*************************************************** NOTICE *************************************************** This document was converted from WordPerfect to ASCII Text format. Content from the original version of the document such as headers, footers, footnotes, endnotes, graphics, and page numbers will not show up in this text version. All text attributes such as bold, itallic, underlining, etc. from the original document will not show up in this text version. Features of the orginal document layout such as columns, tables, line and letter spacing, pagination, and margins will not be preserved in the text version. If you need the complete document, download the WordPerfect version or Adobe Acrobat version, if available. **************************************************** Before theFederal Communications Commission Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of ) ) GTE Telephone Operating Cos. ) CC Docket No. 98-79 GTOC Tariff No. 1 ) GTOC Transmittal No. 1148 ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Adopted: October 30, 1998; Released: October 30, 1998 By the Commission: (Commissioners Furchtgott-Roth and Tristani dissenting in part and issuing a joint statement) I. INTRODUCTION 1. In this Order, we conclude our investigation of a new access offering filed by GTE that GTE calls its DSL Solutions-ADSL Service ("ADSL service"). We find that this offering, which permits Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to provide their end user customers with high-speed access to the Internet, is an interstate service and is properly tariffed at the federal level. In addition, we reject the argument of Northpoint that the possibility of a price squeeze warrants the Commission's transfer to the states of its ratemaking authority with respect to interstate DSL services such as the one at issue here. 2. We emphasize that we decide here only the issue designated in our investigation of GTE's federal tariff for ADSL service, which provides specifically for a dedicated connection, rather than a circuit-switched, dial-up connection, to ISPs and potentially other locations. This issue involves the applicability of Commission rules and precedent regarding the provision by one incumbent local exchange carrier (LEC) of special access service. This Order does not consider or address issues regarding whether local exchange carriers are entitled to receive reciprocal compensation when they deliver to information service providers, including Internet service providers, circuit-switched dial-up traffic originated by interconnecting LECs. Unlike GTE's ADSL tariff, the reciprocal compensation controversy implicates: the applicability of the separate body of Commission rules and precedent regarding switched access service, the applicability of any rules and policies relating to inter-carrier compensation when more than one local exchange carrier transmits a call from an end user to an ISP, and the applicability of interconnection agreements under sections 251 and 252 of the Communications Act, as amended by the Telecommunications Act of 1996, entered into by incumbent LECs and competitive LECs that state commissions have found, in arbitration, to include such traffic. Because of these considerations, we find that this Order does not, and cannot, determine whether reciprocal compensation is owed, on either a retrospective or a prospective basis, pursuant to existing interconnection agreements, state arbitration decisions, and federal court decisions. We therefore intend in the next week to issue a separate order specifically addressing reciprocal compensation issues. II. BACKGROUND 3. In an Order released May 29, 1998, the Common Carrier Bureau (Bureau) found that GTOC Transmittal No. 1148 establishing a new offering, GTE DSL Solutions-ADSL Service ("ADSL service"), raised substantial questions of lawfulness and, accordingly, suspended this tariff for one day, initiated an investigation, and imposed an accounting order. Subsequently, the Bureau designated for investigation the question whether GTE's ADSL service offering constitutes an interstate access service, thus subject to the Commission's jurisdiction and properly tariffed at the federal level. The Bureau also solicited comments on whether the Commission should defer to the states the tariffing of DSL services in order to lessen the possibility of a price squeeze. On September 8, 1998, GTE filed its direct case. More than forty parties filed comments or oppositions responding to GTE's direct case on September 18, 1998. GTE filed its rebuttal on September 23, 1998. 4. The issue whether GTE's ADSL service offering constitutes an interstate access service involves determining how Internet traffic fits within our existing regulatory framework. We begin, therefore, with a brief description of relevant terminology and technology. A. The Internet and ISPs 5. The Internet is an international network of interconnected computers enabling millions of people to communicate with one another and to access vast amounts of information from around the world. The Internet functions by splitting up information into "small chunks or 'packets' that are individually routed through the most efficient path to their destination." With packet-switching, "even two packets from the same message may travel over different physical paths through the network . . . which enables users to invoke multiple Internet services simultaneously, and to access information with no knowledge of the physical location of the service where the information resides." 