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Telecom Public Notice CRTC 2005-2
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Ottawa, 28 April 2005 |
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Forbearance from regulation of local exchange services
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Reference: 8640-C12-200505076
and 8640-A53-200403329 |
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With this Public Notice, the Commission
initiates a proceeding and invites comments on a framework for
forbearance from the regulation of residential and business local
exchange services. The Commission also invites comments on the
appropriateness of a transitional regime that could provide incumbent
local exchange carriers with more regulatory flexibility prior to
forbearance through: 1) lessening or removing competitive safeguards on
promotions and the no-contact restriction under the winback rules; 2)
permitting the ex parte filing of tariff applications for
promotions; and 3) the waiving of service charges for residential local
winbacks. Further, the Commission invites comments on Aliant Telecom
Inc.'s Part VII application for forbearance from regulation of
residential wireline local services, filed on 7 April 2004. |
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Background
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1. |
The Commission has, in a gradual and
orderly manner, opened up monopoly-based telecommunications markets to
competition. Subsequent to the introduction of competition, the
Commission refrained from regulation when it found there was sufficient
competition. Examples of services and markets for which the Commission
has forborne include: terminal equipment,1 mobile wireless,2
toll,3 interexchange private lines,4 retail
Internet,5 wide area networking,6 and certain data
services.7 |
2. |
In Review of regulatory framework,
Telecom Decision CRTC 94-19,
16 September 1994 (Decision 94-19),
the Commission found increased competition in the local telecommunications
market to be in the public interest, and determined that restrictions
on entry into local markets should be removed. In Local competition,
Telecom Decision CRTC 97-8,
1 May 1997 (Decision 97-8),
the Commission recognized that emerging competition was stimulating
innovation in services and prices, and increasing market revenues
to the benefit of both consumers and the telecommunications industry.
In that Decision, the Commission established the framework for competition
in the local services market. |
3. |
The Commission also recognized in Decision
97-8 that efficient
and effective competition would be best achieved through facilities-based
competitive service providers. |
4. |
In monitoring the Canadian telecommunications
industry, the Commission has found, as set out in its annual Report
to the Governor in Council: Status of Competition in Canadian Telecommunications
Markets – Deployment/Accessibility of Advanced Telecommunications
Infrastructure and Services, that competitors have not gained
a substantial market share with respect to local telecommunications
services since the issuance of Decision 97-8.
Local competitors have, however, made some inroads primarily in local
business urban markets and to some degree in local residential urban
markets in some parts of the country. |
5. |
On 7 April 2004, Aliant Telecom Inc.
(Aliant Telecom) filed a Part VII forbearance application
(Aliant Telecom's forbearance application) with the Commission,
requesting forbearance from the regulation of specified residential
wireline local services in 32 exchanges. The company cited substantial
competition in its territory by Bragg Communications Inc., operating
under the brand name of EastLink. |
6. |
Aliant Telecom also requested approval of
expedited relief from some competitive safeguards pending completion of
the Commission's consideration of its forbearance application. The
company requested that the Commission remove the 12-month no-contact
restriction under the winback rules,8 suspend the moratorium
on promotions involving local wireline services,9 reinstate
the ex parte filing of tariff applications for promotions, and
waive service charges for residential local winbacks in the
32 exchanges. |
7. |
Having considered comments from interested
parties, in a letter dated 16 August 2004, the Commission denied
Aliant Telecom's request for a separate expedited proceeding to consider
its requested relief from some competitive safeguards. The Commission
determined that such a request would be considered at the same time as
Aliant Telecom's request for forbearance from the regulation of local
services. The Commission noted that both of Aliant Telecom's requests
were premised on the view that an exchange was the appropriate
geographic market to consider in making determinations regarding local
services forbearance and removal of competitive safeguards. Accordingly,
the Commission determined it could not consider Aliant Telecom's request
for relief from such safeguards in an expedited proceeding as
Aliant Telecom had proposed. |
8. |
Subsequently, the Commission determined
in Promotions of local wireline services,
Telecom Decision CRTC 2005-25,
27 April 2005 (Decision 2005-25)
that incumbent local exchange carrier (ILEC) promotions involving
local wireline services are permitted subject to a number of competitive
safeguards. In that Decision, the Commission also stated that the
criteria under which the competitive safeguards on promotions could
be lessened or removed should be reviewed in this proceeding. |
9. |
The Commission considers that there is
a need to establish a framework for local forbearance, including clear
criteria that it can use to determine when it is appropriate to forbear
from regulating local exchange services. The Commission also considers
