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CRTC starts Internet wholesale pricing hearing

CRTC starts Internet wholesale pricing hearing

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 10 Jul 2011 For: Network World Canada Creator

The telecom regulator begins a hearing to hone its unpopular decision on usage-based billing and set wholesale pricing for independent Internet providers so they can offer high-speed access equal to big carriers.

Arguably the three most despised words in the country at the beginning of the year were usage-based billing.

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) had just approved it for wholesale Internet pricing, which essentially meant incumbent phone and cable companies could force their billing systems on independent Internet service providers, ending their ability to offer unlimited access plans.

But under huge public and political pressure, the commission was forced to retreat.

On Monday the CRTC begins a six-day hearing again into how it will balance conflicting goals: Create a wholesale pricing regime for residential Internet services that’s fair to incumbents, allows ISPs who have been losing market share to compete them, encourages both groups to offer innovative products and invest in new networks.

It will also wrestle with whether that new pricing framework should include some form of usage-based pricing, but one that doesn’t go as far as its earlier decision which the Harper government said flatly it would overturn.
[You can listen to the hearing through the CRTC streamling audio link here.]
 

 
For independent Internet providers like Primus Canada, Teksavvy Solutions and others, the hearing is vital to their survival: After dominating the residential Internet market in the early years of the World Wide Web, they are now reduced to holding a mere six per cent of subscribers.

Having torpedoed UBB, they hope the commission will offer them a way to fight back. For this hearing will also finalize wholesale pricing for a new set of services from incumbents, who were ordered last August to give ISPs access to their latest and fastest Internet speeds.  The commission is so anxious for ISPs to be able to offer their customers speeds that will match those offered by phone and cable companies that it created an interim fee schedule that kicks in July 14. That will be replaced by the final decision, expected in the fall.


 
The hearing will be dominated by presenations from the carriers, ISPs and public interest groups. But the commission is also collecting options from the public. It has recieved 100,832 comments, including 97,833 from the Openmedia.ca lobby effort.

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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon I'm assistant editor of ComputerWorld Canada covering network infrastructure, communications and government IT issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, I've written ... more
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