PEOPLE OF the STATE OF CALIFORNIA; Public Utilities
Commission of the State of California, Petitioners,
North American Telecommunications Association ("NATA");
National Association of Regulatory Commissioners
("NARUC"); Missouri Public Service
Commission ("MPSC"),
Petitioners-Intervenors,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, Respondent,
Pacific Bell, et al., Respondents-Intervenors.
PEOPLE OF the STATE OF CALIFORNIA; Public Utilities
Commission of the State of California, Petitioners,
North American Telecommunications Association ("NATA");
National Association of Regulatory Commissioners
("NARUC"), Petitioners-Intervenors,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, Respondent,
Ameritech Operating Companies (Illinois Bell Telephone Co.,
Indiana Bell Telephone Co. Incorp., Michigan Bell Telephone
Co., Ohio Bell Telephone Co., Wisconsin Bell, Inc.); et
al., Respondents-Intervenors.
PEOPLE OF the STATE OF CALIFORNIA; Public Utilities
Commission of the State of California, Petitioners,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, Respondent.
PEOPLE OF the STATE OF NEW YORK, Petitioner,
North American Telecommunications Association ("NATA");
Pacific Bell, Nevada Bell, Pactel Communications
Companies, and Pacific Telesis Group;
Iowa Utilities Board,
Petitioners-Intervenors,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, Respondent,
Bell Atlantic Telephone Companies ("Bell Atlantic"); et
al., Respondents-Intervenors.
PEOPLE OF the STATE OF NEW YORK, Petitioner,
Pacific Bell, Nevada Bell, Pactel Communications Companies,
and Pacific Telesis Group; Iowa Utilities Board;
North American Telecommunications
Association ("NATA"),
Petitioners-Intervenors,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, Respondent,
American Telephone and Telegraph, et al., Respondents-Intervenors.
STATE OF MICHIGAN; Michigan Public Service Commission, Petitioners,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION; United States of
America, Respondents.
MCI TELECOMMUNICATIONS CORPORATION, Petitioner,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION and United States of
America, Respondents.
Nos. 87-7230, 87-7233, 87-7265, 87-7361, 87-7362, 87-7441
and 87-7451.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Jan. 12, 1989.
Withdrawn from Submission Jan. 27, 1989.
Resubmitted April 28, 1989.
Decided June 6, 1990.
James S. Blaszak and Charles C. Hunter, Heron, Burchette, Ruckert & Rothwell, Washington, D.C., for the Ad Hoc Telecommunications Users Committee.
Joseph P. Markoski and Herbert E. Marks, Squire, Sanders & Dempsey, Washington, D.C., for the ADAPSO.
James H. Wallace, Jr., Wiley, Rein & Fielding, Washington, D.C., for the American Newspaper Publishers Ass'n.
Wayne V. Black, C. Douglas Jarrett and Mary Chambers Grandy, Keller & Heckman, Washington, D.C., for the American Petroleum Institute.
Francine J. Berry and David P. Condit, American Telephone and Telegraph Co., Basking Ridge, N.J.; David W. Carpenter and Cynthia A. Gray, Sidley & Austin, Chicago, Ill.; Howard J. Rubinoit, Sidley & Austin, Los Angeles, Cal.; Jonathan S. Hoak, Sidley & Austin, Washington, D.C., for the American Telephone and Telegraph Co.
Alfred Winchell Whittaker, Kirkland & Ellis, Washington, D.C.; Floyd S. Keene and JoAnne G. Bloom, Ameritech, Chicago, Ill., for the Ameritech Operating Companies.
Arthur H. Stuenkel, Arkansas Public Service Com'n, Little Rock, Ark., for the Arkansas Public Service Com'n.
Gary M. Epstein and Aileen R. Amarandos, Latham & Watkins, Washington, D.C.; Mark J. Mathis, James R. Young, and Lawrence W. Katz, Bell Atlantic, Washington, D.C., for Bell Atlantic.
William B. Barfield and R. Frost Branon, Jr., BellSouth Corporation, Atlanta, Ga., for the BellSouth Corp.
Henry D. Levine and Brant S. Karstetter, Morrison & Foerster, Washington, D.C., for the California Bankers Clearing House Ass'n and the New York Clearing House Ass'n.
Janice E. Kerr, J. Calvin Simpson, and Ellen S. LeVine, California Public Utilities Com'n, San Francisco, Cal., for the California Public Utilities Com'n and the People of the State of Cal.
Theodore D. Frank and Vonya B. McCann, Arent, Fox, Kintner, Plotkin and Kahn, Washington, D.C., for the Centel Corp.
Jonathan Canif and Randolph J. May, Bishop, Cook, Purcell & Reynolds, Washington, D.C., for CompuServe.
Peter B. Kenney, Jr., Baker & Hostetler, Washington, D.C.; John S. Voorhees, Howrey & Simon, P.C., Washington, D.C., for the Computer and Business Equipment Mfrs. Ass'n.
John C. Wohlstetter, Contel Corp., Washington, D.C., for the Contel Corp.
Howard C. Davenport, District of Columbia Public Service Com'n, Washington, D.C., for the District of Columbia Public Service Com'n.
Philip M. Walker, Electronic Mail Association, Reston, Virginia, for the Electronic Mail Ass'n.
Diane Killory, Gen. Counsel, Daniel M. Armstrong and Associate Gen. Counsel, John E. Ingle, Deputy Associate Gen. Counsel, Nancy E. Stanley, Linda L. Oliver, Laurel R. Bergold and Charles Oliver, Counsel, Federal Communications Com'n, Washington, D.C., for the Federal Communications Com'n.
Gregory J. Krasovsky, Florida Public Service Com'n, Tallahassee, Fla., for the Florida Public Service Com'n.
Alexander P. Humphrey, Gen. Elec. Information Services, Washington, D.C., for General Elec. Information Services.
James P. Denvir, Akin, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, Washington, D.C., for Graphnet, Inc.
James R. Hobson and Daniel L. Bart, GTE Telephone Operating Companies, Washington, D.C.; Richard McKenna, GTE Telephone Operating Companies, Stamford, Conn., for the GTE Telephone Operating Companies.
Marsha H. Smith, Donald L. Howell, Michael S. Gilmore, Idaho Public Utilities Com'n, Boise, Idaho, for the Idaho Public Utilities Com'n.
Herbert E. Marks, Diane J. Cornell, James L. Casserly, and David Alan Nall, Squire, Sanders & Dempsey, Washington, D.C., for the Independent Data Communications Ass'n.
Thomas E. Kieper, Indiana Utility Consumer Counselor, Indianapolis, Ind., for the Indiana Utility Consumer Counselor.
Richard E. Wiley, Robert J. Butler, and Kurt E. DeSoto, Wiley, Rein & Fielding, Washington, D.C., for the Information Industry Ass'n.
J. Roger Wollenberg, Roger M. Witten, and Andrew D. Roth, Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, Washington, D.C.; Kevin H. Cassidy, Intern. Business Machines Corp., Purchase, N.Y., for the Intern. Business Machines Corp.
International Transcription Service, Washington, D.C., for the Intern. Transcription Service.
Allan Kniep, Iowa Utilities Bd., Des Moines, Iowa, for the Iowa Utilities Bd.
Richard B. Severy, Ellen G. Block, Jeffrey H. Matsuura, John M. Scorce, MCI Communications Corp., Washington, D.C.; Marc P. Fairman, Morrison & Foerster, San Francisco, Cal., for the MCI Telecommunications Corp.
Peter G. Ballou, Maine Public Utilities Com'n, Augusta, Maine; Joel B. Shufman, Maine Public Advocate, Augusta, Maine, for the Maine Public Utilities Com'n.
Frank J. Kelley, Atty. Gen., Louis J. Caruso, Sol. Gen., Don L. Keskey and Henry J. Boynton, Asst. Attys. Gen., Lansing, Mich., for the State of Mich. and the Michigan Public Service Com'n.
Steven Dottheim, Missouri Public Service Com'n, Jefferson City, Mo., for the Missouri Public Service Com'n.
Paul Rodgers, Charles D. Gray, and Lisa M. Zaina, National Ass'n of Regulatory Utility Com'rs, Washington, D.C., for the National Ass'n of Regulatory Utility Com'rs.
Michael S. Schooler, Brenda L. Fox, and David L. Nicholl, National Cable Television Ass'n, Inc., Washington, D.C., for the National Cable Television Ass'n, Inc.
Robert A. Simpson, Acting Counsel for the New York Public Service Com'n, Albany, N.Y., for the New York State Dept. of Public Service.
Saul Fisher and Richard G. Warren, NYNEX, White Plains, N.Y., for the NYNEX Telephone Companies.
Albert H. Kramer and Denise Bonn, Wood, Lucksinger & Epstein, Washington, D.C., for the North American Telecommunications Ass'n.
James P. Tuthill, Margaret deB. Brown, and Betsy S. Granger, San Francisco, Cal.; Stanley J. Moore, Washington, D.C., for Pacific Bell, Nevada Bell, the PacTel Communications Companies, and the Pacific Telesis Group.
Mary L. Vanderpan, South Dakota Public Utilities Bd., Pierre, S.D., for the South Dakota Public Utilities Bd.
Michael J. Zpevak, Southwestern Bell, St. Louis, Mo., for Southwestern Bell.
