TEXAS OFFICE OF PUBLIC UTILITY COUNSEL; NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF STATE UTILITY CONSUMER ADVOCATES, Petitioners, versus FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Respondents.
No. 00-60434
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FIFTH CIRCUIT
September 10, 2001
REVISED OCTOBER 1, 2001
Before EMILIO M. GARZA and PARKER, Circuit Judges, and ELLISON,* District Judge.
EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:
This petition for review of the CALLS Order1 represents the latest challenge to the Federal
I
We must briefly review the regulatory regime of the telephone industry to better understand the issues presented in this petition. The telephone industry is comprised of two sets of carriers. Local exchange carriers (“LECs“) provide local basic telephone service, while interexchange carriers (“IXCs“) offer long-distance service. Since the divestiture of AT&T in 1984, robust competition has existed in the long-distance market with IXCs trying to recruit new customers and lure subscribers from each other. On the other hand, LECs until recently had natural monopolies on local service in their respective regions, because they own the network infrastructure necessary to make telephone calls. The prohibitive capital costs involved in laying out a separate infrastructure deterred potential competitors from entering the local service market. The 1996 Act made competition in the local basic service market one of its main goals. Congress prodded incumbent local exchange carriers
* District Judge of the Southern District of Texas, sitting by designation.
The 1996 Act‘s provision of allowing LECs to use ILECs’ infrastructure resembled an arrangement already shared by IXCs and ILECs: IXCs rely on ILECs’ network to originate and terminate long-distance calls. More technically, the IXCs use the “local loop,” which refers to telephone wires running from a person‘s telephone to the local telephone switch. Whenever someone makes a long-distance phone call, he or she taps into the local network, where the call is then routed between a LEC local switch and an IXC switch. The costs incurred by the ILECs in providing the use of this infrastructure are called “loop costs.”
Two sources of revenues allow the ILECs to recover the loop costs. First, all end-users of basic local service pay a flat Subscriber Line Charge (“SLC“) that appears in their monthly telephone bills. Prior to the CALLS Order, the FCC capped the SLC at $3.50 per month: ILECs can charge less than $3.50 per month, but it cannot levy an access charge above that amount. The SLC alone is insufficient to defray the loop costs entirely. Thus, the FCC assesses an access charge against IXCs, which in turn usually pass down these costs to end-users. At first, the FCC levied a traffic-sensitive fee called the Common Carrier Line Charge (“CCL“) against IXCs. The FCC later replaced the CCL with the flat-rate Presubscribed Interexchange Carrier Charge (“PICC“). See Access Charge Reform Order, Price Cap Reform Performance Review for Local Exchange Carriers, Transport Structure and Pricing, End User Common Line Charges, CC Docket Nos. 96-262, 94-1, 91-213 and 95-72, First Report and Order, FCC 97-158, 62 Fed. Reg. 31867 (released May 16, 1997) (“Access
In addition to fostering competition in the local telephone service market, the 1996 Act had another key goal of continuing the provision of affordable universal service to all Americans. Traditionally, the phone bills of poor and rural customers have been implicitly subsidized by rate manipulation. High-volume long-distance callers and urban residents pay artificially higher phone bills to subsidize and support universal service for others. Congress recognized that these implicit subsidies could not continue under the market-based regime ushered in by the 1996 Act. In a competitive market, a carrier that subsidizes rural or poor customers by charging below-cost rates while billing above-cost rates to urban customers will be undercut by a competitor offering at-cost rates to urban end-users. Congress wanted to continue subsidizing universal service, but in a way more consistent with the market-oriented reforms. The 1996 Act thus required that the implicit subsidy system of rate manipulation be replaced with explicit subsidies for universal service. To implement the goals of the 1996 Act, the FCC issued a series of orders.
