Telecommunications Relay Services and Speech-to-Speech Services: Individuals With Hearing and Speech Disabilities

Federal Register: February 19, 2008 (Volume 73, Number 33)

Rules and Regulations

Page 9031-9034

From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]

DOCID:fr19fe08-8

FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION 47 CFR Part 64

CG Docket 03-123; DA 07-5098; DA 08-45

Telecommunications Relay Services and Speech-to-Speech Services for Individuals With Hearing and Speech Disabilities

AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.

ACTION: Final rule; extension of waiver.

SUMMARY: In this document, the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau

(Bureau) extends for an additional year waivers of certain

Telecommunications Relay Services (TRS) mandatory minimum standards for

Video Relay Service (VRS) and Internet Protocol Relay (IP Relay). The waived TRS mandatory minimum standards are: One-line voice carry over

(VCO); VCO-to-teletypewriter (TTY); VCO-to-VCO; one-line hearing carry over (HCO); HCO-to-TTY; HCO-to-HCO; call release; speech-to-speech

(STS); pay-per-call (900) calls; types of calls; equal access to interexchange carriers; and speed dialing. The Bureau extends the waivers for one year (four months in the case of speed dialing for VRS) because the record demonstrates that it is technologically infeasible for VRS and IP Relay providers to offer these services at this time.

DATES: The Bureau allowed the waivers of three-way calling for VRS and

IP Relay to expire on January 1, 2008. The waivers of certain TRS mandatory minimum standards for VRS and IP Relay will expire on January 1, 2009, except the wavier of the speed dialing requirement for VRS, which will expire on April 30, 2008.

ADDRESSES: Parties may submit waiver reports identified by [CG Docket

No. 03-

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123 and/or DA 07-5098 and DA 08-45] by any of the following methods:

Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov.

Follow the instruction for submitting waiver reports.

Federal Communications Commission's Web Site: http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/ecfs/.

Follow the instructions for submitting waiver reports.

Mail: Dana Wilson, Consumer and Governmental Affairs

Bureau, Disability Rights Office, 445 12th Street, SW., Room 3-C418,

Washington, DC 20554.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Thomas Chandler, Consumer and

Governmental Affairs Bureau, Disability Rights Office at (202) 418-1475

(voice), (202) 418-0597 (TTY), or e-mail Thomas.Chandler@fcc.gov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On December 31, 2001, the Commission's

Common Carrier Bureau released Telecommunications Relay Services and

Speech-to-Speech Services for Individuals with Hearing and Speech

Disabilities, VRS Waiver Order, CC Docket No. 98-67, 17 FCC Rcd 157

(2001), granting VRS providers a waiver until December 31, 2003, of certain TRS mandatory minimum standards as applied to the provision of

VRS. In subsequent Orders, the Commission extended these waivers ultimately through January 1, 2008, and applied them also to IP Relay.

This is a summary of the Bureau Orders, document DA 07-5098, adopted and released December 26, 2007, and document DA 08-45, adopted and released January 8, 2008, extending certain waivers from TRS mandatory minimum standards to January 1, 2009, and extending waiver of the speed dialing requirement of VRS through April 30, 2008, while allowing waivers of three-way calling for VRS and IP Relay to expire on January 1, 2008.

The full text of documents DA 07-5098 and DA 08-45, and copies of any subsequently filed documents in these matters, will be available for public inspection and copying during regular business hours at the

FCC Reference Information Center, Portals II, 445 12th Street, SW.,

Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. Documents DA 07-5098 and DA 08-45, and copies of subsequently filed documents in these matters, also may be purchased from the Commission's duplicating contractor at Portals

II, 445 12th Street, SW., Room CY-B402, Washington, DC 20554. Customers may contact the Commission's duplicating contractor at its Web site http://www.bcpiweb.com or by calling 1-800-378-3160. To request materials in accessible formats for people with disabilities (Braille, large print, electronic files, audio format), send an e-mail to fcc504@fcc.gov or call the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau at

(202) 418-0530 (voice) or (202) 418-0432 (TTY). Documents DA 07-5098 and DA 08-45 also can be downloaded in Word and Portable Document

Format (PDF) at http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/dro/trs.html.

