Maine Mulls Consolidating Consolidated to Save Numbers
Companies have questions about a Maine plan to combine Consolidated Communications rate centers statewide. The Maine Public Utilities Commission received comments last week in an investigation (docket 2023-00009) of the feasibility of large-scale rate center consolidation in the 207 area…
Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article
If your job depends on informed compliance, you need International Trade Today. Delivered every business day and available any time online, only International Trade Today helps you stay current on the increasingly complex international trade regulatory environment.
code so as to more efficiently distribute phone numbers. Consolidated explained in a July 7 filing how it might combine all its Maine rate centers into one, which the company acknowledged hasn’t been done before. More study is needed, the Telecommunications Association of Maine (TAM) commented Friday. TAM fears a large scale rate center consolidation could affect its 14 RLEC members' toll and local service plans and rate structures, possibly confusing customers and increasing RLECs' costs and rates. Rate center consolidation might be a good idea, but more information is needed, said Charter Communications. The PUC should hold more workshops to better vet the plan, said Comcast. “Consolidated’s proposal is an industry-impacting event in Maine." The proposal raises many questions and concerns, said GoNetSpeed. “The plan has the potential to significantly impact all voice service providers, particularly the small, legacy ILEC companies who have existing contractual agreements with Consolidated to exchange network traffic." It "would need to be undertaken carefully," but rate center consolidation may be "a viable approach to help Maine extend the life of the single 207 area code,” said CTIA. But it's too soon to say what implementation timeline is reasonable, it said. The PUC should assess financial and public safety impacts and consider whether LECs besides Consolidated would also merge rate centers, said CTIA: The commission “should ensure that any plan considers and mitigates any unintended consequences that would result from having one consolidated LEC and other LECs that have not made the same changes to their operations.” Maine’s public advocate said it “would like to see a qualitative and quantitative description … of the operational efficiencies and long-term operational cost savings that Consolidated anticipates, and how it plans to recover the costs for the work it intends to do.”