The FCC first issued its Access Charge Reform Order. As noted before, the order abolished the traffic-sensitive CCL fees assessed against IXCs, and replaced them with the flat-rate PICC. By ensuring that access charges more accurately reflected the actual costs incurred, the FCC hoped that it would facilitate the shift to a competitive market. The order also increased the SLC cap for multi-line business customers on the assumption that they could afford such a price increase. It, however, did not increase the SLC cap for primary residences and single-line businesses. Several IXCs
The FCC also issued In re Federal-State Joint Board on Universal Service, CC Docket No. 96-45, Report and Order, 12 FCC Rcd. 8776 (1997) (“Universal Service Order“). This order emphasized that implicit subsidies for universal service should be gradually removed from interstate access charges, and replaced with an explicit universal service fund derived from percentage-based fees levied against telecommunications carriers. This Circuit remanded parts of the order, but we upheld the requirement that LECs must reduce access charges by an amount commensurate with the money received for the explicit universal service fund. See Tex. Office of Pub. Util. Counsel v. FCC, 183 F.3d 393 (5th Cir. 1999) (“TOPUC I“).
Finally, the FCC addressed the issue of the “X-Factor” in its In the Matter of Price Cap Performance Review for Local Exchange Carriers, CC Docket 96-262, Fourth Report and Order, 12 FCC Rcd 16,642 (1997) (“Price Cap Review“). FCC had annually reduced LECs’ price-caps by imposing what it dubbed the X-Factor, a percentage number that represented the LECs’ increase in productivity minus the rate of inflation. By lowering the price-caps (and hence the amount that LECs could charge consumers), the X-Factor pressured LECs to become more efficient and to lower their
While revisiting the two remanded orders from USTA and TOPUC I, the FCC considered and adopted the CALLS Order, a five-year transitional plan intended to help resolve the thorny issues of access charges. This order originates from the work of the Coalition for Affordable Local and Long Distance Service (“CALLS“), a group of major IXCs and ILECs. Although ILECs and IXCs traditionally have held opposing views on telecommunications reform, they worked together in jointly presenting the CALLS proposal. The FCC conducted a notice-and-comment proceeding pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA“) by soliciting public comments on the proposal and receiving dozens of comments. After making some changes, the FCC submitted a modified CALLS proposal, and again solicited comments but on an abbreviated schedule. Several weeks later, the FCC issued the final CALLS Order.
The CALLS Order promulgates four key changes, all of which are challenged in this petition for review. First, the FCC abolishes the PICC fees assessed against IXCs. Second, to compensate for the loss of revenues from the elimination of the PICC, the order raises the SLC price cap for primary residential lines. It will increase from $3.50 to $6.50 over a period of several years. The FCC changed the fee structure, believing that it would encourage more competition and lead to lower rates overall for consumers. Third, the FCC reintroduces a 6.5 percent X-Factor, but switches it from
The parties challenging the CALLS Order include the Texas Office of Public Utility Counsel, as well as the National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates and the intervenor Consumer Federation of America, both of which are consumer advocacy groups.2 In their petition, they make two broad challenges against the order. The Petitioners first contend that the CALLS Order did not comport with the APA requirements. They characterize the CALLS Order as the product of a surreptitious political deal between the respondent FCC and the respondent-intervenor CALLS Coalition. The Petitioners also challenge the order on substantive grounds, claiming that it betrays, among other things, the 1996 Act‘s requirement of affordable universal access. We first address the substantive statutory challenge, and then the procedural objections to the CALLS Order.
II
In reviewing the Petitioners’ substantive claims, we apply the two-step analysis set forth in Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, 467 U.S. 837, 842-43, 104 S.Ct. 2778, 2781-2783, 81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984). In step one, we look to see whether Congress has spoken directly on the precise question at issue. See id. at 843, 104 S.Ct. at 2781. If Congress has done so, we must “give effect to [Congress‘] unambiguously expressed intent.” Id. at 843, 104 S.Ct. at 2781. If the
We address in order the Petitioners’ three main objections to the CALLS Order: whether the SLC price cap increase violates
A
The Petitioners object to the increase in the SLC caps for residential and single-line business customers, alleging that it violates the affordability mandate of
The Petitioners point to two statutory provisions that allegedly preclude the FCC from increasing the SLC cap.