that there is a need to determine whether there should be a transitional
regime that provides ILECs with more regulatory flexibility prior
to forbearance and, if so, what should be the appropriate criteria
under which: 1) the competitive safeguards on promotions specified
in Decision 2005-25
and the no-contact restriction under the winback rules should be lessened
or removed; 2) the ex parte filing of tariff applications
for promotions should be permitted; and 3) the waiving of service
charges for residential local winbacks should be permitted. |
10. |
The Commission intends, in this proceeding,
to use these criteria to decide upon Aliant Telecom's forbearance
application, and, in future proceedings, to use them to decide upon
future applications for forbearance from regulation of local exchange
services. |
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Analytical framework for forbearance from the regulation of
telecommunications services
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11. |
Section 34 of the Telecommunications Act
(the Act) states: |
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(1) The Commission may make a determination to refrain, in whole or
in part and conditionally or unconditionally, from the exercise of any
power or the performance of any duty under sections 24, 25, 27, 29 and
31 in relation to a telecommunications service or class of services
provided by a Canadian carrier, where the Commission finds as a
question of fact that to refrain would be consistent with the Canadian
telecommunications policy objectives.
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(2) Where the Commission finds as a question of fact that a
telecommunications service or class of services provided by a Canadian
carrier is or will be subject to competition sufficient to protect the
interests of users, the Commission shall make a determination to
refrain, to the extent that it considers appropriate, conditionally or
unconditionally, from the exercise of any power or the performance of
any duty under sections 24, 25, 27, 29 and 31 in relation to the
service or class of services.
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(3) The Commission shall not make a determination to refrain under
this section in relation to a telecommunications service or class of
services if the Commission finds as a question of fact that to refrain
would be likely to impair unduly the establishment or continuance of a
competitive market for that service or class of services.
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12. |
Section 47 of the Act provides that the
Commission shall exercise its powers and perform its duties under the
Act with a view to implementing the Canadian telecommunications policy
objectives, set out in section 7 of the Act, and ensuring that Canadian
carriers provide telecommunications services and charge rates in
accordance with section 27 of the Act. In addressing the
telecommunications policy objectives, the Commission will consider and
balance the interests of customers, ILECs, and competitors. |
13. |
In Decision 94-19,
the Commission adopted the concept of market power, commonly used
in economics and in competition law, as the standard by which to determine
whether a market is, or is likely to become, competitive. Under this
approach, the determination of whether or not to forbear from regulating
a service or class of services is based on a determination of the
relevant market in which the service(s) is/are offered and on whether
a firm has market power in that market. |
14. |
The Commission considers that a market is
not sufficiently competitive if a firm possesses substantial market
power. Market power may be assessed by examining three factors: market
shares, demand conditions that affect responses of customers to a change
in price for a product or service, and supply conditions that affect the
ability of competitors in the market to respond to a change in the price
of a product or service. High market share is a necessary but not
sufficient condition for market power; other factors must be present to
enable a firm with market power to act anti-competitively. |
15. |
Other indicators of a sufficiently
competitive market may be taken into consideration. These include
evidence of rivalrous behaviour, such as falling prices; vigorous and
aggressive marketing activities; or an expanding scope of competitor
activities in terms of products, services, and geographic boundaries. |
16. |
The Commission's process for assessing
the degree of competition in telecommunications service markets is
outlined in Decision 94-19. |
17. |
The first step is the identification of the
relevant market. The relevant market is the smallest group of products
and geographic area in which a firm with market power can profitably
impose a sustainable price increase. The definition of the relevant
market is based on the substitutability of the services in question. |
18. |
The next step in the analysis involves
determining whether a firm has market power with respect to the relevant
market. As indicated in Decision 94-19,
there cannot be sustainable competition in a market in which a firm
possesses substantial market power. Market power can be demonstrated
by the ability of a firm to raise or maintain prices above those that
would prevail in a competitive market. |
19. |
The last step in the analysis is to
determine whether, and to what extent, forbearance should be granted. |
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Scope of the proceeding
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20. |
In this proceeding, the Commission will
determine the framework, including the criteria, for forbearance from
the regulation of residential and business local exchange services.