Synopsis 1. The Commission, in various orders, has waived several TRS mandatory minimum standards for VRS and IP Relay either because, as

Internet-based services, it is not technologically feasible to meet the requirement or, in the case of VRS, because VRS is a video-based service and the communication is via sign language and not text. Since 2004, the Commission has conditioned these waivers on the filing of annual reports, due each April 16, addressing whether it is necessary for the waivers to remain in effect. See Telecommunications Relay

Services and Speech-to-Speech Services for Individuals with Hearing and

Speech Disabilities, CC Docket Nos. 90-571 and 98-67, CG Docket No. 03- 123, Report and Order, Order on Reconsideration, and Further Notice of

Proposed Rulemaking, 19 FCC Rcd 12475 (2004). Pursuant to this condition, all VRS and IP Relay providers have filed reports detailing their progress in meeting the waived requirements. The Bureau has reviewed these reports in reaching the conclusions below. 2. One-line VCO, VCO-to-TTY, and VCO-to-VCO. One-line VCO is a type of traditional TTY-based TRS that can be used by persons with a hearing disability but who can speak. See 47 CFR 64.601(18); 47 CFR 64.604(a)(3)(v). The Commission waived this requirement for IP Relay providers because the voice leg of a VCO call could not be supported over the Internet. The Commission similarly waived this requirement for

VRS. A VCO-to-TTY call allows a relay conversation to take place between a VCO user and a TTY user; a VCO-to-VCO call allows a relay conversation to take place between two VCO users. Consistent with its treatment of the VCO requirement, the Commission waived these requirements for VRS and IP Relay. 3. The Bureau extends the waivers of these requirements for one year. The Bureau notes that the most recent annual waiver reports reflect that VRS and IP Relay providers cannot provide these services because the Internet cannot support the voice leg of a VCO call with the necessary call quality. These waivers are again conditioned on the filing of reports, due April 16, 2008, addressing whether it is necessary for the waivers to remain in effect. 4. One-line HCO, HCO-to-TTY, and HCO-to-HCO. One-line HCO is a type of traditional TTY-based TRS that can be used by persons with a speech disability but who can hear. See 47 CFR 64.604(8); 47 CFR 64.604(a)(3)(v). For the same reason the Commission waived the VCO requirement for IP Relay, it did so with respect to the HCO requirement. The Commission similarly waived this requirement for VRS.

An HCO-to-TTY call allows a relay conversation to take place between an

HCO user and a TTY user; an HCO-to-HCO call allows a relay conversation to take place between two HCO users. Consistent with its treatment of the HCO requirement, the Commission waived these requirements for VRS and IP Relay. 5. Consistent with the Bureau's treatment of VCO, and for the same reasons, the Bureau extends the waivers of these requirements for one year. The Bureau also notes that the most recent annual waiver reports reflect that VRS and IP Relay providers cannot provide these services.

These waivers are also conditioned on the filing of reports, due April 16, 2008, addressing whether it is necessary for the waivers to remain in effect. 6. Call Release. Call release allows a communications assistant

(CA) to set up a TTY-to-TTY call that, once established, does not require the CA to relay the conversation. See 47 CFR 64.604(a)(3)(vi).

