Petitioner Qwest Communications International Inc. (“Qwest”) seeks our review of two orders of the Federal Communications Commission (the “Commission”) pertaining to number portability:
Telephone Number Portability, First Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,
CC Docket No. 95-116, FCC 96-286,
Background
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 (the “Act”)
2
“fundamentally restructured local telephone markets. States may no longer enforce laws that impede competition, and incumbent LECs are subject to a host of duties intended to facilitate market entry.”
AT&T Corp. v. Iowa Utilities Bd.,
Number portability is “the ability of users of telecommunications services to retain, at the same location, existing telecommunications numbers without impairment of quality, reliability, or convenience when switching from one telecommunications carrier to another.” Id. § 153(30). Number portability “is essential to meaningful competition in the provision of local exchange services.” First RepoH and Order ¶ 28. However, as the Commission observes in its brief, “[t]he need to port numbers does not arise in all forms of competitive entry. If a new entrant does not operate its own separate local exchange switch (for example, if a new entrant merely ‘resells’ the telephone services of an incumbent), a customer can change providers without changing its phone number.” Resp. Br. at 5. Thus, an LEC is required to port numbers only when a customer switches service to a new telecommunications service provider that operates its own switch.
In accordance with § 251(b)(2), the Commission required “[a]ll LECs [to] provide a long-term database method for number portability in the 100 largest ... *890 MSAs by December 31, 1998, in accordance with the deployment schedule ..., in switches for which another carrier has made a specific request for the provision of number portability.” 47 C.F.R. § 52.23(b)(1); accord First Report and Order ¶ 77. After December 31, 1998, LECs are required to deploy number portability in switches in the 100 largest MSAs for which no request was previously made and in all other MSAs (which we refer to as “smaller MSAs”) upon request. 4 47 C.F.R. §§ 52.23(b)(2)(iv), 52.23(c); accord First Report and Order ¶ 80; First Reconsideration Order ¶ 107. Until the deployment of long-term number portability, “[a]ll LECs shall provide transitional number portability measures ... as soon as reasonably possible upon receipt of a specific request from another telecommunications carrier....” 5 47 C.F.R. § 52.27(a); accord First Report and Order ¶¶ 110-14.
The Act also requires that “[t]he cost of ... number portability ... be borne by all telecommunications carriers on a competitively neutral basis as determined by the Commission.” 47 U.S.C. § 251(e)(2). The Commission did not actually make such a determination. Rather, the Commission first defined the phrase “competitively neutral,” to mean that “the cost of number portability borne by each carrier [should] not affect significantly any carrier’s ability to compete with other carriers for customers in the marketplace.” First Report and Order ¶ 131. The Commission then set forth two criteria that a state’s cost recovery mechanisms must satisfy to ensure competitively neutral cost allocation. First, the mechanism must “not ... [g]ive one telecommunications carrier an appreciable, incremental cost advantage over another telecommunications carrier, when competing for a specific subscriber.” 47 C.F.R. § 52.29(a); accord First Report and Order ¶ 132. Second, the mechanism must not “[h]ave a disparate effect on the ability of competing telecommunications carriers to earn a normal return on their investment.” 47 C.F.R. § 52.29(b); accord First Report and Order ¶ 135. “In setting forth these criteria, however, [the Commission] left to the states the determination of the exact cost recovery mechanism to be utilized.” Fourth Reconsideration Order ¶ 32; accord 47 C.F.R. § 52.29.
The Commission did, however, articulate four cost recovery mechanisms that, if adopted by a state regulatory body, would ensure competitively neutral allocation of interim number portability costs. Three of these mechanisms, some of which various states had already adopted, allocated costs according to each carrier’s market share as determined by the carrier’s number of ported numbers, telephone numbers (or lines), or gross revenue. First Report and Order ¶ 136. The fourth mechanism, and the one with which Qwest particularly takes issue, “requirefd] each carrier to pay for its own costs of currently available number portability measures.... ” Id.; accord Fourth Report and Order ¶¶ 48-49.
In its petition for review of the Orders, Qwest argues that the Commission’s failure to create a federal recovery mechanism for costs associated with the provision of interim number portability (1) violated 47 U.S.C. § 251(e)(2), and (2) constituted an unconstitutional taking by the federal government. Because Qwest lacks standing to challenge the Orders as they pertain to MSAs in which Qwest has deployed long-term number portability, and because Qwest’s petition is not ripe as it pertains to MSAs in which Qwest has not deployed long-term portability, we do not reach the merits of Qwest’s petition.
*891 Discussion
MSAs in Which Qwest Has Deployed Long-term Number Portability: Standing
Although subsequent to briefing the Commission has -withdrawn its argument that Qwest lacks standing to bring its petition, we consider the issue sua sponte in examining our own jurisdiction.
