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Order Instituting Rulemaking on the Commission's own Motion Into Competition for Local Exchange Service.

R.95-04-043

(Filed April 26, 1995)

   

Order Instituting Investigation on the Commission's own Motion Into Competition for Local Exchange Service.

I.95-04-044

(Filed April 26, 1995)

   
   

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The utilization study sheds new light on the numbering crisis in the 619 area code. The data reveals that despite increasing demand for numbers, the 619 area code is not fully utilized. The study found that of the 7.6 million useable numbers in the 619 area code, approximately 4.6 million, or more than half, presently are not in use. The data further establishes that the 619 area code possesses considerable room for growth, and thus, aggressive measures such as splits or overlays are not yet warranted. The report further urges the CPUC to seek from the FCC authority to implement Unassigned Number Porting (UNP) as a means to more efficiently use numbers still available in the 619 area code.

This report is filed in compliance with CPUC Decision (D.) 99-12-051, and with AB 406, enacted by the California Legislature in the 1999 legislative session. (Chapter 99-809, 1999.) AB 406, codified as Public Utilities Code Section 7937, requires the CPUC to obtain historical telephone number use data from every telecommunications company in California. The CPUC's Telecommunications Division (TD) first obtained and analyzed data from the 310 area code in Los Angeles late in 1999, and produced a utilization report on 310 in March 2000. This report on the 619 area code is one of a group of reports covering specific area code number utilization levels.

FINDINGS

The 619 area code contains approximately 7.6 million telephone numbers available for consumer use. These numbers are available to telecommunications companies that obtain the numbers from the North American Numbering Plan Administrator (NANPA)1, and in turn, assign the numbers to their customers for their immediate use. Alternatively, companies may reserve numbers for future use, or retain numbers for some internal (administrative) use. Some companies provide blocks of numbers to resellers or "dealers", which then assign those numbers to customers. The FCC deems numbers that companies allocate to resellers to be "intermediate" numbers. In addition, each assigned number, after disconnection, must "age" during a transition period before assignment to the next customer. Many companies have inventories of numbers in the "aging" process. Finally, some numbers are not available for public use, as they have been set aside for emergency purposes, for technical network support, or for other reasons.

The FCC has determined that numbers in these five categories - assigned, administrative, reserved, intermediate, or aging - are unavailable, either because they are already in use or are designated for some present or future use. Of the 4.6 million available numbers, approximately 2.6 million have been set aside by the CPUC to use in a lottery for companies seeking numbers. Companies possess the remaining unused 2.0 million numbers. Wireline carriers, such as Pacific Bell and many competitive local exchange carriers, hold roughly 1.25 million available numbers, while wireless carriers hold approximately 800,000 available numbers.2

CHAPTER ONE: OVERVIEW OF NUMBERING

A. INEFFICIENT USE AND INCREASING DEMAND FOR NEW NUMBERS IN CALIFORNIA IS CAUSING AREA CODE PROLIFERATION

Because the FCC recognized that state thousand-block number pooling trials underway might not conform to the national standards set forth in the first NRO Order, the FCC gave state commissions until September 1, 2000 to conform their thousands-block number pooling trials to the national framework. One requirement imposed in California which differs from the national standards is the requirement that companies meet a 75% fill rate in each block before they may receive an additional block from the pooling administrator. The CPUC recognized the 75% fill rate as a critical factor in the success of the 310 pooling trial and petitioned for a waiver of compliance with the national rules. On August 31, 2000, the FCC issued an order granting the CPUC authority to continue to use its own pooling rules until the FCC decides on the merits of the petition, or until December 31, 2000, whichever occurs sooner. This allows California to continue applying the 75% utilization rate in its number pooling efforts.