The Commission waived this requirement for VRS and IP Relay. The Bureau extends the waivers of this requirement for one year due to technological infeasibility. This conclusion is supported by the providers' annual waiver reports, which reflect that the Internet leg of the call (via video or text) cannot support call release functionality. These waivers are also conditioned on the filing of reports, due April 16, 2008, addressing whether it is necessary for the waivers to remain in effect. 7. Pay-Per-Call (900) calls. Pay-per-call (900) calls are calls that the person making the call pays for at a charge greater than the basic cost of the call. See 47 CFR 64.604(a)(3)(iv). The Commission waived this requirement for VRS and IP Relay. The Bureau extends the waivers of this requirement for VRS and IP Relay for one year. The providers' annual waiver reports reflect that there is still no billing mechanism available to handle the charges associated with pay-per- calls. These waivers are also conditioned on the

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filing of reports, due April 16, 2008, addressing whether it is necessary for the waivers to remain in effect. 8. Types of Calls (Operated Assisted Calls and Long Distance

Calls). Commission rules require TRS providers to handle any type of call normally handled by common carriers. See 47 CFR 64.604(a)(3). The

Common Carrier Bureau waived the requirement that VRS providers offer operator-assisted calls and bill certain types of calls to the end user, noting that it was not possible to determine if a VRS call is local or long distance. The providers' annual waiver reports reflect that it remains technologically infeasible for VRS providers to offer operator-assisted calls and to bill for certain types of long distance calls because one leg of the VRS call is transmitted over the Internet.

Based on the record, the Bureau therefore extends waivers of this requirement for VRS for one year as long as providers allow calls to be placed using calling cards and/or provide free long distance calls.

This waiver is also conditioned on the filing of a report, due April 16, 2008, addressing whether it is necessary for the waiver to remain in effect. Although this issue has not been raised, the Commission understands that IP Relay providers, for the same reasons as VRS providers, cannot provide these services. Therefore, to avoid any future uncertainty or compliance issues, the Commission waives on its own motion this requirement for IP Relay as long as the providers allow calls to be placed using calling cards and/or provide free long distance calls. 9. Equal Access to Interexchange Carriers. The TRS rules require that providers offer TRS users their interexchange carrier of choice to the same extent that such access is provided to voice users. See 47 CFR 64.604(b)(3). The Commission waived this requirement for VRS providers, noting that it was not possible to determine if a call is long distance and, in any event, the providers could not automatically route the calls to the caller's long distance carrier of choice. The Commission also noted that this waiver was contingent on VRS providers providing long distance services free of charge to the caller. The Commission waived this requirement for IP Relay indefinitely. 10. The Bureau extends the waiver of this requirement for VRS for one year. The providers' annual waiver reports reflect that because they cannot determine whether a particular call is local or long distance, they cannot offer carrier of choice but instead do not charge consumers for long distance. Based on the record, the Bureau therefore extends this waiver for VRS for one year as long as the providers provide free long distance calls. This waiver is also conditioned on the filing of a report, due April 16, 2008, addressing whether it is necessary for the waiver to remain in effect. 11. Speech-to-Speech. In 2000, the Commission recognized STS as a form of TRS and required that it be offered as a mandatory service. The

Commission waived this requirement indefinitely for VRS and, until

January 1, 2008, for IP Relay. The Commission noted that STS is speech- based service, whereas VRS is a visual service using interpreters to interpret in sign language over a video connection. With respect to IP

Relay, the Commission noted the technical difficulties with respect to voice-initiated calls and the Internet. The Bureau extends the waiver of this requirement for IP Relay for one year. Providers continue to report that this service, like the VCO and HCO services, cannot be provided via IP Relay because of erratic voice quality. The waiver is also conditioned on the filing of a report, due April 16, 2008, addressing whether it is necessary for the waiver to remain in effect. 12. Speed Dialing. Speed dialing allows a TRS user to give the CA a

``short-hand'' name or number (e.g., ``call Mom'') for the user's most frequently called telephone numbers. See 47 CFR 64.604(a)(3)(vi). This feature permits a person making a TRS call through a CA to place the call without having to remember or locate the number he or she desires to call. 13. In DA 07-5098, the Bureau allowed the waiver of the speed dialing requirement for VRS to expire on January 1, 2008. In response, on December 31, 2007, Snap Telecommunications, Inc. (Snap) and Verizon each filed requests to extend temporarily waiver of the speed dialing requirement for VRS. Upon reviewing Snap's and Verizon's 2007 Annual