Philip M. Walker, Telenet Communications Corp., Reston, Va.; Donald E. Ward, Ward & Mendelsohn, P.C., Washington, D.C., for the Telenet Communications Corp.
Stephen R. Bell, Squire, Sanders & Dempsey, Washington, D.C., for the Tymnet-McDonnell Douglas Network Systems Co.
Richard L. Thornburgh, U.S. Atty. Gen., Charles Rule, Andrea Limmer, Catherine G. O'Sullivan, Nancy Garrison, and Barry Grossman, Washington, D.C., for the U.S.
Martin T. McCue, Telephone Ass'n, Washington, D.C.; Randall B. Lowe, Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue, Washington, D.C., for the U.S. Telephone Ass'n.
Dana A. Rasmussen and Robert B. McKenna, U.S. West, Washington, D.C., for U.S. West.
Charles M. Meehan, Shirley S. Fujimoto, and Nina M. Binstein, Keller & Heckman, Washington, D.C., for the Utilities Telecommunications Council.
Steven M. Schur and Robert J. Mussallem, Public Service Com'n of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis., for Wisconsin Public Service.
Margery F. Baker and Kathryn C. Brown, of Counsel for Robert A. Simpson, Acting Counsel for New York Public Service Commission.
Petition for Review of Orders of the Federal Communications Commission.
Before FARRIS, BOOCHEVER and NORRIS, Circuit Judges.
WILLIAM A. NORRIS, Circuit Judge:
Petitioners invoke our jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2342(1) and 47 U.S.C. Sec. 402(a) to review orders of the Federal Communications Commission issued in a rulemaking proceeding known in the telecommunications industry as the Third Computer Inquiry or Computer III.1 Petitioners dispute two discrete rulings by the Commission. First, petitioners challenge the ruling that the divested Bell Operating Companies (BOCs) no longer be required to maintain corporate separation between their common carrier communications services, which are regulated under tariff pursuant to Title II of the Federal Communications Act,2 and the unregulated provision of enhanced or data processing services over the telecommunications network.3 Petitioners contend that the Commission's decision to permit the BOCs to integrate their regulated and unregulated activities, violates section 10(e) of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. Sec. 706(2)(A), because it is arbitrary and capricious.
Second, petitioners challenge the Commission's decision to preempt state regulation of communications common carriers' provision of enhanced services on the ground that it violates section 2(b)(1) of the Communications Act, which denies the Commission jurisdiction over "charges, classifications, practices, services, facilities, or regulations for or in connection with intrastate communication service by wire or radio of any carrier...." 47 U.S.C. Sec. 152(b)(1).
* BACKGROUND
By the 1960s, the growing interdependence of the telephone and the computer created regulatory problems for the Federal Communications Commission. Increasingly, providers of data processing services, such as IBM, were using the transmission facilities of communications common carriers to deliver computer-based information to customers' terminals. An entire new industry based upon the rapidly advancing technology of both the telephone and the computer took root and flourished. Because the provision of enhanced services--as the FCC has labeled telecommunications services combining both data processing and communications components4--involves the use of the transmission facilities of communications common carriers, some argued that the Commission was statutorily required to regulate the new industry. The Commission rejected that argument in favor of a regulatory policy of promoting competition in the enhanced services industry notwithstanding the fact that enhanced services contained regulated communications as well as an unregulated data processing component.
The decision to foster a competitive enhanced services industry did not fully resolve the Commission's regulatory problems. The Commission remained concerned that communications carriers would use their telephone exchange monopolies to obtain leverage in the competitive enhanced services market. First, because non-carrier providers of enhanced services were required to obtain access to the telecommunications network through local exchange "bottlenecks,"5 the Commission was concerned that carriers would gain an unfair competitive edge by discriminating in favor of their own enhanced service offerings in providing access. Second, the Commission was concerned that carriers would exploit their exchange monopolies by passing on to telephone ratepayers costs properly attributable to their unregulated enhanced services business. Such improper cost-shifting effectively subsidizes a carrier's unregulated activities with monopoly profits from its regulated activities, to the detriment of both its monopoly ratepayers and its competitors in the enhanced services market. The two Computer III orders we review in this case represent a culmination of a long history of FCC attempts to guard against these potential abuses of communications carriers' monopoly power.
A. The First and Second Computer Inquiries
In the First Computer Inquiry (Computer I ),6 the FCC considered for the first time the appropriate regulatory treatment of telephone company participation in the newly emerging, competitive industry of delivering data processing services over telephone lines. The Commission required that any telephone carrier offering such enhanced services do so by means of a separate corporate subsidiary. The structural separation requirement was applied to all carriers with annual revenues exceeding $1,000,000, although the Commission never explained why it drew its regulatory line at the $1,000,000 mark. Structural separation was not initially regarded as applying to the American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT & T) and its local exchange affiliates (the Bell System), because those companies were thought to be barred from offering data processing services by a 1956 antitrust consent decree. United States v. Western Elec. Co., 1956 Trade Cas. (CCH) p 68,246 (D.N.J. Jan. 24, 1956); see GTE Serv. Corp.,
In its 1980 Second Computer Inquiry (Computer II ) decision,7 the FCC redefined regulated communications services and unregulated data processing. By creating a regulatory distinction between "basic" and "enhanced" services, the Commission sought to draw a bright line between activities that would be regulated as common carrier offerings and those that would not. See Computer II Final Decision,
Although the FCC in Computer II continued to rely on structural separation as the principal means of preventing cross-subsidization and discriminatory access, it restricted the requirement to members of the Bell System and removed it from all other carriers regardless of whether their revenues exceeded $1,000,000.9 Thus only AT & T and its operating subsidiaries were required to form separate corporate subsidiaries to provide enhanced services.10 The Commission's decision to switch from regulating all carriers with revenues in excess of $1,000,000 to regulating only AT & T apparently went unchallenged. The FCC attempted to predicate the need for regulation on a carrier's national market power, which only AT & T had. However, the Commission neither defined the "national market" at issue nor explained why it drew its regulatory line between national market power and substantial regional market power such as that enjoyed by GTE Service Corporation (GTE) and Continental Telephone. The FCC again stressed the importance of a carrier's monopoly control of local bottleneck facilities and the ability to abuse that control either by providing inferior access to competitors or by cross-subsidizing its own enhanced services with monopoly revenues derived from captive ratepayers. Computer II Final Decision,
B. The Breakup of AT & T
On January 1, 1984, AT & T divested itself of its 22 local exchange telephone companies--the Bell Operating Companies or "BOCs"--as part of a settlement of the government's 1974 antitrust suit against AT & T. United States v. AT & T,
Under the MFJ, AT & T retained its long-distance telephone operations, its CPE manufacturing business, and Bell Laboratories. AT & T, now divested of the BOCs, was free to enter virtually all other facets of the marketplace, including data processing. The divested BOCs were restricted generally to providing local exchange telephone service and other "natural monopoly service[s] actually regulated by tariff."
The antitrust court initially left open the question whether the BOCs should conduct their unregulated activities through separate corporate subsidiaries. In accepting the MFJ, the court found that issue more appropriately a concern of regulatory agencies such as the FCC.
C. The BOC Separation Order
In preparation for the January 1984 restructuring of the Bell System, the FCC opened a proceeding to determine whether and how the Computer II rules should be applied to the divested BOCs.14 In its BOC Separation Order, the FCC stressed that the BOCs enjoyed the same monopoly power through their ownership of the local exchanges that AT & T had long enjoyed. The Commission noted that the seven regional BOCs, although smaller than AT & T, remained titans in the telecommunications industry.15 The divestiture of AT & T did not eliminate the Bell System's control over local exchange facilities; it simply transferred that control from a single national company to seven regional BOC holding companies. Throughout its order, the FCC insisted that the BOCs' monopoly power and control over the local exchange bottlenecks would give them both the incentive and the ability to cross-subsidize and to provide inferior network access to enhanced services competitors. BOC Separation Order,
In the BOC Separation Order rulemaking proceeding, the BOCs argued that divestiture had eliminated the need for Computer II 's structural separation requirements. The FCC rejected this argument because the BOCs had inherited AT & T's monopoly power and control over access to the telecommunications network. In the Commission's view, the critical fact was that each BOC would retain ownership of the local exchange monopolies in the region in which it operated. As the Seventh Circuit observed in approving the FCC's order:
It is still the case, no less than before the divestiture, that if you want to have telephone service and are located in an area served by a Bell operating company you must get your access line from that company. Hence the operating companies have monopolies of basic telephone service in many important markets....
....
... The basic source of AT & T's monopoly power was not the manufacture of telecommunications equipment or even the ownership of the nation's long-distance lines; it was the operating companies' control of access to the telecommunications network. The inheritors of the Bell monopoly are the [BOCs].... The worst bottlenecks in this industry are local.
Illinois Bell,
The FCC also determined in its order that non-structural regulations on BOC cost-accounting and network-access practices would be ineffective safeguards against anticompetitive behavior by the BOCs. Absent a structural separation rule, the FCC found, the BOCs could install their own enhanced services equipment within the local networks, and would be free to market enhanced services through the same organizations used for basic telephone service. For example, the FCC found that
if joint marketing were permitted, the personnel who contact customers to market regulated services could be selling ... enhanced services at the same time. Difficult, sometimes impossible, problems of fairly allocating the costs of marketing between regulated and unregulated accounts would again occur.