CHAPTER TWO: 4.7 MILLION UNUSED NUMBERS IN THE 619 AREA CODE

A. THE SCOPE OF THE UTILIZATION STUDY

    1. Distribution Statistics of Prefixes

B. NUMBERS AVAILABLE IN THE 619 AREA CODE

    4. 4.6 Million Numbers Available

C. ANALYSIS OF AVAILABLE NUMBERS

Rate Center

0%

0 - 10%

10 - 15%

15 - 20%

20 - 25%

 

Campo

12,000

4,830

0

0

0

Chula Vista

70,000

37,799

1,780

4,029

3,903

Coronado

44,000

18,659

1,775

2,401

1,582

Dulzura

4,000

1,909

870

828

0

El Cajon

49,000

48,959

2,692

4,860

3,171

Harbison-Alpine

11,000

1,902

0

0

0

Jacumba

14,000

3,949

869

1,600

780

La Mesa

111,000

53,539

4,449

2,445

3,921

National City

53,000

43,759

896

2,417

2,327

Pine Valley

13,000

4,739

0

2,410

0

San Diego

176,000

102,411

11,571

13,834

6,998

 

557,000

322,455

24,902

34,824

22,682

· The CPUC should petition the FCC to increase the contamination level for pooling to 25%. If the FCC grants the petition, the CPUC should increase the maximum contamination level of donated blocks from 10% to 25% for all LNP-capable carriers.

      6. Analysis of Wireless Carriers' Contamination Rates

Rate Center

0%

0 - 10%

10 - 15%

15 - 20%

20 - 25%

Chula Vista

27,000

6,782

0

0

3,812

Coronado

4,000

3,991

0

0

0

El Cajon

31,000

9,731

0

0

3,838

Harbison-Alpine

8,000

1,997

0

0

0

La Jolla

0

0

0

0

0

La Mesa

18,000

0

0

0

0

National City

16,000

8,943

0

0

773

Poway

2,000

0

0

0

0

Rancho Bernardo

10,000

0

0

0

0

Linda Vista

1,000

7,794

0

828

0

San Diego

122,000

70,355

17,451

12,387

9,364

 

239,000

109,593

17,451

13,215

17,787

· The CPUC should monitor compliance with its fill rate and sequential numbering policies through future number utilization filings and audits.

· The CPUC should establish penalties for non-compliance with fill rate and sequential numbering policies adopted in Decision 00-07-052.27

    8. Reclamation of Prefixes

D. ANALYSIS OF 3.0 MILLION "UNAVAILABLE" NUMBERS

· Reserved numbers - Numbers that are reserved in blocks for future use by specific customers;

· Administrative numbers - Numbers that companies use for their own internal use;

· Intermediate numbers - Numbers that are made available for use by another telecommunications carrier or non-carrier entity for the purpose of providing telecommunications service to an end user or customer; and

· Aging numbers - Numbers from recently disconnected service which are not reassigned during a fixed interval.

    9. 2.3 Million Assigned Numbers

· Non-working wireless numbers should be treated as reserved numbers and limited to 180 days, after which they should become available for assignment to customers.

· Companies should be required to maintain and update regularly the inventory records of all equipment assigned non-working wireless numbers along with the number assigned, and to submit such records to the CPUC upon request.

· The CPUC should continue to monitor non-working wireless numbers in the near term by reviewing future utilization filings, and should include this category of numbers in any audits conducted of wireless carrier number use.

· The CPUC should require companies to transition from INP to LNP in the 619 area code and implement a monitoring mechanism to ensure compliance.

· The CPUC should adopt a schedule for transitioning INP arrangements to LNP in all other California area codes.

· TD recommends that the CPUC initiate an investigation into the possibility of moving the numbers for time, weather and emergency preparedness into the 555 prefix.

· TD recommends that the CPUC include in its investigation the broader use of the 555 prefix in California's area codes by providing standard 555 numbers in every California area code to provide time, emergency preparedness, and weather information.

· TD recommends that the CPUC require companies to assign numbers sequentially in special use prefixes. Where the numbers are presently assigned randomly, TD recommends that these numbers be moved and consolidated in one thousand block in order to free more blocks for number pooling.

    10. Reserved Numbers Are a Potential Source of Additional Numbers

· The CPUC should monitor reserved number use for all companies by reviewing future utilization data to ensure companies are complying with the FCC's 180-day requirement.

· The CPUC should adopt efficient number use practices specific to companies' reserved number holdings. In developing these practices, the CPUC should investigate various alternatives including, but not limited to, 1) limits on the quantity or percentage of reserved numbers companies can hold, and 2) requirements for using reserved numbers prior to requesting new numbers.