Skrzypczak v. Kauger,
Qwest has not established that it has suffered injury in fact in any of the MSAs in which it has deployed long-term number portability because Qwest has failed to demonstrate that a state required Qwest to port
any
telephone numbers in those MSAs. In fact, some seven months after long-term number portability mechanisms were to be deployed in the 100 largest MSAs in which a request for number portability had been made, the Commission found that “petitioners [including Qwest] ... have not shown the actual impact of the guidelines based on state orders” and that there was no “rate order under which the impact of the cost recovery guidelines [could] be evaluated.... ”
Fourth Report and Order
¶ 63;
accord
Pet. Br. at 13 (including Qwest within the class of petitioners that asserted the takings claim before the Commission). One district court has upheld the Oregon Public Utility Commission’s decision to require Qwest to bear its own costs in Oregon, but that court also noted that there was “[n]o evidence ... presented ... to show that WorldCom- has purchased any services pursuant to this Agreement, nor is there any assurance that it ever will.”
US West Communications, Inc. v. Worldcom Technologies, Inc.,
Qwest relies heavily upon the Supreme Court’s decision in
Clinton v. City of New York,
Clinton
stands for the proposition that a party has standing to challenge the legality of a government action (in
Clinton,
a presidential line item veto) where that action revives “a substantial contingent liability [which] immediately and directly affects the borrowing power, financial strength, and fiscal planning of the potential obligor” (in
Clinton,
a tax liability in excess of two billion dollars).
Thus, unlike the Clinton Court, we are the beneficiaries of hindsight. We need not speculate as to how the Orders might affect Qwest, but instead can determine how the Orders in fact affected Qwest. Clinton, therefore, provides no basis upon which Qwest can establish standing to challenge the Orders as they relate to Qwest’s provision of interim number portability in the MSAs in which it has deployed long-term number portability.
Contrary to Qwest’s contention, we do not believe that Qwest has standing to challenge the Commission’s orders “simply by virtue of being ‘a member of the regulated class.’” Pet. Reply Br. at 5 (quoting
Cronin v. F.A.A.,
We are mindful of the procedural posture of Qwest’s appeal: “Because Article Ill’s standing requirement does not apply to agency proceedings, [Qwest] had no reason to include facts sufficient to establish standing as a part of the administrative record.”
Northwest Environmental Defense Ctr. v. Bonneville Power Admin.,
We strongly suggest that in future cases parties litigating in this Court under circumstances [in which the case originated in a court not subject to Article III of the Constitution] take pains to *893 supplement the record in any manner necessary to enable us to address with as much precision as possible any question of standing that may be raised.
The authority upon which Qwest relies does not require a contrary conclusion. Application of the Sixth Circuit’s analysis in
North American Aviation Properties v. National Transportation Safety Board
to this case would require that we look only to the administrative record to determine Qwest’s standing.
Interim Number Portability in MSAs in Uohich Qwest Has Not Yet Deployed Long-term Number Portability: Ripeness
We also decline to consider Qwest’s petition as it relates to interim number portability in MSAs in which it has not yet provided long-term number portability for lack of ripeness. We decline to review administrative decisions unless they “arise in the context of a controversy ‘ripe’ for judicial resolution.”
Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner,
Qwest has not shown that it has or will provide interim number portability in MSAs in which it has not yet deployed long-term number portability, including Oregon.
Cf. U.S. West,
By withholding consideration, we will also “benefit from further factual development of the issues presented.”
Ohio Forestry,
*895
In sum, we decline to “entangl[e] [ourselves] in [an] abstract disagreement[] over administrative policies” because Qwest has not felt the effect of the Orders “in a concrete way.”
Abbott Laboratories,
Until Qwest suffers actual or imminent injury, and “[p]ending the development of ... a [ripe] controversy, [Qwest] need not fear preclusion by reason of the 60-day stipulation in 28 U.S.C. § 2344. A time limitation on petitions for judicial review, it should be apparent, can run only against challenges ripe for review.”
Baltimore Gas and Elec. Co. v. I.C.C.,
Qwest’s petition is DISMISSED.
Notes
. We refer to these orders collectively as the "Orders.”
. See the historical and statutory notes to 47 U.S.C. § 609 for a list of the sections enacted by the Act and those sections amended by the Act.
.Local loops “connectQ telephones to switches.”
AT&T,
. LECs must deploy long-term number portability in additional switches in the 100 largest MSAs within 30 to 180 days of the request, depending upon the current capabilities of the switch. 47 C.F.R. § 52.23(b)(2)(iv)(A-D). In the smaller MSAs, LECs must deploy long-term number portability within six months of a request. Id. § 52.23(c).
. We refer to "transitional number portability” as "interim number portability,” the term used by the Commission in the Orders.
. If the party makes this showing to the court’s satisfaction, “the court may order the additional evidence and any counter evidence the opposite party desires to offer to be taken by the agency.” Id.
. Thus, even if we were to accept Qwest’s argument that “the [Commission] cannot rely on states to fulfill the [Commission's] own constitutional responsibility,” and that the Orders "provid[e] no compensation at all, a result that by definition fails to provide the 'just *895 compensation’ required by the Fifth Amendment,” Pet. Br. at 35, Qwest’s takings claim against the Commission would nevertheless be premature.
. While we cited
MFS
as supporting the Commission’s definition of "competitively neutral” in
RT Communications, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission,
