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AT&T, Feds Neglect Low-Price Mandate Designed to Help Schools
6/28/2012 By: Jeff Gerth, ProPublica
At the dawn of the Internet
era, Congress set out to avert a
digital divide between rich and
poor students. In a landmark bill,
lawmakers required the nation’s
phone companies to provide
bargain voice and data rates
to schools and to subsidize the
cost of equipment and services,
with the biggest subsidies going
to the schools with the most
disadvantaged children.
More than a decade later, as schools struggle for funding
amid widespread budget cuts, there is growing evidence that
the program’s crucial low-price requirement has been widely
neglected by federal regulators and at least one telecom giant.
A decade after the program started, AT&T was still not
training its employees about the mandatory low rates, which
are supposed to be set at the lowest price offered to comparable
customers. Lawsuits and other legal actions in Indiana,
Wisconsin, Michigan, and New York have turned up evidence
that AT&T and Verizon charged local school districts much
higher rates than they gave to similar customers or more than
what the program allowed.
AT&T has charged some schools up to 325 percent more
than it charged others in the same region for essentially the
same services. Verizon charged a New York school district more
than twice as much as it charged government and other school
customers in that state.
The companies say they comply with the rules of the program,
known as E-Rate.
Meanwhile, the federal government has made scant effort to
enforce the requirement that companies give the preferential rate
to schools. The Federal Communications Commission, which
oversees the program, has yet to bring an enforcement action
against any carrier for violating the low-price rule, according to
interviews and documents, some obtained under the Freedom
of Information Act. And the FCC, acting through the private
company that administers the program, has provided little if
any guidance to companies on how to apply the best-price rule. Indeed, in 2010,
companies such as AT&T and Verizon sought clarification on the rule.
“Time and again, we find that schools are rarely advised by the telephone
companies of their best available rates,” said Howard Rotto, whose New York
consulting firm has represented dozens of schools in the Northeast for four decades.
“When representatives of the carrier do not even know of the existence of their best
pricing,” Rotto asked, “how can such a rate ever be offered or known?”
At the most basic level, the victims of this failure are the nation’s schoolchildren who
receive suboptimal broadband access. Many requests for assistance cannot be funded
under the current program. If lower prices were charged, more schools could benefit.
But there’s another set of victims: the vast majority of people with a cellular or
landline phone contract.
As designed by Congress, telecom companies must contribute to a fund,
administered by the federal government, that subsidizes the equipment and services
provided under the program. Most of the companies raise this money by directly
charging their customers.
Sift through that pile of papers at home and take a look at your monthly bill. Amidst
all those charges you’ve never really understood you’ll probably find a small one labeled
“Universal Service Fund.” Skimmed off every consumer’s payment each month, those
dollars and nickels add up, creating a pot of money of about $2.25 billion to subsidize
telecom and Internet services for America’s schoolchildren and library users.
Schools and libraries draw on this fund to help pay for the services provided by
the telecom companies — virtually all schools
are eligible, but the poorer the school, the more it
can draw. Requests for help almost always exceed
the available funding. So when phone companies
charge inflated rates to schools and government
regulators turn a blind eye, this fund is depleted
faster, fewer schools and libraries benefit, and
money taken from millions of telephone customers
goes to boost corporate profits instead of to help as
many schoolchildren as possible.
Indeed, a perverse bureaucratic process denies
most schools the funding to carry broadband
services all the way into actual classrooms. Here’s
how it works: Schools are rarely if ever turned down
for funding to bring broadband main lines to the
exterior walls of the schoolhouse.
But the internal connections, from wiring
to jacks, that complete the last leg and extend
connectivity down to actual classrooms, computers,
and telephones are deemed a lower priority,
so-called “Priority 2.” (Priority 2 also includes
maintenance.) As a result, only the very poorest
schools are eligible for this funding. The rest —
including many poor-but-not-destitute schools
— don’t get the subsidies to carry broadband that
last crucial stretch from outside the schoolhouse to
inside classrooms.
Last year, the E-Rate program received Priority
2 requests totaling more than twice as much money
as it could fund. Worse, many schools don’t even
bother to apply for “Priority 2” services because
they know they’ll be turned down. Wisconsin
estimated in 2005 that 98 percent of its schools and
libraries do not qualify. In 2010 New York wrote
to the FCC, “Many otherwise needy schools and
libraries have received no Internal Connections
funding — ever!” And the FCC itself declared
in 2010 that “the vast majority” of schools and
libraries “do not receive funds for the internal
infrastructure necessary to utilize increased
broadband capacity.”