6. An ISP is an entity that provides its customers the ability to obtain on-line information through the Internet. ISPs purchase analog and digital lines from local exchange carriers to connect to their dial-in subscribers. Under one typical arrangement, an ISP customer dials a seven-digit number to reach the ISP server in the same local calling area. The ISP, in turn, combines "computer processing, information storage, protocol conversion, and routing with transmission to enable users to access Internet content and services." Under this arrangement, the end user generally pays the LEC a flat monthly fee for use of the local exchange network and generally pays the ISP a flat, monthly fee for Internet access. The ISP typically purchases business lines from a LEC, for which it pays a flat monthly fee which allows unlimited incoming calls. 7. Although the Commission has recognized that enhanced service providers (ESPs), including ISPs, use interstate access services, since 1983 it has exempted ESPs from the payment of certain interstate access charges. Pursuant to this exemption, ESPs are treated as end users for purposes of assessing access charges. Thus, ESPs generally pay local business rates and interstate subscriber line charges for their switched access connections to local exchange company central offices. They also pay the special access surcharge on their special access lines under the same conditions applicable to end users. In the Access Charge Reform Order, the Commission decided to maintain the existing pricing structure and continue to treat ESPs as end users for the purpose of applying access charges. The Commission stated that retaining the ESP exemption would avoid disrupting the still-evolving information services industry and advance the goals of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 to "preserve the vibrant and competitive free market that presently exists for the Internet and other interactive computer services." B. GTE's ADSL Tariff 8. On May 15, 1998, GTOC filed Transmittal No. 1148, proposing to offer GTE DSL Solutions-ADSL Service, which GTE describes as an interstate data special access service that provides a high speed access connection between an end user subscriber and an ISP by utilizing a combination of the subscriber's existing local exchange physical plant (i.e., copper facility), a specialized DSL-equipped wire center, and transport to the network interface where the ISP will connect to GTE's network. Specifically, according to GTE, an end user's modem is connected to the network interface device/splitter at the end user premises. GTE explains that its service "consists of the connection from the network interface device over an existing facility to a splitter, modem, and ADSL equipment combination in the serving wire center." The interstate special access data traffic is routed via a digital subscriber line access multiplexer, or DSLAM, to GTE's "connection point" or packet-switched network. The GTE ADSL wire center is connected with the GTE ADSL connection point using frame relay interface capabilities. ISPs connect their networks to the GTE ADSL connection point using frame relay services offered elsewhere in its tariff. The subscriber's use of GTE's local exchange plant for circuit switched intrastate and interstate voice and data calls is unaffected by the DSL service. 9. GTE's ADSL service, like other xDSL technology, enables ISPs and other customers to provide to their end user subscribers "the simultaneous transmission of voice dialed calls and high speed data access over a single transmission path . . . at data speeds that far exceed the current widespread method of voice path dial access to ISPs," thereby reducing the need for subscribers to obtain additional lines for their Internet capabilities. According to GTE, this technology provides end user subscribers a reliable and highly efficient way to reach the Internet; it allows information to be retrieved more quickly; and it supports expanded offerings for enhanced services. GTE notes that an end user still will need to purchase standard residential or business service. 10. GTE expects ISPs to purchase GTE's ADSL service to provide faster connections to end user customers. End users, however, can purchase the service directly from GTE so long as the ISP to which they subscribe is connected to GTE's ADSL network. 11. An end user accesses the Internet using GTE's ADSL service by turning on the computer and clicking on the icon for the ISP service. The end user thus obtains a dedicated connection to the ISP, rather than a circuit-switched, dial-up connection. The communication then travels from the ISP's point of presence to its web server. GTE proposes to offer this service through an interstate access tariff, claiming that: 1) Internet traffic is primarily interstate in nature; 2) the ADSL service offering involves dedicated transport of data; and 3) GTE's ADSL service is an access service under section 69.2 of the Commission's rules. 