BOC Separation Order,
Analogous enforcement problems, in the FCC's view, would beset efforts to use network-access rules to assure that the BOCs would not provide inferior access to competitors. Because of the BOCs' exclusive control over the connection and switching equipment of the local exchanges, it would be difficult for the Commission to know whether the BOCs were providing competitors with transmission services of comparable quality at comparable prices. By integrating their enhanced services equipment into the telephone network, the BOCs could favor their own enhanced services with superior signals and switching capacities without being detected. The BOCs could also engage in subtle tie-in practices in which they conditioned the availability of transmission services on the purchase of their own enhanced services or equipment. See id. at 1135.
In contrast, the FCC found that structural separation continued to be an effective means of preventing cost-shifting and discrimination. It viewed structural separation as essentially a prophylactic measure. The separate subsidiary requirement forces the BOCs to produce and market enhanced services independent of basic telephone services, and maintain different books, different staffs, and different equipment premises for each service. This separation eliminates the problem of determining the proper allocation of joint costs, and makes it difficult for the BOCs to masquerade enhanced services costs as basic telephone service costs. BOC Separation Order,
In mandating structural separation, the Commission made clear that its regulations were designed to protect the integrity of two distinct markets--the unregulated market for enhanced services and the regulated market for basic telephone service. In part, the separation requirements were designed to benefit participants in the enhanced services market by creating an even playing field for the BOCs' competitors. If the BOCs were prevented from either cross-subsidizing their own enhanced services or discriminating against the enhanced service offerings of their competitors, then free and fair competition would flourish in the growing industry. BOC Separation Order,
D. The Third Computer Inquiry
In August 1985, just 14 months after concluding the BOC Separation Proceeding, in which the FCC rejected the argument that divestiture had reduced the need for structural separation, the Commission reversed course16 and announced its intention to relieve the BOCs of the separation requirements.17 The FCC now reasoned that divestiture and increased competition in the enhanced services market had somehow diminished the value of structural separation as a safeguard against monopoly abuse. The FCC and the dissent attempt to justify this about-face by arguing that divestiture has drastically changed the competitive structure of the telecommunications industry. Some aspects of the industry remain the same, however. For example, the FCC noted in Computer III that it could not conclude "that the BOCs' motivation to cross-subsidize ha[d] decreased because of these developments." Phase I Order,
In a Report and Order issued June 16, 1986 (Phase I Order ), the FCC adopted new regulations permitting the BOCs to integrate their basic and enhanced services upon implementation of a plan of nonstructural safeguards approved by the FCC. Phase I Order,
The FCC decided that its structural separation regulations had imposed costs in terms of the unavailability of certain services, lost economies and efficiencies, and the inability of customers to obtain complete telecommunications and data processing solutions from a single vendor. The FCC also determined that the BOCs' ability to cross-subsidize had been restricted because of divestiture, the growth of competitive alternatives to the BOCs' ordinary telephone service, and political and regulatory pressures at the state level to keep local phone rates down. The BOCs' ability to discriminate by providing inferior network access had also diminished, according to the FCC, because of industry-wide coordination of network standards and the threat that enhanced services competitors could bypass the BOCs' local exchanges. Phase I Order,
The FCC concluded that the regulatory goals served by structural separation could be achieved by two nonstructural safeguards.19 First, the FCC would develop cost allocation methods to minimize the BOCs' ability to shift costs from their unregulated to regulated activities. Id. at 1010-11. Second, the FCC adopted regulations specifically designed to prevent the BOCs from using their "substantial market power in providing network access" to discriminate against competing providers of enhanced services. Phase I Order,
II
THE APA ISSUE
Petitioners claim that it was irrational for the FCC to abandon structural safeguards so soon after imposing them on AT & T in Computer II and reimposing them on the divested BOCs in the BOC Separation Order. Structural safeguards, argue petitioners, have been the Commission's primary weapon for preventing anticompetitive conduct such as cross-subsidization and discriminatory access, and these safeguards, which were originally imposed in Computer I on all communications carriers with assets of over $1,000,000, are a long-standing FCC rule which was abandoned without a reasoned agency decision.
The FCC counters by characterizing structural safeguards as a transitional measure imposed on the BOCs to cushion the effects of AT & T's divestiture. FCC Brief at 97 n. 148. Furthermore, the Commission argues that it announced at the time of the BOC Separation Order that it would refine its separation requirements as it gained experience with BOC offerings. Id. (citing BOC Separation Order,
We recognize that the FCC is obligated to reevaluate its policies when circumstances affecting its rulemaking proceedings change. We also recognize that the Commission has broad discretionary authority to change its regulatory mind. But the Commission cannot expect us simply to rubberstamp its change in policy. Although we respect the Commission's exercise of discretion in an area in which it has expertise, we cannot, as a reviewing court, accept an agency's change of course uncritically. Section 10(e) of the APA requires us to set aside agency action if it is "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law." 5 U.S.C. Sec. 706(2)(A).
The FCC explains its lifting of the structural separation requirements by arguing that certain developments in telecommunications markets and technologies have materially changed circumstances in the industry. Specifically, the FCC asserts that technological advances, political and regulatory pressure by the states, divestiture, and a generally competitive enhanced services market have reduced the risks of both cross-subsidization and discriminatory access.
Section 10(e) of the APA requires us to determine whether the Commission's decision was a reasonable exercise of its discretion, based on consideration of relevant factors, and supported by the record. See, e.g., Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. State Farm Mutual Auto Ins. Co.,
We stress that petitioners' contention that the FCC violated Sec. 10(e) of the APA when it allowed the BOCs to integrate their regulated and unregulated activities requires judicial scrutiny of the cost/benefit analysis that is at the heart of the FCC decision. Especially in a rulemaking proceeding as economically and technologically complex as Computer III, this scrutiny is a daunting task. Nonetheless, because the FCC relied on a cost/benefit analysis, we must decide whether the FCC's evaluation of the costs and benefits it has identified as relevant finds support in the administrative record. While we scrutinize the FCC's evaluation of each individual cost and benefit, we make no attempt to exercise the judgment required in striking the balance between the competing costs and benefits. That balancing is a matter that must be left to the discretion of the FCC. But if the FCC's evaluation of any significant element in the cost/benefit analysis lacks record support, we cannot uphold the agency action under Sec. 10(e). Thus, we must be satisfied that the Commission's assessment of the various costs and benefits is reasonable in light of the administrative record.
We note further that we are limited in our evaluation to the reasons the FCC gave; we cannot supply our own rationale. According to the Commission, technological advances and market changes have made it possible for nonstructural safeguards, such as cost accounting, to protect ratepayers from cost-shifting and competitors from both cost-shifting and inferior access. We thus address the question of whether the record supports the FCC's finding that the individual costs and benefits of structural separation have been materially affected by changed circumstances.
A. The Costs of Structural Separation
Throughout the various Computer rulemaking proceedings, the FCC has recognized that the protective benefits of structural separation do not come free of cost. See, e.g., BOC Separation Order,
The Commission makes a fair case that the integration of regulated and unregulated telecommunications services by the BOCs would yield some economies of scale. On the technological side, the BOCs could integrate enhanced services equipment more closely into the telephone network. On the marketing side, the BOCs could offer customers--particularly business customers--packages of basic and enhanced services. These packages would minimize transaction costs, and reduce delays and coordination problems in satisfying consumer demands. Moreover, the BOCs would not have to maintain, and customers would not have to pay for, separate organizations and facilities for operating and repairing basic and enhanced services. See Phase I Order,
While the Commission concludes that these costs are "potentially very significant," it makes no attempt to quantify them. Id. at 1008. The Commission asserts that it has had several years since Computer II in which to study the costs of structural separation. We recognize that the Commission now enjoys the benefit of additional experience with structural separation; however, the Commission makes no showing that this experience proves that the costs of separation have increased. In the absence of concrete data, the Commission has relied on vague generalizations offered by the BOCs, see id. at 987-89, which makes us hesitate to give great weight to the FCC's "potentially very significant" assessment. Nonetheless, the BOCs' submissions provide an adequate, if marginal, basis for concluding that experience shows that some economies of scale would result from integrating basic and enhanced operations.
The FCC makes a plausible case that its separation requirements have impeded the marketing and even development of some new forms of enhanced services. The Commission invokes the example of the Custom Calling II VMS (voice message system), which AT & T developed in the early 1980s. AT & T unsuccessfully sought a waiver from the Computer II structural separation rules so it could market the system through its local exchange operating companies. The result, according to the Commission, is that neither this system nor any substantial equivalent has been available to the public. Phase I Order,
Although we are concerned that the rulemaking record fails to indicate the magnitude of the costs of structural separation, we recognize that the FCC necessarily must speculate about the extent to which releasing the BOCs from the handicap of separate operations will create a more vigorous enhanced services market. Because the BOCs have never had an opportunity to offer enhanced services in a deregulated environment, the real benefits, if any, of integrated operations may not be quantifiable at this time. We therefore conclude that the FCC could reasonably decide on this record that structural separation impairs the BOCs' ability to achieve certain economies of scale and has impeded the development and marketing of some new forms of enhanced services. The record, however, yields no evidence that the costs of separation have increased as a result of changed circumstances following Computer II and the BOC Separation Order. The regulatory experience has merely confirmed that these costs are "potentially very significant." Phase I Order,
B. The Benefits of Structural Separation
The FCC has consistently identified the social benefits of structural separation as safeguarding against the twin evils of discriminatory access and cross-subsidization. Guarding against these improper and anticompetitive practices has always been the Commission's chief concern in promoting its goal of protecting both captive ratepayers and enhanced services competitors of communications carriers. In Computer III, the Commission found that changed technological and market circumstances had reduced the need for structural separation as a safeguard against access discrimination and cross-subsidization of the BOCs' own enhanced services with monopoly revenues derived from ratepayers. The FCC cites as changed circumstances a more competitive enhanced services market, technological advances that include an increased ability to detect discriminatory access and the growth of opportunities to bypass local exchanges, increased state political and regulatory pressures, and the AT & T divestiture of the Bell Operating Companies. We therefore consider whether the record supports the FCC's conclusion that these changed circumstances have reduced the value of structural separation, thereby justifying the substitution of nonstructural for structural safeguards.