· The CPUC should develop criteria by which companies assign administrative numbers. The CPUC should consider placing a limit on the quantity or percentage of administrative numbers companies are allowed to hold.

· The CPUC should develop rules that require companies to limit administrative number assignments within certain blocks in a given prefix. In cases in which companies hold multiple prefixes in a single rate center, the CPUC should develop rules that require companies to limit administrative number assignments within prefixes.

    12. Intermediate Numbers

· The CPUC should monitor intermediate number use for all companies by reviewing future utilization filings to test whether potential abuses in this reporting category occur.

      a. Type 1 Numbers

· Wireline and wireless carriers should improve Type 1 number inventory management. Wireline carriers should perform an annual inventory check of wireless Type 1 numbers to confirm that wireless companies are using the numbers allocated to them. Companies should make inventory data available to the CPUC upon request. Wireline companies should reclaim unused numbers within 60 days of discovery.

· Type 1 carriers should be subject to number conservation techniques such as sequential numbering and fill rates. A system to ensure compliance with Type 1 number conservation measures should be developed.

· The Commission should consider Type 1 wireless carriers as candidates for number pooling. Excess and unused Type 1 numbers should be donated to the number pool.

    13. Aging Numbers

· Although the CPUC has required all companies to differentiate aging numbers between residential and business, and track the two categories separately, Pacific Bell has not complied with these requirements. Pacific Bell should be redirected to differentiate aging numbers between business and residential, track them separately, and report on each category accurately. The CPUC should assess penalties for failure to comply.

    14. The Need to Audit the Data

· The CPUC should audit the data submitted by companies in this study and future area code number utilization studies.

A. INTRODUCTION

B. NUMBER POOLING

· The CPUC should work with industry groups and the Pooling Administrator to develop specific rules for companies pertaining to forecasting a six-month inventory when a number pool is authorized in a particular area code.

C. LACK OF LOCAL NUMBER PORTABILITY STANDS AS A KEY BARRIER TO POOLING

· The CPUC should encourage the FCC to resolve the contradiction in the texts ordering LNP capability for all wireline carriers in the top 100 MSAs.

· As soon as permitted by the FCC, the CPUC should request that non-LNP capable wireline carriers in the 619 area code become LNP capable within the time frame prescribed by the FCC, which in no case may exceed 6 months from the day the CPUC makes the request.

· In the meantime, companies, both inside and outside of the top 100 MSAs, should be encouraged to make requests of one another to become LNP capable.

D. UNASSIGNED NUMBER PORTING

· The CPUC should petition the FCC for authority to implement UNP statewide.

· The CPUC should solicit comments in order to develop rules and practices necessary to implement UNP.

E. CONSOLIDATION OF RATE CENTERS TO MAXIMIZE NUMBER USE

· The CPUC should undertake further investigation by ordering the telecommunications industry to develop a plan, within 180 days, for rate center consolidation.

F. SHARING PREFIXES MAY YIELD MORE EFFICIENT NUMBER USE

· The CPUC should further explore sharing of prefixes as a means to more efficiently utilize numbers in all area codes.

CONCLUSION

APPENDIX A

ALLEGIANCE TELECOM, INC.-CA

AT&T LOCAL

CCCA, INC. DBA CONNECT! - CA

COX CALIFORNIA TELECOM, INC.

FIRSTWORLD SO CA

FRONTIER LOCAL SERVICES, INC.-CA

GST PACIFIC LIGHTWAVE

ICG TELECOM GROUP - CA

LEVEL 3 COMMUNICATIONS, LLC-CA

MCIMETRO, ATS, INC.

MGC COMMUNICATIONS, INC.-CA

NEXTLINK OF CALIFORNIA

NORTH COUNTY COMMUNICATIONS CORP.-CA

PAC-WEST TELECOMM, INC.

PAETEC COMMUNICATIONS, INC. - CA

SPRINT COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY, L.P. - CA

TELEPORT COMMUNICATIONS GROUP - SAN DIEGO

TELIGENT, INC.-CA

TIME WARNER COMMUNICATIONS AXS OF CALIFORNIA

U.S. TELEPACIFIC CORP.-CA

WINSTAR WIRELESS, INC.-CA

WORLDCOM TECHNOLOGIES, INC.-CA

PACIFIC BELL

COX CALIFORNIA PCS, INC.