12. In its Direct Case, GTE contends that its ADSL service offering is inherently an interstate service because it will be used to communicate with parties outside the end user's home state via e-mail, to access remote databases, and to interact with Internet websites throughout the country and the world. GTE argues that it is well established that the "nature of the communication itself rather than the physical location of the technology determines the jurisdictional classification of a service." GTE relies upon several decisions where courts have confirmed that the jurisdictional analysis of a communications service requires an examination of "the totality of the communication from its inception to its completion," without regard to points of intermediate switching. 13. GTE also argues that application of the inseverability doctrine mandates a finding that its ADSL service offering is interstate and subject to federal tariffing requirements because: 1) Internet traffic involves multiple parties throughout the nation and around the world, rendering traditional jurisdictional measures meaningless; and 2) it is not technically possible to segregate and measure Internet traffic based on the geographic location of the parties. In the alternative, GTE claims that its ADSL service offering, as a dedicated access offering, warrants federal regulation because it exceeds the ten percent de minimis threshold set for interstate regulation of special access services. 14. In addition, GTE asserts that the Commission repeatedly has classified Internet traffic as predominantly interstate, and that, therefore, tariffing its ADSL service offering on the federal level is appropriate. GTE contends that the Commission's designation of ISPs as "end users" for purposes of assessing access charges does not mean that ISPs are end users for purposes of defining the termination point of an end-to-end communication. Finally, GTE argues that the alleged risk of an unlawful "price squeeze" provides no basis for the Commission to abdicate its jurisdiction over interstate services. GTE states that Northpoint's contention that one set of regulators should review both GTE's interstate ADSL rates and GTE's rates for unbundled network elements (UNEs) must fail because the relationship between UNE and service pricing is subject to the dual regulatory structure inherent in the Act. 15. Many competitive LECs and ISPs urge the Commission to treat Internet traffic delivered via GTE's ADSL service offering as one intrastate "local" call terminating at the ISP's local server, followed by a second, separate transmission from the ISP server to the Internet. Specifically, these commenters argue that, for jurisdictional purposes, the end-to-end ADSL communication consists of two distinct components: an intrastate "telecommunications service," which ends at the ISP's local server, and an interstate "information service," which begins where the telecommunications service ends. In addition, many competitive LECs observe that, because ISPs are permitted to purchase services from incumbent LECs under the same intrastate tariffs available to end users, ISP traffic delivered via GTE's ADSL service offering constitutes local traffic for separations purposes. Therefore, competitive LECs argue that such traffic must terminate at the ISP's point of presence. Finally, several commenters maintain that GTE's ADSL service offering must be tariffed on the state level, because it does not qualify as an "access service" under section 69.2 of the Commission's rules. III. DISCUSSION 16. We agree that GTE's DSL Solutions-ADSL service offering is an interstate service that is properly tariffed at the federal level. Section 2(a) of the Act grants the Commission jurisdiction over "all interstate and foreign communication by wire." Traffic is deemed interstate "when the communication or transmission originates in any state, territory, possession of the United States, or the District of Columbia and terminates in another state, territory, possession, or the District of Columbia." 17. As many commenters note, the Commission traditionally has determined the jurisdictional nature of communications by the end points of the communication and consistently has rejected attempts to divide communications at any intermediate points of switching or exchanges between carriers. In BellSouth MemoryCall, for example, the Commission considered the jurisdictional nature of traffic that consisted of an incoming interstate transmission (call) to the switch serving a voice mail subscriber and an intrastate transmission of that message from that switch to the voice mail apparatus. The Commission determined that the entire transmission constituted one interstate call, because "there is a continuous path of communications across state lines between the caller and the voice mail service." 