(1) Prevention of Discriminatory Access
The FCC found that technological and market developments in the last few years have reduced the danger that the BOCs will discriminate against their competitors in providing access to the telephone network. We agree that the Commission could reasonably decide that changed circumstances have made it more difficult for the BOCs to provide competitors with inferior access.
The FCC could reasonably conclude that the emergence of powerful competitors such as IBM, which have the resources and expertise to monitor the quality of access to the network, reduces the BOCs' ability to discriminate in providing access to their competitors. The record also supports the proposition that these large corporate competitors--unlike the average telephone user--have a growing capability of bypassing local exchanges by using microwave systems or cable networks for linking their computers with their customers' terminals.
Moreover, the network-access policies that the FCC proposes to substitute for structural separation involve new technologies for detecting inferior access that have not previously been available. The FCC's policy of Comparably Efficient Interconnection (CEI) is designed to ensure that each BOC will provide competitors with connections to the local exchange that equal the connections available to the BOCs' own enhanced services offerings. Moreover, the Open Network Architecture (ONA) policy requires each BOC to incorporate CEI concepts into the overall design of its basic service network. Thus, the record supports the Commission's finding that technologies for ensuring equal access have improved, and may be effective in preventing discrimination in ways not feasible in the past.
(2) Prevention of Cross-Subsidization
We cannot agree, however, that there is adequate record support for the Commission's conclusion that changed circumstances have reduced the danger that the BOCs will effectively subsidize their competitive activities with monopoly revenues improperly derived from captive ratepayers. The FCC points to four changes in the telecommunications market that allegedly have reduced this danger following Computer II and the BOC Separation Order: (1) the enhanced services market has become "extremely competitive"; (2) the growth of "bypass" and other alternatives to local exchange facilities has eroded the BOCs' monopoly power; (3) political and regulatory forces at the state level exert pressure on the BOCs to keep the price of basic telephone service down; and (4) divestiture has dissipated the monolithic power of the Bell System. Given these changes, the FCC asserts that nonstructural safeguards such as accounting controls may be substituted for structural separation requirements without increasing the risk of cross-subsidization.
From our review of the administrative record, we hold that the evidence fails to support the FCC's finding that changed market and technological circumstances have significantly diminished the risk of undetected cost-shifting by the BOCs. Nor do we find any record support for the FCC's abandonment of its original position that cost-accounting regulations are relatively ineffective means of preventing improper cost-shifting. We note in this regard that the FCC mischaracterizes the record when it argues that its reliance on cost accounting to detect cost-shifting does not depart from past policy. FCC Brief at 104. The Commission concedes that it has "concluded [in past proceedings] that cost allocation alone would be insufficient to protect against cost-shifting." Id. The FCC denies, however, that in Computer III it is relying solely on cost accounting regulations as a safeguard against cross-subsidization.
[The FCC] is relying on cost accounting as one element of its overall scheme, the efficacy of which must be viewed with other Computer III requirements. As the Justice Department noted in its comments, 'regulatory mechanisms, that by themselves may be insufficient to prevent a regulated bottleneck monopolist from impeding competition in related markets, may, in conjunction with an open architecture network, significantly reduce the risk of anticompetitive harm.'
Id. at 105 (citation omitted). This argument is to no avail because it obscures the distinction between regulatory protections against discriminatory access and regulatory protections against cost-shifting. Open Network Architecture, for example, does nothing to detect or deter cost-shifting; it only guards against inferior access. Thus, we must reject the Commission's assertion that it did not depart from past policy in Computer III when it relied heavily on cost accounting regulations to detect cost-shifting. We can only conclude that this position taken in Computer III represents an unexplained change from the FCC's original position. We agree with the FCC that it has broad discretion to implement reasonable policy changes. But as the Supreme Court has said, " '[A]n agency's view of what is in the public interest may change.... But an agency changing its course must supply a reasoned analysis.' " State Farm,
The Commission does not explain how the fact that the enhanced services market is "extremely competitive" reduces the BOCs' ability to cross-subsidize their unregulated enhanced services businesses by misallocating costs to their regulated activities. The BOCs' ability to shift costs derives from the fact that they are monopoly providers of basic telephone service. Because competition in the unregulated enhanced services market does nothing to decrease the BOCs' monopoly power in the basic services market, we fail to see how it can diminish the BOCs' ability to shift costs to their regulated services without detection in ratemaking proceedings. If anything, increased competition in the enhanced services market simply increases the BOCs' incentive to shift costs so they can engage in predatory price-cutting as a means of maintaining or increasing their share of the market for enhanced services.
The Commission also asserts that the BOCs' monopoly power over the local networks has been "eroded" by new technologies permitting some telephone users to bypass the BOCs' local exchange facilities. These new bypass technologies include "Teleport" fiber networks, cable networks, and microwave systems, all of which enable some circumvention of the local exchanges. The record indicates that such services are available in some metropolitan areas to large business subscribers.
Nynex, for example, listed in considerable detail the bypass technologies currently being employed by major New York banks, and described how other corporate subscribers are interested in developing their own private networks. However, Nynex offered no evidence that these bypass opportunities were widely available to ordinary residential subscribers. Nynex did suggest that some large apartment and condominium buildings in certain metropolitan areas might purchase "shared tenant services" which would enable telephone users to avoid the BOCs' local exchanges, but gave no indication as to the present existence or potential scope of such residential services. Nynex also suggested that corporations maintaining private networks might sell their excess capacity to smaller users who could not afford to purchase microwave systems; but again, it offered no evidence that any such "trickle down" effect actually existed, nor any evidence of how widely available it would be. Moreover, Nynex offered no evidence that the availability of bypass as a theoretical alternative to BOC local exchange service has in any way restricted the ability of the BOCs to inflate basic service prices and cut enhanced service prices through cost-shifting.
Nynex's submission was fairly representative of other commenters' submissions on the question of local bypass. Cincinnati Bell, for example, described how Procter & Gamble and General Electric have constructed their own private telecommunications networks, but offered no evidence of bypass opportunities for residential subscribers.21 Joint Appendix at 220-22 (Comments of Cincinnati Bell Telephone Company). Southwestern Bell extolled the fact that "customers can now install a point-to-point microwave system for less than $20,000, excluding multiplexing equipment or tower construction costs," but again offered no evidence that ordinary telephone users were able to bypass the BOCs' local exchanges. Joint Appendix at 424-25 (Comments of Southwestern Bell Corporation). Finally, Ameritech described the range of fiber-optics and microwave networks available to occupants of several large office buildings in Chicago, but gave no examples of existing bypass opportunities for residential customers. Joint Appendix at 565-75 (Reply Comments of the Ameritech Operating Companies). None of these commenters submitted any evidence that bypass has significantly diluted the BOCs' monopoly power in the local exchange markets.
In short, although the record contains an impressive array of evidence demonstrating the technical feasibility of bypass, the record contains no evidence that bypass has become a realistic option for any appreciable number of ordinary telephone users. More importantly, the record is devoid of evidence that the potential for bypass is significant enough to reduce the BOCs' ability, as a practical matter, to exact monopoly rents from basic service customers by burdening them with costs from unregulated activities. On the basis of the record before us, therefore, the FCC's contention that the availability of bypass will hamper BOC attempts at cost-shifting must be characterized as speculative at best. As the court administering the AT & T antitrust MFJ concluded in an opinion contemporaneous with the Phase I Order, " 'bottleneck' monopolies continue to exist as before," and "the ability to exploit the bottlenecks anticompetitively has remained precisely the same." United States v. Western Elec. Co.,
We stress that the relevance of bypass to the issue of cross-subsidization lies in the potential for bypass to become so widespread that monopoly power over local exchange service is materially reduced. Nothing in the record supports such a conclusion. In other words, the record yields no evidence that the BOCs' power to extract monopoly rents from local telephone customers has diminished. In fact, the FCC has never attempted to quantify even in the most broad and general way any such change. To provide anecdotes about specific bypass opportunities without discussing their impact on the BOCs' ability to misallocate costs to ratepayers' revenues confuses the issue. Once again, the Commission fails to distinguish the role of bypass in reducing the risk of discriminatory access from the role of bypass in reducing the risk of cross-subsidization. The record evidence about bypass goes only to a possible reduction in the risk of discriminatory access. The FCC cites to nothing and we know of nothing in the record that even begins to show that bypass reduces the BOCs' potential for cost-shifting in any significant way. It is the ability to shift costs to ratepayers that enables communications carriers to subsidize their unregulated activities. We therefore conclude that the evidence of increased bypass opportunities provides no support for a finding that the BOCs' ability to cross-subsidize has been significantly reduced.