From 2009 to 2011, Priority 1 services accounted
for about two-thirds of the funds committed. This
year, the estimated demand for Priority 1 services
will essentially exhaust the entire fund.
How could Congress’s plan have gone so far awry?
An examination of the program by ProPublica
shows that, from the beginning, oversight of how the
money was spent was turned over to private companies
that employ numerous former telecom executives.
The leading company hired to oversee the
program provided little if any training or guidance
to phone companies over the past decade in
how to calculate the bargain prices, known as
“lowest corresponding price.” Instead, according
to documents and interviews, it focused on the
schools, examining whether their purchases of
equipment were cost-effective.The company and
the FCC even forced schools and libraries — many
of them unskilled in negotiating complex telecom
contracts — to pay millions of dollars in penalties
for failing to follow the program’s voluminous and
cumbersome rules.
Yet 16 years after the law passed, the FCC
has not brought even one case against a phone
company for violating the “lowest corresponding
price” requirement. Efforts to enforce the rule
have come exclusively through private legal action,
such as lawsuits, and one Justice Department-led
investigation that examined pricing in Indiana.
Much about the E-Rate program remains
hidden from public view. Telecom contracts are
mostly private, so it is not possible to judge how
frequent or widespread violations of the lowestcorresponding-
price rule might be. For this report,
ProPublica relied on documents, many obtained
from lawsuits, as well as dozens of interviews.
Mike Balmoris, a spokesman for AT&T, declined
to answer specific questions about the company’s
practices but released a statement saying “AT&T
complies fully with the E-Rate requirements,
including the lowest corresponding price rule.”
In an email, Verizon spokesman Ed McFadden
said the company regularly trains its employees
on all legal obligations, “including requirements
of the E-Rate program,” as part of a larger effort
“to conduct business with all our customers at the
highest ethical standards.” The FCC also declined
to answer questions.
A statement provided by an FCC spokesman,
Mark Wigfield, cited the program’s overall success, the
commission’s efforts to improve “safeguards against
waste, fraud and abuse,” rules requiring schools to
engage in competitive bidding to ensure low prices,
and audits by the private company regulating the
program that compare prices that companies charge
schools to “those charged other customers.”
The FCC declined to make those audits
available. But through a FOIA request, ProPublica
requested every audit for the first 12 years
of the E-Rate program involving the lowestcorresponding-
price rule. The government provided
what it said was a complete set — a mere nine audits.
In broad terms, they show that regulators
paid little attention to telecom service providers
while coming down hard on schools. Indeed, most
of the audits deal with the companies as a side
issue; the main focus is on whether the schools,
not the companies, complied with the program’s
complex regulations. Some of the audits are heavily
redacted, but in the available text none mentions
lowest corresponding price, the key cost-saving
requirement.
The E-Rate Program
E-Rate was created through the Telecommunications
Act of 1996, which President Bill Clinton made
law through the first e-signing of a federal bill. The
act mandated broader telecommunications access
through four programs, including E-Rate for the
nation’s schools and libraries.
When a school or library qualifies for E-Rate,
the fund subsidizes 20 percent to 90 percent of the
telecom bill, depending on how poor the school or
library is. (A key measure of poverty: the percentage
of students who qualify for the government’s free or
reduced-cost school lunch program.)
The FCC says the program has been a success.
At the time of E-Rate’s launch, 65 percent of public
schools were connected to the Internet. By 2005,
about 97 percent were, thanks largely to E-Rate,
according to the FCC.
A few days after signing the act, Clinton
highlighted “a requirement for companies to
provide a discount for connecting all of our
classrooms and libraries to the information
superhighway.”
One reason for the bargain-rate requirement
is to make sure that as many schoolchildren and
library patrons as possible benefit. Another reason
to require companies to provide preferential
rates, according to the FCC, is that many schools
and libraries suffer from a “lack of experience”
when it comes to “negotiating in a competitive
telecommunications market.” Indeed, telecom
pricing is notoriously complex and opaque, and the
E-Rate program benefits “many of nation’s poorest
and most isolated communities,” according to an
FCC document.
Under FCC regulations, schools are required
to try to obtain competitive bids from phone
companies, while the companies are required to
charge no more than their
“lowest corresponding price,”
which the agency defined as
“the lowest price [a telecom
company] charges to similarly
situated non-residential
customers for similar services.”