18. Similarly, in Teleconnect, the Bureau examined whether a call using Teleconnect's "All-Call America" (ACA) service, a nationwide 800 travel service that uses AT&T's Megacom 800 service, is a single, end-to-end call. Generally, an ACA call is initiated by an end user from a common line open end; the call is routed through a LEC to an AT&T Megacom line, and is then transferred from AT&T to Teleconnect by another LEC. At that point, Teleconnect routes the call through the LEC to the end user being called. The Bureau rejected the argument that the (ACA) 800 call used to connect to an interexchange carrier's (IXC's) switch was a separate and distinct call from the call that was placed from that switch. The Commission affirmed, noting that "both court and Commission decisions have considered the end-to-end nature of the communications more significant than the facilities used to complete such communications. According to these precedents, we regulate an interstate wire communication under the Communications Act from its inception to its completion." The Commission concluded that "an interstate communication does not end at an intermediate switch. . . . The interstate communication itself extends from the inception of a call to its completion, regardless of any intermediate facilities." In addition, in Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, the Commission rejected the argument that "a credit card call should be treated for jurisdictional purposes as two calls: one from the card user to the interexchange carrier's switch, and another from the switch to the called party" and concluded that "switching at the credit card switch is an intermediate step in a single end-to-end communication." 19. Consistent with these precedents, we conclude that the communications at issue here do not terminate at the ISP's local server, as some competitive LECs and ISPs contend, but continue to the ultimate destination or destinations, very often at a distant Internet website accessed by the end user. The fact that the facilities and apparatus used for GTE's ADSL service offering may be located within a single state does not affect our jurisdiction. As the Commission stated in BellSouth Memory Call, "this Commission has jurisdiction over, and regulates charges for, the local network when it is used in conjunction with the origination and termination of interstate calls." Indeed, in the vast majority of cases, the facilities that incumbent LECs use to provide interstate access are located entirely within one state. 20. We disagree with those commenters who argue that, for jurisdictional purposes, an end-to-end ADSL communication must be separated into two components: an intrastate telecommunications service, provided in this instance by GTE, and an interstate information service, provided by the ISP. As discussed above, the Commission analyzes the totality of the communication when determining the jurisdictional nature of a communication. The Commission previously has distinguished between the "telecommunications services component" and the "information services component" of end-to-end Internet access for purposes of determining which entities are required to contribute to universal service. Although the Commission concluded that ISPs do not appear to offer "telecommunications service," and thus are not "telecommunications carriers" that must contribute to the Universal Service Fund, it has never found that "telecommunications" ends where "enhanced" information service begins. To the contrary, in the context of open network architecture (ONA) elements, the Commission stated that "an otherwise interstate basic service . . . does not lose its character as such simply because it is being used as a component in the provision of a[n enhanced] service that is not subject to Title II." Under the definition of information service added by the 1996 Act, an information service, while not a telecommunications service itself, is provided via telecommunications. As explained in the Universal Service Report to Congress, because information services are offered via telecommunications, they necessarily require a transmission component in order for users to access information. We, therefore, analyze ISP traffic as a continuous transmission from the end user to a distant Internet site. 21. Nor are we are persuaded by competitive LEC arguments that, because the Commission has treated ISPs as end users for purposes of the ESP exemption, an Internet call must terminate at the ISP's point of presence. As discussed above, GTE's ADSL service offering is designed to be used by ISPs as part of their end-to-end Internet access service. The Commission traditionally has characterized the link from an end user to an ESP as an interstate access service. In the MTS/WATS Market Structure Order, for instance, the Commission concluded that ESPs are "among a variety of users of access service" in that they "obtain local exchange services or facilities which are used, in part or in whole, for the purpose of completing interstate calls which transit its location and, commonly, another location in the exchange area." The fact that ESPs are exempt from certain access charges and purchase their PSTN links through local tariffs does not transform the nature of traffic routed to ESPs. That the Commission exempted ESPs from access charges indicates its understanding that they in fact use interstate access service; otherwise, the exemption would not be necessary. We emphasize that the Commission's decision to treat ISPs as end users for access charge purposes does not affect the Commission's ability to exercise jurisdiction over such traffic. 