Nor does the record yield evidence of any reduction in the BOCs' ability to increase monopoly profits by misallocating costs in seeking rate increases for basic telephone service. The FCC provides us with no basis for deciding when and whether a communications common carrier has the requisite monopoly revenues to engage in such improper cost shifting as a means of subsidizing its unregulated enhanced services business. As a reviewing court, we cannot judge for ourselves whether the BOCs generate sufficient revenues from their local exchange monopolies to pose a serious threat of harm to competition in the enhanced services market. We lack the capacity to make such a determination. Not only has the Commission failed to address the issue of the BOCs' monopoly power, but its decisions in past proceedings about when monopoly revenues are of significant magnitude to merit regulation have been confusingly erratic. In Computer I, the FCC originally imposed structural separation requirements on all carriers with annual gross revenues exceeding $1,000,000. In Computer II, the Commission relieved all carriers of the separation requirements except one, AT & T.23 The conversion from a policy of including small carriers with only $1,000,000 in revenues to a policy of excluding all carriers but AT & T has gone both unexplained and unsupported. Frankly, we find no coherence in the Commission's policy shifts in deciding which carriers to subject to separation requirements.24 The Commission's attempt in Computer II to explain its decision to exempt all carriers save AT & T after originally exempting only carriers with revenues under $1,000,000 lacks any persuasive power. The FCC simply recited that AT & T had "national market power" as though those words had talismanic significance. We are left with no explanation of why AT & T's power in some undefined, perhaps regulated, perhaps unregulated "national market" provides a rational basis for drawing the regulatory line between AT & T and all other communications carriers. Why suddenly did carriers such as GTE, with revenues of $3,894,000,000, and United Telecommunications, with revenues of $1,084,956,000,25 lose their ability to cross-subsidize? Computer III, like Computer II before it, fails to answer this question. Because the FCC has never explained how "national market power" relates to the threat of cross-subsidization, we must conclude that we have no basis on which to discern whether the FCC's current policy choice is rational.
We are also unpersuaded by the Commission's new-found faith in Computer III that political and regulatory forces in the states will exert pressure on the BOCs to "minimize rural, residential, and small business local exchange rates, even to levels below cost," thereby "limit[ing] the BOCs' ability to shift costs to regulated [basic] services." Phase I Order,
Finally, the FCC states that "[d]ivestiture eliminated AT & T's control over the most significant operations it could use for cross-subsidization--its former local exchange companies." Phase I Order,
The only information in the voluminous Computer III record that even purports to explain the FCC's decision is its statement that the divested BOCs now resemble GTE. But this so-called resemblance tells us nothing, for the FCC has lacked any consistency in fitting GTE into its structural separation policies. Under the Computer I regime, GTE was required to offer enhanced services through separate subsidiaries because it had annual revenues exceeding $1,000,000. Under the original Computer II order, GTE, along with AT & T, was required to continue to maintain structural separation. However, on reconsideration, the FCC lifted the requirement from GTE. At the time of the BOC Separation Order, the FCC determined that the divested BOCs did not compare with GTE. Now in Computer III, the FCC has decided that, in fact, they do. The FCC's classification of GTE has been at best inconsistent and at worst totally random as has been its comparison of GTE with the individual BOCs.
In sum, the four purported "changes" in the telecommunications market identified by the FCC lend no support to its conclusion that the risk of cross-subsidization by the BOCs has decreased. We are left with the Commission's assurance that cost-accounting regulations will be sufficient to "minimize" the BOCs' ability to misallocate costs, Phase I Order,
C. The Reasonableness of the FCC's Decision
The Computer III nonstructural regulations are designed to protect both ordinary telephone customers and the competitive enhanced services market. Phase I Order,
In conclusion, we emphasize that it is not our role to decide whether a rationale exists that would justify the FCC's decision to abandon the Computer II and BOC Separation Order regulatory framework. See State Farm,
III
THE PREEMPTION ISSUE
In Computer III the FCC issued orders preempting nearly all state regulation of the sale of enhanced services by communications common carriers.30 Specifically, the FCC orders preclude state regulators from: (1) tariffing enhanced services sold by communications carriers; (2) requiring communications carriers to maintain structural separation between their basic and enhanced service operations; and (3) requiring nonstructural safeguards that are inconsistent with or more stringent than the FCC's nonstructural safeguards.31 Petitioners argue that the FCC preemption orders violate Sec. 2(b)(1) of the Communications Act, which denies the FCC jurisdiction "with respect to (1) charges, classifications, practices, services, facilities, or regulations for or in connection with intrastate communication service by wire or radio of any carrier." 47 U.S.C. Sec. 152(b)(1) (Supp. V 1982).
A. The Applicability of Sec. 2(b)(1) to Enhanced Services
The question of statutory interpretation presented for decision is whether Sec. 2(b)(1) distinguishes between basic and enhanced telecommunications services. The FCC concedes that Sec. 2(b)(1) reserves to the states the sole authority to regulate intrastate basic telephone service, but argues that the statute does not bar the FCC from regulating enhanced services to the exclusion of state regulation of intrastate enhanced services. Petitioners challenge the Computer III preemption orders on the ground that the plain language of Sec. 2(b)(1) forecloses the FCC's attempt to distinguish between basic and enhanced services for preemption purposes.
Simply put, petitioners contend that enhanced services are services "for or in connection with intrastate communication service by wire or radio of any carrier," 47 U.S.C. Sec. 152(b)(1), because enhanced services consist of nothing more than the transmission of electronic signals over the telephone network. In this fundamental respect, petitioners assert, enhanced services are indistinguishable from basic services. Petitioners rely particularly on the broad language of Sec. 2(b)(1) reserving to the states the authority to regulate services "for or in connection with" communication services provided by telephone carriers. This broad language, claim the petitioners, explicitly "fences off from FCC reach or regulation," Louisiana Pub. Serv. Comm'n v. FCC,
Given the fact that both basic and enhanced services are delivered by communications carriers over the same telephone network, and the broad "in connection with" language of Sec. 2(b)(1), the Commission faces an uphill battle in defending its position that Sec. 2(b)(1) distinguishes between basic and enhanced services. The gist of the Commission's argument is that enhanced services fall beyond the reach of Sec. 2(b)(1) because enhanced services, unlike basic telephone services, are not offered on a "common carrier" basis.32 In the Commission's view, the key words in Sec. 2(b)(1) are "for or in connection with intrastate communication service by wire or radio of any carrier." Because the term "carrier" is synonymous with "common carrier" for purposes of the Act,33 the Commission reasons, the words "of any carrier" must be interpreted to mean that Sec. 2(b)(1) applies only to telecommunications services that are offered on a common carrier basis.
We reject the Commission's interpretation of Sec. 2(b)(1).34 We find nothing in the language of Sec. 2(b)(1) to support the cramped reading advanced by the Commission. To the contrary, the broad language of Sec. 2(b)(1) makes clear that the sphere of state authority which the statute "fences off from FCC reach or regulation," Louisiana PSC,
We are unimpressed by the Commission's argument that the words "of any carrier" in Sec. 2(b)(1) must mean that Congress intended the reach of Sec. 2(b)(1) to be limited to common carrier services. The plain meaning of the language "of any carrier" is that the statute applies to communications services provided by common carriers such as AT & T and the BOCs as distinguished from communications services provided by non-common carriers such as IBM. Thus, the distinction made by the statute is between providers of communications services, i.e., between carriers and non-carriers. When services are provided by communications carriers, the statute makes no distinction based upon the terms and conditions on which the services are offered, i.e., whether on a common carrier or private contract basis.35
We are equally unimpressed with the Commission's argument that the legislative history of the Communications Act demonstrates that Sec. 2(b)(1) was intended only to protect states' jurisdiction to regulate intrastate common carrier telephone services. Before the Act was passed in 1934, state regulation had focused on common carrier services. During consideration of the 1934 Act, concern with maintaining states' regulatory authority over common carriers emerged as a prominent theme.36 Congress' purpose in writing Sec. 2(b)(1) into the Act, the Commission asserts, was to preserve the states' traditional role in protecting consumers against monopoly abuses by telephone carriers providing ordinary telephone services. "Nowhere," says the Commission, "does the legislative history reveal any intention to insulate from federal regulation new types of communications services that might develop in the future and that the states never had regulated." FCC Brief at 65.
This exegesis of the Act's legislative history does not persuade us to abandon what we believe to be the unambiguous command of Sec. 2(b)(1). As the Supreme Court noted in Louisiana PSC, even if it were true that Congress' dominant concern was to protect states' ability to control common carrier charges for intrastate telephone service, the language Congress chose reserved to the states expansive authority to regulate intrastate telecommunications.
