Mea culpa. Below is my penance. Next time I will wait for verification/ discussion before blasting news of such magnitude. Apologies to all. -- Birdie ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- Please send this article to all lists/newsgroups/individuals that you sent to bogus Modem Tax file: From: w8sdz@rigel.acs.oakland.edu (Keith Petersen) Subject: Re: Modem TAX Date: 6 Jun 91 11:31:09 GMT I wish you guys would check before posting things like this modem tax story. The story is a fraud. This issue was settled in 1988. ---Forwarded article: >From Pg. 6 of the Wall Street Journal for 17 March 1988. FCC SCRAPS PLAN TO CHARGE FOR COMPUTER ACCESS TO PHONE SYSTEMS, SOURCES SAY WASHINGTON - The Federal Communications Commission has quietly decided to scrap its plan to sharply in- crease telephone rates for computer users, agency and congressional sources said. Last week, the agency informed important lawmakers that it wouldn't go ahead with its plan to assess so- called access charges of as much as $5.50 per hour per user to hook up computer-communication networks to lo- cal telephone systems. An FCC official described the decision as a tactical move to placate opposition from Congress and computer users. "They got the message loud and clear from Congress that this plan was a political and policy loser", said a House staffer who was informed of the FCC decision. The FCC's about-face is a big victory for informa- tion service companies, who have contended that steep access charges would have drivem them out of business by making their services too expensive. Currently, computer-communications networks are exempt from those access charges. Computer users around the country deluged the FCC with about 10,000 letters opposing ac- cess fees, the most letters the agency has ever gotten on a telephone issue. The decision to drop the proposal was made by FCC Chairman Dennis Patrick and the common-carrier bureau of the agency, the sources said. Mr. Patrick, whose office wouldn't comment on the decision formally needs the vote of at least one of the agency's other two members to terminate a proposal. But in practice, he can act unilaterally because, as chairman, he controls which proposals can come to a vote. In any event, FCC Commissioner Patricia Diaz Dennis said she supported the decision to end the access- charge plan. "We've got a lot of things on our plate," she said. That's one that would overcrowd it." Several agency officials described the FCC's action as a way of patching up its tattered relations with Congress which is still fuming over the FCC's decision to abolish the fairness doctrine. Last Thursday, [March 10] Rep. Edward Markey (D., Mass.), chairman of the House telecommunications sub- committee, said he would introduce legislation to kill the access charge - even though agency officials said they had assured the congressman's staff that the FCC itself would kill the plan. A Markey aide said he was only notified an hour before Rep. Markey was to give a previously scheduled speech on access charges. "We'll closely monitor the commission's future actions to insure that this onerous charge doesn't re-emerge in a new form", Rep. Markey said in a statement yes- terday. Rep. Markey and other lawmakers also still oppose Mr. Patrick's pet plan to radically alter regulation of American Telephone & Telegraph Co. FCC and congressional sources said the agency would proceed, but slowly, with a separate plan to assess charges of about $4.50 per hour per user to hook up private telephone networks to local telephone systems. The FCC believes that both computer-communications networks and private telephone networks aren't paying their fair share of the cost of local telephone ser- vice. But exempting computer-communications networks has more appeal politically, because the users are often consumers with limited ability to pay increased charges. (end of article) ---Forwarded message (note the date): ~Date: 03-18-88 (11:23) Number: 2266 To : All Refer#: NONE ~From: Joe Hyland Read : (N/A) Subj: Letter writing does work! Status: public message Letter writing DOES work, folks, especially in an election year. Our thanks go out to Matthew March for uploading this tidbit to us. Anyone using (or thinking about using) PC-Pursuit should be particularly interested and happy to read this story: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Article that appeared in the Orlando Sentinel, Thursday, March 17, 1988 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Associated Press TELEPHONE INCREASE MAY BE SPIKED -------------------------------- Computer user's protests made an apparent impact on the FCC proposal that would substantially increase telephone charges for business and home computer users, sources said Wednesday. FCC chairman Dennis R. Patrick has concluded that, based on strong and nearly unanimous opposition to the proposal, the plan should be dropped, according to sources at the commission and on Capitol Hill. Commissioner Patricia Diaz Dennis said Patrick had not spoken with her about a recommendation to drop the plan, but she said she agrees with the idea. "There's a lot on our plate right now, and I don't think I'd miss not seeing that on it," she said. The third commissioner James Quello could not be reached for comment. Patrick's office had no comment on the reports. The commission was expected to vote in two to three months to drop the proposal. A decision to scrap the plan would be a victory for the hundreds of thousands of computer users who dial into data bases such as CompuServe and QuantumLink for a variety of information services, like news stories and financial reports, and electronic communication with other users. Users of those services flooded the FCC and Capitol Hill with thousands of letters opposing the plan, which would add about $4.50 an hour to the cost of hooking up to information services. They said the increased charges, which would double the hourly hookup price for some information services, would drive many of them off the computer networks and crush a fledgling industry. Rep. Edward J. Markey, D., Mass., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce telecommunications subcommittee, said he would delay indefinit- ely the introduction of a bill aimed at blocking the FCC from imposing the access charges. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Thank-You, cards and politi-grams to the above mentioned people might help in insuring that the present course is followed from now on. If you think these folks are doing this out of the goodness of their heart, think again. These people are motivated by one thing - POPULAR OPINION! Let your feelings be known. Write your congressman and the FCC. Keep the pressure on. Our hobby is worth it! - Joe Hyland --------------------------------- end ----------------------------------