was unclear and therefore was invalid.
DTE’s subsequent dismissal of GNAPs’ claim for compensation under the agreement did not “cure” its ambiguity for several reasons. First, the FCC’s Order focused on whether the tariff was valid at the time it was filed. GNAPs revised its tariff on February 14, 2000, eliminating the provisions found unlawful by the FCC. DTE’s subsequent ruling could not retro *259 actively cure the deficiency of the tariff in effect prior to February 14 or affect the validity of charges GNAPs sought to assess Verizon prior to that point. In addition, because GNAPs appealed the DTE finding, that matter was not resolved when the FCC made its determination. Finally, even had the DTE ruling cured the tariffs indeterminacy, it did not eliminate the impermissible cross-reference.
C. Statutory Structure
In a final effort to avoid the inevitable, GNAPs argues that the FCC does not have the authority to invalidate tariffs under Section 208, but only acts as an “adjudicator of private rights.”
AT&T v. FCC,
This argument is no more successful than GNAPs’ creative reading of its own tariff. As we noted just last year, Section 204 grants the FCC “quasi-legislative authority to evaluate a carrier’s proposals for new or revised rates.”
Hi-Tech Furnace Sys., Inc. v. FCC,
D. Relief
GNAPs argues, in the alternative, that even if the FCC was correct to declare the tariff unlawful, the FCC erred by “retroactively invalidating” the tariff. Whatever the deficiencies of the tariff in this case, GNAPs argues, it is not so deficient as to justify retroactive invalidation under the standards set forth in
ICC v. American Trucking Assn’s,
GNAPs’ argument that relief under Section 208 of the Act cannot be retroactive in effect is clearly wrong. Section 208 is designed to enable parties to obtain redress for a carrier’s violation of the Act or the FCC’s regulations. Yet insofar as Section 208 authorizes the award of damages or other remedies, it is always “retroactive” in its application in that it will always be changing the economic consequences of a carrier’s prior conduct. The remedy here — complete invalidation of GNAPs’ tariff — may be more severe than consequential damages, but it is no more backward-looking.
The FCC notes that it may be inappropriate for GNAPs to have filed its tariff in the first place. The FCC has not authorized, let alone required, carriers to file
*260
tariffs for local Internet-bound traffic. Instead, the Commission expected carriers to enter into interconnnection agreements that would set compensation subject to state commission approval. Merely because a tariff is presumed lawful upon filing does not mean that it is lawful. Such tariffs still must comply with the applicable statutory and regulatory requirements. Those that do not may be declared invalid. Indeed, GNAPs acknowledges that “[a] tariff that is so plainly defective as to be a legal nullity may be declared retroactively
invalid
— void
ab initio
— in order to ensure that an injustice is not worked on the affected customers.” Brief for Petitioner at 36. That was the case here. The FCC found that the tariff, on its face, violated the plain meaning of the FCC’s tariff regulations and therefore was unlawful from the date of issuance. This is sufficient to satisfy the test laid out in
American Trucking Ass’ns
as the FCC voided a tariff in furtherance of a “specific statutory mandate” to which the action was “directly and closely tied.”
While we uphold the FCC’s conclusion that the tariff was void ab initio and invalid from the date it was published, we have not left GNAPs without opportunity to seek redress. Our holding today does not foreclose GNAPs’ ability to seek compensation under the interconnection agreement before the DTE as well as to seek a negotiated compensation settlement with Verizon. If this route is unsuccessful or impractical, and the FCC’s rules make it difficult for GNAPs and other carriers to obtain compensation for Internet-bound traffic, they may petition the FCC for a change in the Commission’s rules. That GNAPs sought to game the existing rules, and lost, does not mean the FCC was arbitrary and capricious in its application of its own rules.
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the petition for review is
Denied.