Our rejection of the Commission's interpretation of Sec. 2(b)(1) is in accord with the holding of the D.C. Circuit in National Ass'n of Regulatory Util. Comm'rs v. FCC,
Louisiana PSC establishes the governing principles for interpreting section 152(b). There the Court made clear that the Act, through section 152(b), establishes a system by which the states exercise the same authority over intrastate wire communication as the FCC exercises over interstate wire communication:
By its terms, this provision fences off from FCC reach or regulation intrastate matters--indeed, including matters 'in connection with' intrastate service. Moreover, the language with which it does so is certainly as sweeping as the wording of the provision [section 151] declaring the purpose of the Act and the role of the FCC.... We agree with petitioners that ... sections [151 and 152(b) ] are naturally reconciled ... to enact a dual regulatory system....
This passage and the language of section 152(b) compel us to reject the FCC's attempt to limit the reach of section 152(b) to "intrastate common carrier communication services." Recon. Order, 1 F.C.C.Rcd. at 1192, paras. 14-15. As the Court has made clear, section 152(b) 'not only imposes jurisdictional limits on the power of a federal agency, but also by stating that nothing in the Act shall be construed to extend FCC jurisdiction to intrastate service, provides its own rule of statutory construction.' Louisiana PSC,
Id. at 428.
We agree with the D.C. Circuit. The extent of the authority to regulate intrastate communications services reserved to the states by Sec. 2(b)(1) does not turn on whether the services are provided on a common carrier or non-common carrier basis. The Commission's interpretation of Sec. 2(b)(1) would require us to qualify the statute's sweeping language "for or in connection with intrastate communication service by wire or radio of any carrier" by adding the words "which the carrier provides on a common carrier basis." If the Commission advocates such an amendment to the statute, then it must make its case to Congress, not to the courts.
B. The "Impossibility" Exception to Sec. 2(b)(1)'s Restriction on the FCC's Preemption Authority
Having rejected the Commission's argument that Sec. 2(b)(1) does not safeguard state authority to regulate intrastate enhanced services, we turn to the Commission's alternative argument that a portion of its Computer III preemption order is valid under an "impossibility" exception carved out of Sec. 2(b)(1) by the Supreme Court in Louisiana PSC. In essence, the Commission argues that its preemption of state-imposed structural separation requirements and some state-imposed nonstructural safeguards is valid because such state regulations cannot feasibly coexist with the Computer III scheme.38
In Louisiana PSC, the Commission advanced this same argument in defending an order establishing uniform depreciation rates for telephone equipment used jointly for interstate and intrastate service. The Supreme Court rejected the argument, holding that Sec. 2(b)(1) reserved to the states the right to set equipment depreciation rates for equipment used in providing intrastate telephone service.
The Court went on to suggest, however, that the Commission's uniform depreciation schedule for equipment used jointly might have been valid if "it [were] not possible to separate the interstate and intrastate components of the asserted FCC regulation."
We agree with the Commission that the language of Louisiana PSC requires us to recognize an "impossibility" exception to Sec. 2(b)(1). The D.C. Circuit recently came to the same conclusion in NARUC III,
The impossibility exception, however, is a limited one. The FCC may not justify a preemption order merely by showing that some of the preempted state regulation would, if not preempted, frustrate FCC regulatory goals. Rather, the FCC bears the burden of justifying its entire preemption order by demonstrating that the order is narrowly tailored to preempt only such state regulations as would negate valid FCC regulatory goals. As the D.C. Circuit held in NARUC III, "a valid FCC preemption order must be limited to [state regulation] that would necessarily thwart or impede" the FCC's goals. Id. at 430 (emphasis added). "The FCC has the burden ... of showing with some specificity that [state regulation] ... would negate the federal policy...." Id. (emphasis added). We are therefore faced with the task of deciding whether the FCC's regulation of interstate enhanced services would necessarily be frustrated by all possible forms of state-imposed structural separation requirements and by all state-imposed nonstructural safeguards that are inconsistent with Computer III requirements.
Our review of the record fails to persuade us that the Computer III preemption orders are "limited to [state regulation] that would necessarily thwart or impede" valid FCC goals.
(1) Preemption of State Structural Separation Requirements
First, the FCC has failed to carry its burden of demonstrating that all state-imposed separation requirements would negate its policy of permitting the structural integration of basic and enhanced services offered on an interstate basis. The Commission argues that any requirement that a carrier separate its intrastate enhanced and basic services will necessarily force carriers to separate their interstate services as well, because the intra- and interstate components of enhanced services are structurally inseverable. See Phase I Reconsideration,
In addition, the FCC appears to base its inseverability argument on the assumption that state structural separation regulations would necessarily require separation of physical facilities. See Phase I Reconsideration,
The Commission has made a plausible argument that some forms of state structural separation requirements would negate its policy of permitting the integration of basic and enhanced services offered on an interstate basis. For example, a state-imposed requirement that carriers use separate physical facilities for all basic telephone and enhanced services offered on an intrastate basis would almost certainly force carriers to separate their interstate services as well. However, the fact that state separation requirements could conceivably take forms that would frustrate valid federal goals is insufficient under the narrow "impossibility" exception to justify the Commission's preemption of all state regulations requiring some form of structural separation.
(2) Preemption of State Nonstructural Safeguards
The record also fails to support the Commission's preemption of (1) all state nonstructural safeguards applicable to AT & T and the BOCs that are inconsistent with the nonstructural safeguards imposed on AT & T and the BOCs by the FCC, and (2) all state nonstructural safeguards applicable to the independent communications carriers that are more stringent than those imposed by the FCC on AT & T and the BOCs.
As with its arguments in defense of its preemption of all state structural separation requirements, the Commission's arguments in defense of its preemption of inconsistent nonstructural safeguards fail to support the full breadth of the FCC's preemption order. The FCC argues, for example, that "[m]any of the Computer III Open Network Architecture ("ONA") and Comparably Efficient Interconnection ("CEI") guidelines will require technical modifications to existing networks.... [S]uch technical requirements cannot be separated jurisdictionally." FCC Brief at 87 (emphasis added). As explained above, an argument that state regulation will negate valid federal purposes in "many" cases does not suffice to justify preemption of all state regulation in an area. The "impossibility" exception to Sec. 2(b)(1) is a narrow one that may be invoked only when state and federal regulation cannot feasibly coexist. As the Supreme Court made clear in Louisiana PSC, the FCC must do more than pay lip service to Congress' intent "to enact a dual regulatory system."
The Commission offers even less compelling justification for that part of its order preempting state nonstructural regulations applicable to the independents that are more stringent than those imposed by the Commission on AT & T and the BOCs. The Commission notes only that it is desirable "that [the independents] not be subject to a greater degree of regulation than are the BOC[s]," Phase II Order,
IV
THE PRECLUSION ISSUE
The Commission contends that the doctrines of administrative finality and res judicata bar judicial review of the state petitioners' challenge to the portion of the Computer III order preempting state tariffing of enhanced services. This part of the Computer III order simply reaffirms the Commission's previous action in Computer II, which was "affirm[ed] ... in its entirety" in Computer & Communications Indus. Ass'n v. FCC,
The doctrine of administrative finality generally bars a litigant from seeking review of administrative rulemaking after the statutory deadline for appeal has lapsed. See, e.g., Eagle-Picher Indus. Inc. v. EPA,
Nor is review of the tariffing preemption order barred by the doctrine of res judicata. Under res judicata, a final judgment on the merits ordinarily bars further claims by the parties based upon the same cause of action.39 See Montana v. United States,
We reject the Commission's res judicata claim. We hold that the petitioners in CCIA did not have a full and fair opportunity to challenge the Commission's preemption of state tariffing of enhanced services. The Commission's preemption order was buried in a footnote, see Computer II Further Reconsidered Decision,
It is conceivable that the petitioners in CCIA could have amended their petition to the D.C. Circuit to respond to the Commission's footnote. However, we are unwilling to conclude that this limited opportunity to respond to the FCC's footnote gave the state petitioners in CCIA a sufficiently full and fair opportunity to litigate. We are particularly unwilling to reach that conclusion in light of the public interest in the tariffing issue raised by petitioners and the public function that these state regulatory bodies serve. Cf. United States v. Mendoza,
V
CONCLUSION
In summary, we hold (1) that the FCC's substitution of nonstructural safeguards for the federal structural separation requirements to which the BOCs were subject was unlawfully arbitrary and capricious; and (2) that the FCC has failed to carry its burden of showing that its preemption orders are necessary to avoid frustrating its regulatory goals. We therefore grant the petition for review, vacate the Computer III Orders, and remand to the Commission for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BOOCHEVER, Circuit Judge, concurring in part, and dissenting in part:
I concur in the majority opinion except for Part II. As to Part II, I respectfully dissent from the majority's conclusion "that the Commission's decision to release the BOCs from the structural separation requirements is arbitrary and capricious and therefore in violation of Sec. 10(e) of the Administrative Procedure Act." Op. at 1239.
The FCC imposed structural separation on predivestiture AT & T in 1980 as part of Computer II. Phase I Order,
As the majority points out, in our review of the FCC's Computer III decision, we can set aside that decision only if it is "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law." 5 U.S.C. Sec. 706(2)(A) (1982); Op. at 1230.
The scope of review under the "arbitrary and capricious" standard is narrow and a court is not to substitute its judgment for that of the agency. Nevertheless, the agency must examine the relevant data and articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action including a "rational connection between the facts found and the choice made."
Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
We therefore must determine whether the FCC examined the relevant data and articulated a satisfactory explanation for its action. I agree with the majority that the Commission's cost/benefit analysis is the basis for its decision to eliminate structural separation requirements. I also agree that "[w]hile we scrutinize the FCC's evaluation of each individual cost and benefit, we make no attempt to exercise the judgment required in striking the balance between the competing costs and benefits." Op. at 1231. I fear, however, that the majority has substituted its own judgment in striking that balance.
In the course of its cost/benefit analysis, the Commission found "that the inefficiencies and other costs to the public associated with structural separation significantly outweigh the corresponding benefits." Phase I Order,
In assessing the benefits of structural separation, the FCC "conclude[d] that the benefits of structural separation in protecting ratepayers and the enhanced services market from potential anticompetitive practices by the BOCs are not significantly greater than such benefits provided by nonstructural safeguards." Phase I Order,
The other previous benefit identified by the FCC was limiting AT & T's and the BOCs' "ability to cross-subsidize [their] unregulated offerings by improperly allocating some costs of those offerings to [their] regulated operations." Phase I Order,
The majority finds that "the record yields no support for the Commission's position that market and technological changes since Computer II and the BOC Separation Order have reduced the danger of cross-subsidization by the BOCs." Op. at 1238. On this basis, the majority concludes that the Commission's entire balancing of costs and benefits was arbitrary and capricious. Id. The majority takes two positions on the issue of cross-subsidization as it relates to the FCC's ultimate decision: 1) recent market and technological developments in the telecommunications industry have not reduced the risk of BOC cross-subsidization, and 2) the nonstructural regulations proposed by the FCC were previously rejected by the agency as ineffective and so cannot be used now to justify the FCC's decision. I find neither of these positions tenable.
Recent Developments
Two of the numerous justifications the FCC advanced for its conclusion that recent developments have reduced the danger of cross-subsidization deserve particular attention. First, the Commission found that the monolithic power of AT & T was greatly diluted with its breakup and the creation of the smaller local BOCs. "Divestiture eliminated AT & T's control over the most significant operations it could use for cross-subsidization--its former local exchange companies." Phase I Order,
The majority rejects this analogy to GTE, "find[ing] no coherence in the Commission's policy shifts in deciding which carriers to subject to separation requirements." Op. at 1236. The majority is troubled that in Computer I, the Commission imposed structural separation based on gross revenues, but in Computer II exempted all carriers except AT & T from these requirements. The majority also looks suspiciously on the fact that "in its tentative ruling in Computer II, the Commission decided that GTE should be required to maintain structural separation but then reversed itself in the final decision." Op. at 1236 n. 23. The propriety of the Commission's ruling in Computer II is not before us. To the extent we may consider the Commission's past decisions to guide our evaluation of the FCC's current policy choice, however, I do not share the majority's bewilderment at the Commission's earlier decision to single out AT & T for continued imposition of structural separation requirements. That issue was presented to the D.C. Circuit in Computer and Communications Indus. Ass'n v. FCC,
[i]n reaching its decision to impose separation only on AT & T, the Commission considered four factors: (1) the carrier's ability to engage in anti-competitive activity through its control of local exchange facilities, (2) the carrier's ability to cross-subsidize its competitive activities through its monopoly services, (3) the degree to which the carrier possesses integrated research and manufacturing capabilities, and (4) the carrier's economic ability to enter the market through a separate subsidiary. The Commission also noted statistics regarding each carrier's revenues, market share, and market size.
Id. at 218-19 (footnote omitted). Thus, in contrast to the majority's characterization, the FCC did not use "national market power" in any talismanic sense, but as a shorthand notation for a multifactor inquiry. Moreover, "the Commission exhibited thoughtful deliberation by exempting GTE from the separation requirement after receiving more information about the nature and extent of GTE's resources." Id. at 219. I cannot agree with the majority that "[t]he FCC's classification of GTE has been at best inconsistent and at worst totally random," Op. at 1237, or that the FCC's prior inquiry provides us with "no basis on which to discern whether the FCC's current policy choice is rational." Id. at 1236.
The second recent development affecting the BOCs' ability to cross-subsidize is "[t]he availability of bypass and other new technologies [which] places some limits on the BOCs' ability to shift costs from their unregulated services to their regulated offerings without reducing the demand for those offerings." Phase I Order,
The FCC specifically did "not conclude ... that the BOCs' motivation to cross-subsidize has decreased because of these developments. Nor do[es it] underestimate the potential danger that BOCs could misallocate costs."
The FCC concluded, based on what I believe was a sufficient record, that the danger of cross-subsidization by the BOCs has been reduced with the breakup of AT & T and the availability of bypass technologies. Even if that reduction has been slight, it is for the Commission to weigh that reduction with the other relevant factors in reaching its ultimate decision. The majority agrees with the FCC that the costs of structural separation are at least as high as they were at the time of the FCC's decision in Computer II and the BOC Separation Order. Op. at 1232. The majority also agrees that prevention of discriminatory access is not as great a benefit of structural separation as it once was. Id. at 1233. Viewing the FCC's finding on cross-subsidization in light of these other factors, as I believe we must, I cannot say that the FCC's ultimate decision to abandon structural separation is unsupported by the record, or that it was arbitrary and capricious.
Nonstructural Regulations
The FCC also stated that "[w]hile we have found that structural separation no longer serves the public interest, that finding was explicitly conditioned on the adoption and implementation of an effective set of nonstructural regulations to guard against the continued potential for improper cost shifting and discrimination by dominant carriers." Id. at 1013. The question then becomes whether the nonstructural regulations proposed by the FCC to guard against cross-subsidization provide additional support for the FCC's decision to abandon the structural separation requirements. The majority is unable to "find any record support for the FCC's abandonment of its original position that cost-accounting regulations are relatively ineffective means of preventing improper cost-shifting." Op. at 1233. I disagree.
In connection with its abandonment of structural separation, the FCC established numerous nonstructural safeguards to reduce the danger of cross-subsidization and anti-competitive action by the BOCs, including: 1) adoption of the principle of full allocation of costs across services, rejecting the view that unregulated activities should bear only the incremental or marginal costs they cause, Joint Cost Order, 2 F.C.C.Rcd at 1312-13; (2) requiring that the additional costs of upgrading or replacing facilities primarily for the benefit of unregulated services be excluded from the regulated accounts, id. at 1313; (3) adoption of specific allocation rules requiring that a carrier charge nonregulated activity at the tariff rate for any tariffed services it uses, id. at 1318; (4) requiring allocation of costs directly to the relevant activity where possible, and otherwise assigning costs on the basis of a formula related to the allocation of other costs and expenses, id.; (5) adoption of rules governing transactions between affiliates, id. at 1337-38; (6) imposition of comparably efficient interconnection (CEI) and open network architecture (ONA) requirements, Phase I Order,
These requirements and the regulatory scheme they embody warrant our maximum deference. Reviewing the FCC's initial imposition of structural separation requirements in Computer II, the D.C. Circuit noted:
No aspect of the Computer II rules more warrants our deference than these requirements. The Commission, having chosen a permissible regulatory tool--structural separation--set out detailed plans for implementing it. These plans were based upon the Commission's own expertise and experience in regulating the communications industry and upon the comments of the members of that industry. This court is ill-prepared to decide which mechanical requirements would best implement the structural separation scheme. Our only province is to determine whether the separation requirements were "based on a consideration of the relevant factors and whether there has been a clear error of judgment."
Computer and Communications Indus.,
More fundamentally, however, just as we cannot look at the Commission's cross-subsidization determination in isolation, we cannot view the FCC's decision to impose nonstructural safeguards separately from its cost/benefit analysis of structural separation. The FCC's cross-subsidization and nonstructural safeguard determinations are simply factors in the weighing process which resulted in the Commission's ultimate decision to abandon structural separation. The FCC did not decide that the danger of cross-subsidization has been eliminated--only that it has been reduced, like the danger of inferior access, to the point where it is outweighed by the costs of structural separation. Similarly, the Commission did not determine that nonstructural safeguards are more effective than structural separation, or even as effective as structural separation--rather, it found that they are preferable to structural separation in light of the relative costs and benefits. The FCC rationally reached this conclusion based on the record before it.
As the majority opinion and this dissent make clear, the FCC considered numerous relevant factors before reaching its decision, including "the comments of various parties, business practices in the communications industry, the costs and benefits of various degrees of separation, and the efficacy of various separation tools." Computer and Communications Indus.,
We are engaged in reviewing decisions made in a highly technical, rapidly changing industry. I believe that the FCC has given adequate reasons for its decision to abandon structural separation and to substitute nonstructural safeguards.