The Commission will also determine whether there should be a transitional
regime that provides ILECs with more regulatory flexibility prior
to forbearance and, if so, what should be the criteria under which:
1) the competitive safeguards on promotions specified in Decision
2005-25 and the no-contact
restriction under the winback rules should be lessened or removed;
2) the ex parte filing of tariff applications for promotions
should be permitted; and 3) the waiving of service charges for residential
local winbacks should be permitted. In this proceeding, the Commission
will also apply this framework and these criteria to make a determination
on Aliant Telecom's forbearance application. |
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Framework for forbearance
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21. |
This proceeding will focus on the framework
for forbearance from the regulation of local exchange services. In
particular, the Commission invites parties to comment on the following
issues: 1) the local exchange services that should be within the scope
of this proceeding; 2) the relevant market(s) for forbearance from the
regulation of local exchange services, taking into consideration both
services and geographic areas; 3) the criteria to be applied to
determine whether the relevant market(s) is/are sufficiently competitive
for forbearance; 4) the appropriate scope of the Commission's
forbearance from its powers and duties; 5) post-forbearance criteria and
conditions; and 6) the process for future applications for forbearance
from the regulation of local exchange services. |
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1. What local exchange services should be within the scope of this
proceeding?
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22. |
The Commission considers that local
exchange services used by residential and business customers to access
the public switched telephone network (PSTN) are within the scope of
this proceeding, as are the service charges and any features related to
the provision of these services. The scope of this proceeding does not
include: public telephone services, customer-specific arrangements (CSAs)
and bundles that do not include local exchange services, point-to-point
services, operator services, mobile and exchange radio services, and
competitor services. |
23. |
The Commission notes that some local
exchange services that are within the scope of this proceeding use
underlying access and transport services. An example of such a service
is Megalink, sometimes referred to as ISDN-PRI, a local exchange service
that requires components of Digital Network Access (DNA) service. The
Commission considers that the dependencies between these underlying
access and transport services and local exchange services are relevant
to this proceeding. |
24. |
As part of the process for finalizing the
list of local exchange services to be considered in this proceeding,
those ILECs who are made parties to this proceeding are to identify each
tariffed local exchange service that they consider to be within the
scope of this proceeding, including justification for why each service
should be within the scope of this proceeding. In addition, with respect
to each service identified, each ILEC is to indicate whether that
service is dependent on any underlying service. As part of this
proceeding, parties are invited to comment on the list of services
provided by the ILECs, and the Commission will determine the final list
of local exchange services that will fall within the scope of this
proceeding. |
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2. What is/are the appropriate relevant market(s) for forbearance
from the regulation of local exchange services, taking into
consideration both services and geographic areas?
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25. |
Parties are invited to provide their views,
with supporting rationale, with respect to the appropriate service and
geographic components for each relevant market. |
26. |
In its forbearance application dated 7
April 2004, Aliant Telecom suggested the exchange as the appropriate
geographic area for the purpose of forbearance. Other possibilities
include, but are not limited to, operating territory, province, or local
calling area. |
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3. What are the appropriate criteria to be applied to determine
whether the relevant market(s) is/are sufficiently competitive for
forbearance?
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27. |
Parties are invited to address the criteria
for determining market power set out in Decision 94-19
and other criteria that would demonstrate that the statutory requirements
of section 34 of the Act are met. |
28. |
In Decision 94-19,
the Commission's key concern was whether any firm held sufficient
market power within a relevant product or service market of a specific
geographic area that prevented establishment of sustainable competition.