NEXTWAVE TELECOM, INC DBA NEXTWAVE WIRELESS

AB CELLULAR HOLDING, LLC DBA AT&T WIRELESS

AIRTOUCH CELLULAR - CA

AIRTOUCH PAGING - CALIFORNIA

COOK TELECOM, INC.

DIGITCOM SERVICES, INC.

GTE MOBILNET OF CALIFORNIA

GTE MOBILNET OF CENTRAL CALIFORNIA

MAP MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.

MESSAGE CENTER BEEPERS, INC

METROCALL

MOBILECOMM

NATIONWIDE PAGING, INC.

NETWORK SERVICES LLC

NEXTEL COMMUNICATIONS

PACIFIC BELL MOBILE SERVICES

PACIFIC COAST PAGING, INC

PAGEMART, INC.

PAGENET

PAGING DIMENSIONS

PAGING PLUS

SOUTHWEST PAGING

THE WESTLINK COMPANY

TSR WIRELESS LLC

For convenience, "other administrative numbers" are reported as a group for purposes of the Utilization Study

TABLE G-1

AGING NUMBERS IN THE 619 area code

 
 

RESIDENTIAL

BUSINESS

TOTAL

       

WIRELINE

3,259

89,782

93,041

       

WIRELESS

61,014

51,992

113,006

       

TOTAL NUMBERS

64,273

141,774

206,047

APPENDIX H

NUMBER POOLING

415 Pooling Updates (as of October 1, 2000)

 

1

2

3

4

5

6

Rate Center

Forecast Blocks by Carriers for 2000 Q3

Blocks Assigned by Pooling Administrator

for 2000 Q3

Initial Blocks Forecasted by Carriers

Year -to-Date

Blocks Assigned by Pooling Administrator Year -to-Date

Blocks Remaining from Carrier- Donation to

the 415 pool

BELVEDERE

3

1

3

1

21

CORTEMADRA

6

4

6

4

35

IGNACIO

6

4

6

4

39

IVERNESS

3

0

3

0

27

MILL VALLEY

6

3

6

3

37

NICASIO

3

0

3

0

21

NOVATO

8

5

8

5

32

POINT REYES

3

0

3

0

25

SAN RAFAEL

6

4

6

4

64

SAUSALITO

5

0

5

0

37

SNFC CNTRL

75

1

75

1

109

SNFC JUNIPER

16

5

16

5

72

SNFC MT-EV

21

3

21

3

69

STNSN-BLNS

3

0

3

0

31

TOTAL

164

30

164

30

619

           

One Block = 1 thousand numbers

     

Pooling Updates (as of December 12, 2000)

             
 

2000 Q1

 

2000 Q2

 

2000 Q3

 

2000 Q4

 

Year-to-Date

 

NPA

Blocks Forecast by Carriers

Blocks Assigned by Pooling Administrator

Blocks Forecast by Carriers

Blocks Assigned by Pooling Administrator

Blocks Forecast by Carriers

Blocks Assigned by Pooling Administrator

Blocks Forecast by Carriers

Blocks Assigned by Pooling Administrator

Initial Blocks Forecasted by Carriers Year -to-Date

Blocks Assigned by Pooling Administrator Year -to-Date

Blocks Remaining from Carrier- Donation to the 415 pool

310 (pool began 3/18)

225

73

199

29

286

26

198

32

908

160

653

                       

415 (pool began 7/29)

       

164

30

193

8

357

38

623

                       

714 (pool began 9/29)

           

224

34

224

34

633

                       

909 (pool began 12/1)

           

143

19

143

19

996

TOTAL

               

1632

251

 
                       

One Block = 1 thousand numbers

                 
                       