Notes
The orders under review are: Report and Order, In re Amendment of Sections 64.702 of the Commission's Rules and Regulations (Third Computer Inquiry ) (Docket No. 85-229),
The FCC has authority to regulate interstate telecommunications pursuant to the Communications Act of 1934, 47 U.S.C. Secs. 151-613 (1982 & Supp.1987) ("Communications Act" or "Act")
Throughout this opinion we use the FCC's terms "basic" and "enhanced" to distinguish between regulated common carrier communications services, which consist largely of plain old telephone service (POTS), and unregulated data processing services which use the telephone network to convey information from remote computers to customers' terminals. In the FCC's formal terms, basic service is the offering of a "pure transmission capability over a communications path that is virtually transparent in terms of its interaction with customer supplied information." Final Decision, In re Amendment of Section 64.702 of the Commission's Rules and Regulations (Second Computer Inquiry),
See supra note 3
Local telephone exchanges are dubbed "bottlenecks" because they generally provide the sole access to the telecommunications network
Tentative Decision of the Commission, In re Regulatory and Policy Problems Presented by the Interdependence of Computer and Communication Services and Facilities (First Computer Inquiry),
Computer II Final Decision, supra note 3; on reconsideration
Customer premises equipment includes all terminal equipment kept on subscriber premises, ranging from ordinary telephones to computerized switchboards
These rules are set forth at 47 C.F.R. Sec. 64.702(c), (d) (1987). See also Computer II Final Decision,
AT & T remained subject to the 1956 antitrust consent decree when the FCC adopted Computer II. That decree had limited AT & T essentially to the provision of services that were "subject to regulation." Western Elec., 1956 Trade Cas. (CCH) p 68,246, at 71,137. The FCC expressed its belief in the Computer II decision that the 1956 decree did not bar AT & T from the offering of CPE and enhanced services on a separated basis insofar as those offerings were "subject to regulation" by the FCC. Thus, by subjecting AT & T (but no other carrier) to structural separation requirements, the FCC was arguably doing AT & T a favor by subjecting its CPE and enhanced services to regulation and thereby freeing AT & T to engage in those businesses without violating the 1956 consent decree. The 1956 decree was later vacated as part of the settlement of the 1974 government antitrust case against AT & T, and the pertinent restriction in the 1956 decree no longer was applicable. Computer & Communications Industry v. FCC,
Initially, the FCC required GTE to offer enhanced services through a separate subsidiary; however, on reconsideration, the Commission released GTE from the requirement. See Computer II Reconsidered Decision,
Unless otherwise indicated, we refer in this opinion to the regional holding companies and their wholly-owned telephone companies indiscriminately as the "BOCs."
The settlement agreement, as modified by the district court, is referred to as the Modified Final Judgment or "MFJ."
The MFJ defines "information services" as "the offering of a capability for generating, acquiring, storing, transforming, processing, retrieving, utilizing, or making available information which may be conveyed via telecommunications...." MFJ Section IV(J),
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, In re Policy and Rules Concerning the Furnishing of Customer Premises Equipment, Enhanced Services and Cellular Communications Services by the Bell Operating Companies,
The dissent characterizes the regional holding companies as "the smaller local BOCs." Dissent at 5788. According to the FCC, however, the post-divestiture BOCs still possess
concentrated control over monopoly bottleneck facilities in large, continguous geographic areas. The ... [BOCs] will own bottleneck facilities in virtually every major and medium-sized metropolitan and industrial area in the country: In contrast, even the largest of the independents, GTE, controls bottleneck facilities in mostly rural, widely scattered areas.
BOC Separation Order,
Compare BOC Separation Order,
See Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, supra note 16
The FCC did not propose specific accounting procedures and requested comments only "on the overall objectives" of cost allocation. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 50 Fed.Reg. at 33,591 p 69 n. 53
Once again, the FCC did an about-face from its position in the BOC Separation Order. Compare Phase I Order,
There are two components to this open-network policy: CEI (for "Comparably Efficient Interconnection"), which means each BOC must, pending more permanent changes, provide competitors with connections to the local exchange network that are equal to the connections available to the BOCs' own enhanced services; and ONA (for "Open Network Architecture"), which means each BOC must ultimately incorporate CEI concepts into the overall design of its basic service network
Cincinnati Bell's only discussion of the possibility of residential bypass was a reference to a cable TV vendor's press release announcing its intention to enter the telecommunications market sometime in the future. There was no indication of whether and when the vendor would make good on this press release
The dissent points out that the FCC conceded that the development of bypass technologies has not decreased the BOCs' motivation to cross-subsidize. Dissent at 1248-49. The dissent then reminds us that the FCC stated that it did not " 'underestimate the potential danger that BOCs could misallocate costs.' " Id. (quoting Phase I Order,
Moreover, in its tentative ruling in Computer II, the Commission decided that GTE should be required to maintain structural separation but then reversed itself in the final decision. Computer II Reconsidered Decision,
The dissent is correct that the propriety of the Commission's holding in Computer II is not before us. Dissent at 1248. We refer to the earlier Computer Inquiries to make the point that the FCC fails to provide us with any standard for determining when a carrier's monopoly revenues suffice to pose a threat of cross-subsidization
These are GTE's and United's revenues for 1978. See Computer II,
We have already discussed the irrelevance of ONA, CEI, or the other discriminatory access policies to cross-subsidization. See supra p. 1233
See Computer I Tentative Decision,
We note, however, that the elimination of structural separation might in the long run harm the enhanced services market. To the extent that the BOCs shift costs undetected, they have the potential to engage in anticompetitive predatory pricing in the enhanced services market
We agree with the dissent that "[t]he FCC's cross-subsidization and non-structural safeguard determinations are simply factors in the weighing process which resulted in the Commission's ultimate decision to abandon structural separation." Dissent at 1251. Because we conclude that these determinations are not supported by the record, we must find the Commission's decision arbitrary and capricious. We cannot guess at how the FCC would have balanced the many factors it considered if it had considered these two factors in the light in which the record portrayed them
See Phase I Order,
The ONA and CEI requirements of Computer III are applicable to the BOCs and AT & T, but not to the independent telephone companies. The preemption order leaves the door open to state regulations subjecting AT & T and the BOCs to nonstructural safeguards provided they are not inconsistent with ONA and CEI, as well as to state regulations subjecting the independent companies to nonstructural safeguards provided they are no more stringent than the ONA and CEI safeguards which Computer III imposes on AT & T and the BOCs. See Phase II Order,
A service provided on a common carrier basis is one that is offered to the public on standard terms. "[A] carrier will not be a common carrier where its practice is to make individualized decisions, in particular cases, whether and on what terms to deal." National Ass'n of Regulatory Util. Comm'rs v. FCC,
See 47 U.S.C. Sec. 153(h) (1982) (equating the two terms for purposes of the Act)
We reject the FCC's contention that Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
The FCC attaches great significance to its decision to regulate enhanced services pursuant to Title I, 47 U.S.C. Secs. 151-155, rather than Title II, 47 U.S.C. Secs. 201-222, of the Communications Act. Title II contains the Act's basic grant of authority to the Commission to regulate common carriers. Title I, although it contains no specific grant of jurisdiction to the FCC, has been read to confer upon the FCC "ancillary" authority beyond that contained in the Act's specific jurisdictional grants. The Commission's argument, in essence, is that the words "of any carrier" demonstrate that Sec. 2(b)(1) was meant to restrict the Commission's jurisdiction only in those cases in which the Commission has chosen to exercise its Title II authority to regulate common carriers. Because it has chosen to regulate enhanced services pursuant to Title I, the Commission argues, Sec. 2(b)(1) is simply inapplicable
We are unpersuaded. There is nothing in the language of the Act to suggest that the "dual regulatory system," Louisiana PSC,
Moreover, the Commission's argument misconceives the nature of its ancillary authority. Title I is not an independent source of regulatory authority; rather, it confers on the FCC only such power as is ancillary to the Commission's specific statutory responsibilities. See United States v. Southwestern Cable Co.,
See, e.g., 78 Cong.Rec. 4139, 8822-24 (1934)
"The term 'inside wiring' generally refers to the telephone wires within a customer's home or place of business that are on the customer's side of the point of intersection between the telephone company's communications facilities and the customer's facilities." Id. at 425
The Commission does not defend its preemption of state authority to tariff enhanced services under the impossibility exception. However, the Commission does claim that the states are precluded from challenging the tariffing portion of its preemption order. We reject the Commission's argument. See infra Part IV
We use the term "res judicata" to signify "claim preclusion," as opposed to "collateral estoppel" or "issue preclusion." See generally Migra v. Warren City School Dist. Bd. of Educ.,
The Commission's Computer II Further Reconsideration order was adopted October 7, 1981, and released October 30, 1981. The opening briefs of all petitioners challenging the Computer II preemption orders were submitted before the end of September 1981. The Commission does not dispute that "no party directly challenged this aspect [preemption of state tariffing of enhanced services] of the Commission's orders" in the CCIA litigation. FCC Brief at 11-12
CEI requires "that if a carrier offers an enhanced service, it should be required to offer network interconnection (or collocation) opportunities to others that are comparably efficient to the interconnection that its enhanced service enjoys." Id. at 1019. ONA differs from CEI only in that it is "broader in concept" than CEI, and that it deals not with service-specific standards but with "the overall design of a carrier's basic network facilities." Id. ONA requires that "all users of the basic network ... [be allowed] to interconnect to specific basic network functions and interfaces on an unbundled and 'equal access' basis." Id
Pursuant to this safeguard, "AT & T and the BOCs ... will be required, for all new network services or changes to existing network services that affect the interconnection of enhanced services with the network, to notify the enhanced services industry that such a change is planned." Id. at 1083
Under this requirement, AT & T and the BOCs' enhanced services operations are permitted to have access to information about customer use of the basic network services, "provided that [they] establish[ ] procedures to honor requests from customers that their [information] (i) be withheld from ... enhanced services personnel, and (ii) be released to other enhanced services vendors." Report and Order, 2 FCC Rec. 3072, 3093 (1987)