We hold that the FCC‘s interpretation
We first discuss
Similarly, we hold that the FCC‘s reading of
Thus, while the FCC cannot flatly ignore or contravene the goal of affordability, Congress gave it the latitude to formulate a policy that considers affordability, along with other policy goals of the 1996 Act. We cannot arrogate to ourselves this policy-making function, merely because we (or the Petitioners) believe that the FCC is not maximizing the affordability goal at the expense of other objectives. As we explain later, the increase in the SLC cap represents FCC‘s reasoned attempt to maintain the difficult balance between the principles of ensuring affordability and encouraging competition.
Notwithstanding the statutory provisions, we cannot uphold FCC‘s decision to increase the
The FCC has articulated rational reasons to the degree that it has changed prior policies.4 Simply put, the telecommunications market has undergone dramatic changes in the past few years, and it continues to do so. In light of this dynamic market, the FCC has walked a delicate tightrope between the 1996 Act‘s twin goals of ensuring affordability and promoting local service competition. We have implicitly recognized that an uneasy tension exists between these two goals: although increased competition will ultimately make phone service more affordable, the transition from a highly-regulated industry to a market-oriented regime can bring some growing pains. See Alenco, 201 F.3d at 615. As a consequence, while the “FCC must see to it that both universal service and local competition are realized,” we have also recognized that “Congress has conferred broad
Citing several factors and changes in the market, the FCC believed that its prior concerns about affordability were “sufficiently mitigated to allow an increase in the SLC” from $3.50 to $6.50 over the course of several years. CALLS Order, ¶ 86. First, the FCC noted that the prior SLC limit of $3.50 was established in 1984; if adjusted for inflation, it would stand at $4.94. See id. at 85. In light of this, the FCC did not find that an increase in the SLC cap would raise affordability concerns. Second, it cited empirical evidence suggesting that telephone subscribership would not be “negatively impacted” by such an increase. See id. at ¶ 86. The FCC also noted that increased funding for the Lifeline support program allayed prior fears of unaffordability. Finally, the FCC promised to conduct a cost-study before the SLC is scheduled to rise above $5.00.
In addition, the FCC believed that pro-competitive benefits from the abolition of the PICC would offset any increase in the SLC. Although the PICC is technically assessed against the IXCs, they usually pass it down, with added costs, to the end-users. See id. Eliminating the PICC would remove such unnecessary transaction costs. The FCC further reasoned that consumers would benefit because the PICC, as an external cost imposed on all IXCs, is relatively resistant to competitive pressures. See CALLS Order, ¶ 89. Consequently, the FCC believed that it would be difficult for the IXCs to reduce and compete away this fee. See id. On the other hand, only the ILECs assess the SLC, which is imposed directly against the consumers. The newly entering LECs are not required to charge the SLC. Thus, the FCC held that competitive pressure could force ILECs to reduce the SLC through efficiency gains. See id.
The Petitioners strongly dispute the FCC‘s reasoning. For example, they reply that the FCC‘s
B
The Petitioners also challenge the CALLS Order on the ground that it recovers an unreasonably disproportionate amount of joint and common costs of universal service from end-users. At dispute is the meaning of
One of the Petitioners, TOPUC, had presented this very same argument in challenging the Access Charge Reform Order, which had increased the SLC price cap on multi-line businesses. The Eighth Circuit wholly rejected that argument in Southwestern Bell. It noted that “[b]ecause the SLC is a method of recovering loop costs, not an allocation of those costs between supported and
C
In enacting the 1996 Act, Congress established the goal that network access charges should eventually reflect the actual costs of providing and administering the particular network service. To meet this objective, the FCC has primarily relied on market forces to restructure the access charges. The Petitioners maintain that the FCC has failed to conduct a comprehensive, forward-looking cost-study in violation of the 1996 Act. We reject this argument.
