From: "Brock N. Meeks" <brock@well.sf.ca.us>CyberWire Dispatch // Copyright (c) 1994 //Jacking in from the "Back From the Dead" Port:Washington, DC -- Nothing chills -- or inflames -- the Net faster than whenword of the dreaded "FCC Modem Tax" begins ooze through Cyberspace.Well... it's back.  Sort of.Ruth Milkman, legal advisor to Federal Communications Commission ChairmanReed Hundt, said during a recent question and answer session that theagency might again take up the issue of the so-called modem tax."Some years down the road I can see acceess fees [for enhanced serviceproviders] being considered by the FCC," Milkman said during a phoneinterview. "But only under the scenario when access charges are reformed."These access charges are a kind of trip wire phrase which online activistshave dubbed a "modem tax" when applied to enhanced service providers, whichis another catch phrase meaning services like America Online anCompuServe.Milkman said the FCC would only consider an access charge under a verynarrow scenario which would play out only  if "enhanced service providersfelt that by paying the access charges they weren't contributing to asubsidy scheme set up for (long distance phone companies)," Milkman said.So, what the hell is an "access charge"?  Take a deep breath. Here goes:Access charges are paid by long distance companies to local telephonecompanies. Every time a company such as AT&T connects a caller in DesMoines with Uncle Bert in New York, it has to pay Nynex, the localtelephone company, a fee for the privilege of carrying that long distanccall over their facilities, commonly known as the "local loop."Long distance companies pay up to 40% of their entire revenues to localtelephone companies.  That's billions and billions of dollars each yearthat flow into the hands of the Baby Bells, just for completing the calls.The access fees are set at artificially high rates because they contain amind numbing set of complex subsidies, the most obvious one is that whicunderwrites the public policy known as "Universal Service."Back in the days when the FCC only had rotary dial phones (circa 1987someone came up with the brilliant idea that because modem use waincreasing at such a rapid pace, that maybe services such as Sprintlink(then known as telenet) and CompuServe should have to pay these accesscharges, too.After all, the FCC wonks postured, they carry long distance (modem) trafficover the phone lines?  It would only be fair to have these "enhancedservice providers" as they are known in FCC-speak, also help out theimpoverished long distance phone companies underwrite Universal Service.Bingo.  The hue and cry that went up from the online community (it wasn'tyet called "the Net") was enormous.  The major players -- Telenet andCompuServe -- quickly branded the plan as a "tax" and thus the phrase"modem tax" was born.Dire warnings went out:  If the FCC succeeded in making enhanced serviceproviders chip in for access fees, it would increase the cost of each hourof online time by at least $6 per hourAnd remember, this was in the days when a 2,400-bps modem was the hottesthing going.  Six bucks an hour would have demolished the struggling onlineindustryThe fallout among the nascent online community was astounding. For thefirst time in history, the "net" community rose up with a single voice andFLOODED the FCC with protests.FCC official "filing kits" made the rounds, teaching people how to fileofficial comments of protest.The ground swell of opposition worked.  The FCC was buried in responses.At the time, the FCC said it was the hottest item in its history, garneringmore response than any issue in history.The FCC eventually backed off.  The reason:  It was persuaded that enhancedservice providers were still entrepreneurial companies and couldn't affordthe burden of access fees.The proposal was officially dropped.  It was the first major victory forthe Net.  And it was empowering.  The online community became educated andenlightened almost over night to the ways of an arcane governmental agency.And this community was drunk with a heady kind of power:  It couldsufficiently affect the outcome of governmental regulation.Small catch:  The damn "modem tax" issue wouldn't die.Someone with the brains of a trout began to circulate the now infamous"modem tax" file.  The file claims that Jim Eason, a San Franciso radiotalk show host had aired a segment in which he claimed to have insideinformation that the FCC was about to relaunch its "modem tax" proposal.The message was and is a HOAXBut it also has never died.  It's the Net's first "urban myth" and likeFreddie, it refuses to die, even to this day.Milkman, who was on-board at the FCC during the 1987 modem tax firefight,sighed when explaining the complex issue:  "Part of the problem is thatnobody is exactly sure what all the subsidies are.  Most people agree thatthere are subsidies in the access charges, but you can't break out thosesubsidies exactly."Another factor in play:  Sometimes enhanced service providers are reallyjust reselling long distance transport after having bought large blocks oftime from a major carrier like AT&T.  Thus, to have these enhanced serviceproviders also pay an access fee amounts to a kind of double-dipping,Milkman said.As it turns out, Congress might have as much to say about a future "modemtax" as the FCC.  This twisted scenario turns on the tenuous grasp thateveryone from the Vice President to Commerce Department to the FCC has oexactly what constitutes "Universal Service," in the era of the InformationSuperhighway.Revamping the 60 year old Communications Act of 1934 will be up to Congressthis year.  And they will likely do it.  But how universal service isdefined remains a big mystery.  And who ends up paying for and maintainingthat public policy (which isn't about to be abolished) also remains amystery.Don't be surprised if, when the legislative smoke clears, not only doenhanced service providers -- America Online, CompuServe and Prodigy, et al-- have to pay access fees, but also your Internet provider and your cablecompany.And who do you think will end up catching those cost increases?? RightYour wallet.But for now?  Rest easy, Milkman says:  "I want to make this very clear:There is NO docket [open] in which the Commission is proposing makingenhanced service providers pay access charges.  And I don't anticipate itcoming up."Meeks out...