1 NANPA is a role performed by NeuStar, Inc. The FCC chose NeuStar, formerly Lockheed Martin, to perform the functions of numbering administration and area code changes nationwide. 2 Including Type 1 carriers. Type 1 numbers are described in Chapter 2, Sec. D.4.a. 3 Historically, telephone numbers have been allocated to companies in blocks of 10,000, as a complete prefix, such as (619) 703-XXXX. Number pooling allows companies to obtain numbers in blocks of 1,000 or fewer numbers. 4 At present, only wireline carriers are required to participate in number pooling. The FCC has granted most wireless carriers an extension of time, until November, 2002, to implement the technology that will support number pooling. The FCC has permanently exempted paging companies from implementing the technology necessary to pool. 5 The percentage of numbers in use in a particular block of 1,000 numbers is referred to as the "contamination" level. 6 This assumes that companies' six-month inventory needs would be satisfied out of the unused numbers in the blocks greater than 25% contaminated 7 Today called the Incumbent Local Exchange Carrier (ILEC). 8 Today called Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (CLEC). 9 A company's request for its first prefix in the rate center is considered an initial request; requests for additional prefixes are considered growth requests. 10 See Chapter Three of this report for a discussion of LNP. 11 FCC's Opinion and Order on Telephone Number Portability FCC 97-74, issued March 6, 1997. 12 Cellular companies, PCS companies, and paging companies comprise the wireless category. 13 ILECs and CLECs. 14 Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, CC Docket No. 99-200 FCC 00-104 (released March 31, 2000). 15 Wireline carriers are composed of ILECs and CLECs. 16 The one special code area is used for directory assistance, a special use prefix described in section D.1.c of this chapter. 17 A detailed break-down of the available 2 million numbers is shown in Table B-1 in Appendix B. 18 Recommendations dealing with receiving authority from the FCC to increase contamination threshold rates (25%) for pooling, recovering blocks from special use codes, and recovering unused numbers from non-LNP capable carriers and Type 1 carriers as described later in this report. 19 See Table B-2 in the appendix for a detailed breakout of the 3.7 million numbers. 20 Although all wireline carriers are required to be LNP-capable, three wireline carriers in the 619 area code remain non LNP-capable. 21 10% or less contaminated means that out of 1,000 numbers in a block, 100 numbers or less have been classified as unavailable. 22 Future need may include serving new customers or offering new services. 23 See Table B-1 in Appendix B. The 318,426 is comprised of 24,902 which are in blocks that are 10-15% contaminated, 34,824 from 15-20% contaminated, 22,682 from 20-25% contaminated, and 236,018 numbers which are in blocks that are more than 25% contaminated. Later in this chapter, TD recommends additional steps that can be implemented to make more of the 318,426 numbers available for number pooling. 24 INC's Thousand Block (NXX-X) Pooling Administration Guidelines, dated January 10, 2000, state that carriers should donate specified thousand blocks. 25 Additional numbers from the last three columns of Table 2-4: 24,902+35,824+22,682=82,408 26 See footnote 3 of Table B-2, Appendix B, for the derivation of this estimate. 27 See Chapter 1 for the discussion on Decision 00-07-052. 28 FCC 00-104, Paragraphs 237, 238, and 241. 29 Remote Call Forwarding allows a customer to have a local telephone number in a distant location. RFC is similar to call forwarding on a residential line, except that the RCF customer has no phone, no office and no physical presence in that location. Direct Inward Dialing uses a trunk from the central office which passes the last two to four digits of the Listed Directory Number into the PBX, thus allowing the PBX to switch the call to the correct extension without the use of an attendant. Existing DID retail service is limited to PBX services For purposes of providing INP, DID switch functionality is used to provide INP to any CLC customer regardless of the type of terminal equipment used on the customer's premises. 30 However, one wireline carrier in the 619 are still non-LNP capable. 31 The emergency preparedness prefixes are for services other than 911. 32 The number used for inter-area code directory assistance, which is uniform throughout California, is -(xxx)-555-1212. This number has been designated for this use at the federal level. 33 An example would be a customer request for 2,500 numbers to be used in 2000, coupled with a request to have the next 2,500 numbers in sequence "reserved" for the customer to use in 2001. 