Weak Enforcement
Almost from the inception of
the program, phone companies have advocated for
leeway in determining the lowest corresponding
price. In 1997, representatives from five former Bell
companies — three of which are now part of AT&T —
wrote to the FCC that companies should be allowed
“to determine the lowest corresponding price …
based on a consideration of factors normally used in
determining prices within a competitive market.”
Meanwhile, the FCC has repeatedly declined
to back the pricing rule with tough enforcement.
In 1997, the FCC proposed that companies could
get reimbursed through the program only if they
first certified that they had complied specifically
with the pricing rule — a strong legal requirement
that might have left companies liable to the federal
False Claims Act if they misrepresented their
prices. The FCC cited the “universe of records”
a company “must review to determine lowest
corresponding price.” But the agency never
enacted that certification proposal.
In 2005, the FCC again proposed that service
providers, as part of their annual E-Rate filings,
certify specifically they had charged the “lowest”
price to schools and libraries. But after industry
opposition, the plan was dropped, according to
public filings. Wigfield, the FCC spokesman,
declined to say why the agency did not require
certification. (The FCC does require a broad, annual
certification, in which companies are instructed to
affirm their compliance with E-Rate rules.)
The FCC, through the nonprofit firm Universal
Service Administrative Co., or USAC, has taken action
against phone companies for a variety of infractions
— but never has it demanded a refund or penalty for
violating the lowest-corresponding-price rule.
As for AT&T, as recently as 2007 it issued
its employees a 61-page “E-Rate Compliance
Training” manual, used as part of an annual
required course for employees. The pricing rule is
not mentioned.
In its statement to ProPublica, the company
spokesman said, “AT&T has implemented training
and procedures to ensure compliance with all
E-Rate requirements.”
Unequal Pricing
Working out of his modest home in Waupun,
Wisconsin, Todd Heath runs a niche business: He
takes a cut from any refunds he manages to obtain
for telecom customers, mainly schools. In 2008,
Heath wondered why schools he represented,
in small cities like Kaukauna, West Bend and
Fond du Lac, were paying far more than others
for essentially the same services from the same
company: Wisconsin Bell, a unit of AT&T.
The schools were all in the E-Rate program, and it
wasn’t long before Heath accused the company of
violating the lowest-corresponding-price rule. His
complaints are now in federal court.
Under whistleblower laws, if the suit results in a
financial settlement, Heath stands to gain a portion
of that money.
Heath’s complaint alleges that in 2005, school
districts in Burlington, Grafton, Cudahy and Altoona
paid as much as 80 percent more for the “identical”
central office exchange service from Wisconsin Bell
than did the Fond du Lac School District.
Also that year, according to the court complaint,
Milwaukee, West Bend and Sheboygan were paying
far higher rates for office exchange services than what
was available under an agreement between Wisconsin
Bell and the state of Wisconsin that allowed schools
and libraries to get the same favored rate the state was
getting. For example, the Wisconsin state contract
price for a service called ISDN/PRI, which integrates
voice and data into a single line, was $390 per month,
according to the complaint. But schools in Fond du
Lac, Hartford, Kaukauna, Kimberly and West Bend
were billed at prices ranging from $640 to $1,268 per
month, the complaint states.
Heath’s complaint asserts that “Wisconsin
Bell routinely has withheld information about
these available rates from public school and library
customers, and it has billed almost all of them at
much higher rates, sometimes three times as high as
LCP,” or lowest corresponding price.
The allegation that Wisconsin Bell hid the state
rates from schools is wrong, the company says,
because the contract rates were “publicly known.”
E-Rate regulations, however, require that the
lowest corresponding price be more than just publicly
known; that price must be provided to schools and
libraries in the program. Phone companies “shall not
charge” schools or libraries “a price above the lowest
corresponding price,” the regulations state. (There is
an exception for a rate so low that the company loses
money, but the FCC must sign off on this exception.
An agency spokesman, asked about any such cases, did
not provide an example.)
Wisconsin Bell is seeking dismissal of the
lawsuit on various grounds. One is that the FCC
has, in essence, neglected its duty to train phone
companies on how to determine the preferential
rate. The agency, according to a Wisconsin Bell
court filing, has “yet to provide authoritative
benchmarks with respect to application of the
lowest corresponding price requirement.”
The AT&T spokesman declined to discuss
the Heath case but said the company “has worked
diligently with industry to seek additional FCC
clarifications of these rules where appropriate.”
Excerpt from ProPublica, an independent, non-profit newsroom that produces investigative journalism in the public interest.Read the complete report HERE.