The 1996 Act does not compel the FCC to conduct forward-looking cost-studies because the cost-study requirements of
The Eighth Circuit earlier upheld the FCC‘s reliance on the market to restructure rates. See Southwestern Bell, 153 F.2d at 547 (noting that “[d]ue to the difficulty in creating a reliable forward-looking cost model for interstate access services, a prescriptive plan would not be feasible at the present time“). The Petitioners remind the court that nearly three years have passed since the Eighth Circuit‘s decision. Although we recognize that the FCC has not acted as quickly as the Petitioners would want, we cannot say that the FCC has acted arbitrarily or capriciously, given the transitional nature of the CALLS Order. See Alenco, 201 F.3d at 616 (giving special deference to transitional rules). We are further assured by the FCC‘s promise to conduct a cost-study before the SLC cap is set to rise over five dollars. In sum, we believe that the Eighth Circuit‘s analysis in Southwestern Bell is apropos here:
The FCC has reasonably exercised its predictive judgment in concluding that competition in the local telephone services market will effectively drive interstate access charges to economic costs. If, in light of the actual market developments, the Commission determines that competition is not having the anticipated effect on access charges, the agency presumably will revisit the issue. We cannot conclude at this time that the FCC‘s decision to adopt a market-based approach was arbitrary . . . in light of the broad discretion Congress has given the Commission in setting interstate rates.
Southwestern Bell, 153 F.3d at 547.
III
The Petitioners allege that the FCC‘s procedures in formulating the CALLS Order were fatally
In reviewing an agency‘s procedures under the APA, we apply the arbitrary and capricious standard, recognizing that particular deference is accorded to transitional rules. See Alenco, 201 F.3d at 616. We cannot “substitute [our] judgment for that of the agency.” State Farm at 43, 103 S.Ct. at 2866. Our role is “to review the agency action to determine whether the decision ‘was based on a consideration of the relevant factors and whether there was a clear error of judgment.‘” State of Louisiana v. Verity, 853 F.2d 322, 327 (5th Cir. 1988) (quoting State Farm).
A
The Petitioners characterize the CALLS Order as a tainted political compromise between the FCC and the CALLS Coalition. Specifically, the abbreviated second round of notice-and-comment and the ex parte contact between the FCC and the CALLS Coalition suggest that the FCC had given approval to the proposed order before considering public comment, according to the Petitioners. We hold that the CALLS Order is the product of a valid, if not perfect, informal notice-and-comment rulemaking proceeding. The APA requires federal agencies that conduct informal rulemaking to give notice of a proposed rule and consider public comment on it. See
After receiving and considering these comments, the FCC revised the proposed order and released a modified CALLS proposal which took into account concerns about the affordability of the increase in the SLC price cap. The FCC held an abbreviated notice-and-comment period for the revised draft of the proposed order, and issued the final CALLS Order about two months later. The Petitioners complain that this shortened second round of notice-and-comment violated the APA. Furthermore, they point to several ex parte contacts between the FCC and the CALLS Coalition. According to the Petitioners, the abbreviated schedule for the revised draft of the proposed order, along with the ex parte communication, suggests that the FCC gave “at least tacit approval [of the revised proposed order] . . . long before initiation of the second comment period.” In short, they accuse the FCC of flouting the procedural safeguards that ensure meaningful participation by the public in the rulemaking process.
We find the Petitioners’ objections without merit. Even if we assume that the abbreviated second round of notice-and-comment did not fully meet the APA requirements, it would not undermine the validity of the CALLS Order because the FCC was not legally required to offer an additional period of notice-and-comment. We have held that “[i]f, after notice and comment, the agency alters the proposed rule, a new comment period will not be required so long as the modified
The revised version of the proposed order was a “logical outgrowth” of the original proposal, which the Petitioners concede met the APA requirements. The modified proposal retained the essential framework of the original proposal, but it added a few provisions to allay affordability concerns (e.g., requiring a cost-study before increasing the SLC cap over five dollars). In other words, had the FCC not even held a second notice-and-comment period, the Petitioners would have no grounds for complaint. We believe that the FCC‘s second notice-and-comment period, even if it was abbreviated, went above and beyond what the APA legally requires.
Moreover, while interested parties should be able to participate meaningfully in the rulemaking process, the public “need not have an opportunity to comment on every bit of information influencing an agency‘s decision.” See State of Tex. v. Lyng, 868 F.2d 795, 800 (5th Cir. 1989) (allowing an agency to withdraw regulations and announce modified ones without taking additional comments). Accordingly, the petitioners must show how they were prejudiced by the FCC‘s failure to solicit additional comments, and how they would have responded had they been given the opportunity to submit additional responses.6 See id. at 799. The Petitioners fail to meet this burden.