34 Central Office Code (NXX) Assignment Guidelines, prepared by the Industry Numbering Committee, January 27, 1999 version, Section 4.4. 35 FCC Order 00-280, CC Docket No. 99-200, adopted and released on July 31, 2000. 36 See FCC Order 00-129 ¶114. 37 See Appendix D for a breakdown of reserved numbers reported in the 619 NPA by rate center. 38 A number pooling trial in the 619 area code is scheduled for October 2001. Once the pool is implemented, carriers could donate excess numbering resources for reallocation and could get new number resources in smaller quantities (i.e. at the 1,000 number block level). 39 Wireline carriers serving La Mesa rate center reported 12,493 reserved numbers and wireline carriers serving the San Diego-San Diego rate center reported 48,198 reserved numbers. 40 See Appendix F for a breakdown of intermediate numbers held by wireline and wireless carriers. 41 Type 1 numbers are programmed in the wireline carrier's end office, but are used by a wireless carrier. 42 98,800 out of a total of 169,700 Type 1 numbers are unaccounted for or mismatched. 43 Type 1 numbers may go unused because wireless carriers go out of business or because of inadequate record keeping. 44 The 619 study revealed that Type 1 numbers given to wireless carriers are from prefixes in which the wireline carriers have already initiated LNP. Because Type 1 numbers reside in the wireline carrier's end office, Type 1 numbers are LNP-capable and thus suited for pooling. 45 These blocks are 10% or less contaminated. 46 In the first NRO Order, both 360 days and 365 days were used as the time period for aging business numbers. In a clarifying order, the FCC adopted 365 days as the aging period for business numbers. When the CPUC sent out the parameters for utilization data for this study, the 360 day time period for aging business numbers was used. In order to be consistent with the time frames the FCC adopted, the CPUC is now using 365 days for aging business numbers. 47 Two prefixes have been opened in the 310 pool for LRN assignment purposes. 48 As of December 18, 2000. 49 Three prefixes have been opened in the 415 pool for LRN assignment purposes 50 Before a whole prefix is activated, the prefix must be first listed for 66 days in the Local Exhange Routing Guide (LERG), stating the rate center where the prefix will be located. 51 Data can be found in Pooling Appendix. 52 Sections 6.1.4 & 6.1.5 in INC 99-0127-023, January 10, 2000 53 FCC 96-286 in CC Docket No. 95-116. 54 FCC 99-19, WT Docket 98-229; CC Docket No. 95-116, Released: February 9, 1999. Paging companies are indefinitely exempt from becoming LNP-capable. 55 Further Comments of the California Public Utilities Commission and the People of the State of California in CC Docket No. 99-200, submitted May 19, 2000. 56 See INC Contribution #336R of September 29, 2000, "UNP Architecture With Minimal Administrative Structure" and Focal and MCIWorldcom's Report on UNP Trial 57 First NRO Order, FCC 00-104, CC Docket 99-200, ¶ 230. "We reiterate our finding that UNP and ITN [individual telephone number pooling] are not yet sufficiently developed for adoption as nationwide numbering resource optimization measures and conclude that ITN and UNP should not be mandated at this time.". 58 See ¶ 231: "We permit carriers, however, to engage voluntarily in UNP where it is mutually agreeable and where no public safety or network reliability concerns have been identified." 59 For example, while the ILECs still control roughly 95% of the residential toll market, competitors have succeeded in making significant inroads into the business toll market, where the ILECs now hold only 50% of the market. If the CPUC were to decide that the ILECs should be "made whole" for any lost toll revenues, then other companies legitimately could demand a mechanism to make them whole as well. Alternatively, if the competitors cannot practically be reimbursed for lost revenues, then as a policy matter, the CPUC must decide if it is reasonable to allow only the ILECs to recover such revenue. 60 "Where Have All the Numbers Gone?" (Second Edition), The Ad Hoc Telecommunications Users Committee, prepared by Economics and Technology, Inc., June 2000. The estimate of $5.56 may be conservative. 61 The last major rate design proceeding undertaken for Pacific Bell and Verizon, then GTEC, was the Implementation and Rate Design (IRD) phase of the New Regulatory Framework proceeding, 1.87-l l-033. The IRD phase took three years to complete. 62 Prior to a pooling trial, all companies requesting telephone numbers got prefixes from the NANPA. Currently, only non-LNP capable carriers receive prefixes from the NANPA, while LNP capable carriers receive thousand-number blocks from the pooling administrator. 63 See Chapter 1 for the discussion on Decision 00-07-052.

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