Reports on their progress towards meeting waived requirements, the

Bureau finds that it erroneously concluded in DA 07-5098 that all VRS providers could offer the speed dialing feature by the end of 2007. The

Bureau therefore extends the waiver of the speed dialing requirement for VRS providers through April 30, 2008. Because the speed dialing waiver will terminate at the end of April 2008, the Bureau does not require that VRS providers address this feature in their annual waiver reports that are due on April 16, 2008. 14. With respect to IP Relay, because there is conflicting evidence in the record on whether providers can provide this feature, the Bureau extends the waiver of this requirement for IP Relay for one year. In light of the fact that some providers report that they are offering this service, however, the Bureau anticipates that there will be no further extensions of this waiver. The Bureau believes that this additional one year waiver is adequate to address any remaining technical or implementation concerns. This waiver is also conditioned on the filing of a report, due on April 16, 2008, providing updated information on the status of providing this service. 15. Three-way calling. The three-way calling feature allows more than two parties to be on the telephone line at the same time with the

CA. See 47 CFR 64.604(a)(3)(vi). The Commission waived this requirement for VRS and IP Relay. 16. In Telecommunications Relay Services and Speech-to-Speech

Services for Individuals with Hearing and Speech Disabilities, CC

Docket No. 98-67 and CG Docket No. 03-123, Order, 20 FCC Rcd 3689 (CGB 2005) (Three-way Calling Clarification Order), published at 70 FR 14568, March 23, 2005, the Bureau clarified the manner in which TRS providers could comply with this rule. The Bureau stated that TRS providers will satisfy the three-way calling requirement if they

``ensure that the TRS facility or CA facilitates or handles a three-way call, as the CA would handle any TRS call, where and to the extent the three-way call has been arranged by any one of the parties to the call, e.g., using a party's local exchange carrier provided custom calling service (CCS), by bridging two telephone lines via customer terminal equipment, or by some other means.'' The Bureau further clarified

``that TRS providers are not required to be able to arrange, initiate, or set up a three-way call (but they may do so)* * * so long as the provider is able to handle or facilitate a three-way call, in some manner, whether initiated by one of the parties to the call or set up by the provider.'' 17. VRS and IP Relay providers have reported that they are providing three-way calling in accordance with the Three-way Calling

Clarification Order. Because the record therefore demonstrates that it is technically feasible to offer this service, the Bureau concludes that these waivers are no longer necessary and therefore will allow these waivers to expire on January 1, 2008.

Ordering Clauses 18. Pursuant to section 225 of the Communications Act of 1934, as

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amended, 47 U.S.C. 225, and Sections 0.141, 0.361, and 1.3 of the

Commission's rules, 47 CFR 0.141, 0.361, and 1.3, documents DA 07-5098 and DA 08-45 are adopted. For VRS, the waivers of the one-line VCO,

VCO-to-TTY, and VCO-to-VCO; one-line HCO, HCO-to-TTY, and HCO-to-HCO; call release; pay-per-call (900) calls, types of calls, and equal access to interexchange carrier requirements are hereby extended for one year, i.e., until January 1, 2009, conditioned on the filing of a report, due April 16, 2008, addressing whether it is necessary for the waivers to remain in effect. The waiver of the speed dialing requirement for VRS is extended through April 30, 2008. 19. For IP Relay, the waivers of the one-line VCO, VCO-to-TTY, and

VCO-to-VCO; one-line HCO, HCO-to-TTY, and HCO-to-HCO; call release; pay-per-call (900) calls; STS; and speed dialing requirements are hereby extended for one year, i.e., until January 1, 2009, conditioned on the filing of a report, due April 16, 2008, addressing whether it is necessary for the waivers to remain in effect. 20. The waivers of the three-way calling requirements (for VRS and

IP Relay) expired on January 1, 2008.

Federal Communications Commission.

Nicole McGinnis,

Deputy Bureau Chief, Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau.

FR Doc. E8-3024 Filed 2-15-08; 8:45 am

BILLING CODE 6712-01-P

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