We also reject the Petitioners’ speculative and perhaps sinister scenario imputed to the ex parte communication between the FCC and the interested parties. The APA permits ex parte contact between an agency and private parties as long as the agency adequately gives notice of such contact.
Generally, ex parte contact is not shunned in the administrative agency arena as it is in the judicial context. In fact, agency action often demands it. As the D.C. Circuit explained, “Under our system of government, the very legitimacy of general policymaking performed by unelected administrators depends in no small part upon the openness, accessibility and amenability of these officials to the needs and ideas of the public from whom their ultimate authority derives, and upon whom their commands must fall.” Sierra Club v. Costle, 657 F.2d 298, 400-401 (D.C. Cir. 1981).
Finally, we do not agree with the Petitioners that the FCC‘s private contact with interested parties triggered the procedural mandates of the Negotiated Rulemaking Act of 1990 (“NRA“). See
B
Although we do not agree with the Petitioners’ contention that the FCC merely averaged the estimates, we find that the FCC failed to exercise sufficiently independent judgment in establishing the $650 million amount. See id. The FCC does not explain how it actually derived that figure, and instead seems to invoke the Goldilocks approach to rulemaking: noting that “[s]ome commentators argue that the size of the interstate access universal service mechanism is too large [while] [o]ther commentators argue that the size . . . is too small,” the FCC apparently believes that its approach is just right because it falls reasonably within the range of estimates. CALLS Order, 204. The FCC also relies heavily on the fact that both the IXCs and LECs, which traditionally have had opposing interests, agree on the amount. See id. at ¶ 202 (“Because of the divergent interests of these parties, we believe that the $650 million represents a sufficient amount . . .“). An agency abdicates its role as a rational decision-maker if it does not exercise its own judgment, and instead cedes near-total deference to private parties’ estimates—even if the parties agree unanimously as to the estimated
We recognize that identifying a specific amount is an “imprecise exercise,” and that our review of the Universal Service Fund is especially deferential due to its transitional nature. See id. at 201. However, the FCC must provide some explanation as to why it found one study more persuasive than the other, even if it does not determine a precise amount as the only “correct” figure. The CALLS Order hints at some reasoned analysis, suggesting that the AT&T study applied the FCC‘s synthesis model, while the ALTS and Time Warner studies made unwarranted assumptions. See CALLS Order at 202, 204. But the CALLS Order fails to address other studies. See Natural Res. Def. Council v. EPA, 859 F.2d 156, 194 (D.C. Cir. 1988) (requiring some independent analysis by the agency prior to adoption of a rule).
We remand to the FCC for further analysis and explanation in regards to the $650 million Universal Service Fund.7
C
We also remand the X-Factor issue, finding that the FCC lacked a rational basis in the record to support the 6.5 percent figure. Prior to the CALLS Order, the FCC had designated the X-Factor
In its CALLS Order, the FCC reintroduced the same 6.5 percent X-Factor, but stated that the revamped X-Factor serves a different function as a “transitional mechanism that operates to reduce rates at a certain pace, and [is no longer] . . . linked to a specific measure of productivity.” CALLS Order, ¶ 140. Therefore, the FCC argues that the CALLS Order does not conflict with the D.C. Circuit‘s remand order in USTA, because the court had only required further justification of the 6.5% figure in light of its role as a productivity proxy. Now that the X-Factor no longer is tied to productivity, the FCC claims that the 6.5 percent figure is acceptable. We disagree.
The new X-Factor suffers from the same infirmity as the prior one: the FCC has failed to show a rational basis as to how it derived the 6.5 percent figure.8 See State Farm at 56, 103 S.Ct. at 2873. Even if the X-Factor is no longer tethered to any productivity measure, the FCC still needs to provide
IV
We uphold most parts of the CALLS Order, but remand to the FCC for further analysis and explanation of two portions of the CALLS Order: the $650 million Universal Service Fund and the 6.5% X-Factor.
The petition for review is DENIED IN PART and GRANTED IN PART. The CALLS Order is AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, and REMANDED IN PART, in accordance with this opinion.