22. Having concluded that the jurisdictional treatment of GTE's ADSL service offering is determined by the nature of the end-to-end transmission between an end user and the Internet website accessed by the end user, we now must decide whether that transmission does in fact constitute an interstate telecommunication. Generally, a call that originates and terminates in a single state is jurisdictionally intrastate, and a call that originates in one state and terminates in a different state (or country) is jurisdictionally interstate. An Internet communication does not necessarily have a point of "termination" in the traditional sense. In a single Internet communication, an Internet user may, for example, access websites that reside on servers in various state or foreign countries, communicate directly with another Internet user, or chat on-line with a group of Internet users located in the same local exchange or in another country, and may do so either sequentially or simultaneously. Accordingly, we recognize that some of the ISP traffic carried by GTE's ADSL service may be destined for intrastate or even local Internet websites or databases. 23. GTE argues that its ADSL service is properly tariffed at the federal level on the ground that it similar to existing special access services that are subject to federal regulation under the mixed-use facilities rule because more than ten percent of the traffic is interstate. The mixed-use facilities rule was introduced in a 1989 proceeding involving the re-examination of the separations treatment of "mixed-use" special access lines. Specifically, in the MTS/WATS Market Structure Order, the Commission adopted the Joint Board's recommendation that "mixed- use" special access lines (i.e., lines carrying both intrastate and interstate traffic) are subject to the Commission's jurisdiction where it is not possible to separate the uses of the special access lines by jurisdiction. The Commission found that special access lines carrying more than de minimis amounts of interstate traffic to private line systems should be assigned to the interstate jurisdiction. Interstate traffic is deemed de minimis when it amounts to ten percent or less of the total traffic on a special access line. 24. GTE contends that its ADSL service is similar to special access lines currently subject to federal regulation under the mixed-use facilities rule, and, thus, its ADSL service should be similarly regulated at the federal level. Section 69.2 of the Commission's rules defines "access service" as including "services and facilities provided for the origination or termination of any interstate or foreign telecommunication." There are two categories of access service: switched and special. Switched access services share the local switch to route originating and terminating interstate toll calls. Special access services, by contrast, generally provide a dedicated path between an end user and an IXC's point of presence. The special access category includes a wide variety of facilities and services, such as wideband data, video, and program audio services. 25. We agree that GTE's ADSL service is a special access service, thus warranting federal regulation under the "ten percent" rule. Like the point-to-point private line service high volume telephony customers purchase for direct access to IXCs' networks, GTE's ADSL service provides end users with a direct access to their selected ISPs, over a connection that is dedicated to ISP access. This dedicated access enables end users to avoid the problems associated with circuit- switched, dial-up access, such as long holding times and inability to connect to the Internet due to network congestion. The ADSL service also is similar to traditional private line services in that both services may carry interstate and intrastate traffic, and both services provide direct access from an end user to a service provider's (ISP or IXC) point of presence. 26. We are not persuaded by ALTS's argument that ADSL service does not fall within the definition of special access because it does not constitute "interstate telecommunications." As stated above, we disagree with ALTS's suggestion that the "telecommunications" service ends where the "information service" begins. Furthermore, as discussed above, we conclude that more than a de minimis amount of Internet traffic is destined for websites in other states or other countries, even though it may not be possible to ascertain the destination of any particular transmission. For these reasons, we conclude that GTE's ADSL service is subject to federal jurisdiction under the Commission's mixed-use facilities rule. 27. We emphasize that we believe federal tariffing of ADSL service is appropriate where the service will carry more than a de minimis amount of inseparable interstate traffic. Should GTE or any other incumbent LEC offer an xDSL service that is intrastate in nature, for example, a "work-at-home" application where a subscriber could connect to a corporate local area network, that service should be tariffed at the state level. 28. Several parties further argue that because it is difficult, if not impossible, to separate intrastate and interstate Internet traffic, federal regulation of this traffic is appropriate pursuant to the inseverability doctrine. Under the inseverability doctrine, pre-emption of state regulation is permissible "where it is not possible to separate the interstate and the intrastate components of the asserted FCC regulation." The Commission bears the burden of demonstrating that state regulation "negates the exercise by the FCC of its own lawful authority over interstate communications." In light of our finding that GTE's ADSL service is subject to federal jurisdiction under the Commission's mixed use facilities rule and properly tariffed as an interstate service, we need not reach the question of whether the inseverability doctrine applies. 29. Many commenters urge the Commission to clarify that any conclusion on the jurisdictional nature of GTE's ADSL service has no bearing on the jurisdictional nature of circuit- switched traffic, particularly dial-up calls to the local ISP platform. These parties contend that characterizing GTE's ADSL service as interstate would allow incumbent LECs to avoid their obligations to pay reciprocal compensation to competitive LECs for the transport and termination of circuit switched, dial-up calls from end users to ISPs. As stated above, our decision in this proceeding relates only to the jurisdictional treatment of the high speed access connection between an end user subscriber and an ISP, as described in GTE's tariff. We make no determination in this Order concerning whether incumbent LECs should be required to pay reciprocal compensation when they exchange Internet traffic with competitive LECs. 30. Finally, we reject the argument advanced by some commenters that the Commission should defer the tariffing of DSL services to the states in order to lessen the possibility of a price squeeze. These commenters argue that federal tariffing of DSL services will subject competitors to a price squeeze, because the federally tariffed DSL rate may be lower in some states than the sum of the prices of unbundled network element inputs, such as loops and collocation, that competitive LECs must purchase to offer competing services. They suggest that the Commission should either: (1) require GTE to impute to its ADSL service charges for loops, collocation, and transport elements that it imposes on its competitors; or (2) defer tariffing of DSL services to the states, which have jurisdiction over the pricing of network elements. 31. We do not agree that the possibility of a price squeeze warrants transfer of our ratemaking authority over DSL services to the states. First, it is not clear that fear of a price squeeze is well-founded. Northpoint's argument is premised on its assertion that GTE's rate for its ADSL service "is less than the price it charges competitive LECS for the loops, collocation and transport necessary to provide DSL service," but this is not an apt comparison. When a requesting carrier purchases these unbundled network elements, the facilities in question are capable of supporting a variety of services in addition to ADSL, such as local exchange service and access services. Competitors need not recover their costs from ADSL service alone; they have the same opportunity as GTE to recover the costs of network elements from all of the services they offer using those facilities. Thus, a carrier choosing to offer only data service over a facility that is capable of carrying more, such as GTE's ADSL offering, may not reap the entire revenue stream that the facility has to offer. Moreover, taken to its logical conclusion, Northpoint's reasoning would suggest that all interstate access services be regulated by the states, because those services can be provided by competitors through the use of unbundled network elements priced by the states. Such an outcome is neither necessary nor contemplated by the Act. 32. This Commission is well-versed in addressing the price squeeze concerns of new entrants and has in the past successfully forestalled attempts by incumbent LECs to shift costs to monopoly services in order to justify rates that effect a price squeeze. We have ample authority under the Act to conduct an investigation to determine whether rates for DSL services are just and reasonable. Moreover, although states have jurisdiction to determine the prices of unbundled network elements, those prices are a matter of public record that the Commission may examine in the context of determining the reasonableness of DSL rates or in the event of a complaint alleging a price squeeze. We conclude, therefore, that federal tariffing of interstate DSL services, such as the one at issue here, is appropriate, and we will address any price squeeze concerns as they arise. IV. ORDERING CLAUSES 33. Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED, pursuant to Section 204(b) of the Communications Act of 1934, 47 U.S.C.  204(b), that GTOC Transmittal No. 1148, proposing to offer GTE DSL Solutions-ADSL Service, is an interstate access service subject to this Commission's jurisdiction. 34. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, that the investigation and accounting order imposed by the Common Carrier Bureau in CC Docket No. 98-79 with respect to GTE for the designated issues as discussed herein IS TERMINATED. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Magalie Roman Salas Secretary APPENDIX A Comments ACI Corp. America Online Ameritech Association for Local Telecommunications Services (ALTS) AT&T Corp. Bell Atlantic BellSouth Corporation Commercial Internet eXchange Association Competitive Telecommunications Association (CompTel) Covad Communications Company (Covad) e.spire Communications, Inc. Firstworld Communications, Inc. Florida Digital Network, Inc. Focal Communications Corporation Hyperion Telecommunications, Inc. GTE Service Corporation GST Telecom Inc. ICG Telecom Group Intermedia Communications, Inc. Internet Service Providers' Consortium (ISPC) ITC^Delta Communications, Inc. (ITC) KMC Telecom, Inc. MediaOne Group, Inc. MCI/Worldcom, Inc. (MCI) National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) New York Department of Public Service Commission Northpoint Communications, Inc. (Northpoint) Pacific Bell Telephone Company (PacBell) Pac-West Telecomm, Inc. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission Public Utility Commission of Texas Public Utility Commission of Oregon RCN Telecomm Services, Inc. Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, Nevada Bell Telephone Company (SBC) Splitrock Services, Inc. Sprint Corporation Time Warner Communications United States Telephone Association (USTA) U S West, Inc. Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission Virginia State Corporation Commission October 30, 1998 Separate Statement of Commissioners Harold Furchtgott-Roth and Gloria Tristani, Dissenting in Part We support today's decision finding that GTE's DSL tariff includes an interstate service offering properly filed at the federal level. We write separately, however, to express our unwillingness to address the broader issues related to the jurisdictional nature of ISP traffic in this proceeding. That broader issue seems to be of enormous importance to many businesses, industries and consumers today, and doubtlessly many more tomorrow. The Commission faces no statutory deadline on the broader issue of the jurisdictional nature of ISP traffic, and thus we would prefer caution. The Commission does face a statutory deadline on the GTE tariff, but we could have allowed that tariff to go into effect as a lawful provision of a private service without addressing these broader questions. Such a result would not have reached the broader issue of whether ISP traffic over this DSL service is inherently interstate. Neither would such a decision have required the Commission to determine that "the communications at issue here do not terminate at the ISP's local server, as some CLECs and ISPs contend, but continue to the ultimate destination or destinations, very often at a distant Internet website accessed by the end user." Nor would we need to conclude that "[t]he fact that the facilities and apparatus used for GTE's DSL service offering may be located within a single state does not affect our jurisdiction." Such sweeping statements about this agency's jurisdiction -- and even more importantly the logical application of that framework -- could have broad and even unintended implications for many state commission decisions. Despite the majority's attempt to insulate State commission decisions, we are concerned that the logical application of that framework could have broader implications, and that is why we would urge greater caution and a narrower decision. Of course, we urge all parties to exercise caution pending the Commission's decision next week. The majority's decision to address the jurisdictional nature of ISP traffic has the unfortunate consequence of necessitating a discussion of the relationship between today's decision and existing state commission decisions concerning reciprocal compensation. That analysis by the Commission could have major ramifications for incumbent LECs, CLECs, state commissions, and consumers. At this point, we are uncertain of how to characterize the impact, if any, of today's Order on state commission decisions. In our judgment, such a discussion should have been deferred until next week when we will address reciprocal compensation issues more comprehensively. We think that it is important to reach a well-reasoned solution, and one that can withstand the inevitable weight of both close judicial scrutiny and market reaction. If we proceed rapidly with a solution that has not been fully vetted, we will create even greater uncertainty in the market, raising the specter of possible defeat in court, and exacerbating an already difficult market condition. Such a result will have benefitted no one but the litigation profession. As a narrower resolution of the tariff before us is possible, we would have preferred to meet that deadline in a manner that does not precommit this agency to a scheme whose logic could dictate a resolution of some of the reciprocal compensation issues that we are not prepared to endorse. * * * *