Parties are invited to submit their views, with supporting rationale,
as to the appropriate quantitative and qualitative criteria that would
demonstrate that competition is, or will be, sufficient to protect
the interests of users, and that a determination by the Commission
to refrain from exercising its powers and/or performing its duties
under the Act in relation to a telecommunications service or class
of services would not be likely to impair unduly the establishment
or continuance of a competitive market for a service or class of services. |
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4. What Commission powers and duties should be forborne?
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29. |
Pursuant to section 34 of the Act, the
Commission can forbear in whole or in part, and conditionally or
unconditionally, from the exercise of any power or the performance of
any duty under sections 24, 25, 27, 29 and 31. Parties are invited to
submit their views, with supporting rationale, as to which powers and
duties should be forborne and to what extent and with what conditions,
if any. Parties should address whether the extent of forbearance should
vary depending on market circumstances. |
30. |
The Commission has, under these sections of
the Act, established conditions of service between ILECs, competitive
local exchange carriers, resellers, and other competitive
telecommunications service providers and their customers. These
conditions establish rights and obligations among these various parties.
For example, the ILECs' Terms of Service include safeguards with respect
to deposits and suspension or termination of tariffed services. As well,
there are quality of service standards that the ILECs have to meet in
providing certain tariffed services to competitors and retail customers.
Other conditions include, for example, the Multiple Dwelling Unit access
condition and conditions concerning the confidentiality of customer
information. Parties are invited to submit their views, with supporting
rationale, as to the extent, if any, such rights and obligations
associated with the local exchange services of the various service
providers should be retained if the Commission were to forbear. |
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5. What post-forbearance criteria and conditions should apply and
why?
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31. |
Parties are invited to submit their views,
with supporting rationale, on the post-forbearance criteria, conditions,
or safeguards, if any, that should be put in place at the time of
forbearance. These could include, for example, triggers which, if met,
would result in either automatic de-forbearance or a review of the
appropriateness of ongoing forbearance. Such triggers could include rate
relationships, rate increases, changes in market share or the end of a
pre-determined period of time. |
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6. What is the appropriate process for future applications for
forbearance from the regulation of local exchange services?
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32. |
Parties are invited to make submissions on
the appropriate process for considering future forbearance applications
for local exchange services, taking into account the need to demonstrate
how the criteria to be set out in the Decision resulting from this
proceeding have been met. Parties should demonstrate how their proposed
processes would ease regulatory burden while ensuring that regulation,
where required, is efficient and effective. |
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Should there be a transitional regime that provides ILECs with more
regulatory flexibility prior to forbearance?
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33. |
Parties are invited to submit their views,
with supporting rationale, on whether there should be a transitional
regime that provides ILECs with more regulatory flexibility prior
to forbearance and, if so, under what circumstances should the Commission:
1) lessen or remove the existing competitive safeguards for promotions
defined in Decision 2005-25
and the no-contact restriction under the winback rules, 2) permit
the ex parte filing of tariff applications for promotions,
and 3) permit the waiving of service charges for residential local
winbacks. Parties are invited to make submissions on the appropriate
process for considering future applications for regulatory flexibility,
taking into account the need to demonstrate how the circumstances
to be set out in the Decision resulting from this proceeding have
been met. Parties should demonstrate how their proposed processes
would ease regulatory burden while ensuring that regulation, where
required, is efficient and effective. |
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Aliant Telecom's forbearance application
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34. |
Considering the issues identified above,
parties are invited to provide comments on Aliant Telecom's forbearance
application, including its request to remove the competitive safeguards
identified in its application. Aliant Telecom may file updates to its
forbearance application. |
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Other issues
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35. |
Parties are invited to provide comments on
any other matters within the scope of this proceeding. |
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Procedure
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36. |
Aliant Telecom, Bell Canada, MTS Allstream
Inc., Saskatchewan Telecommunications, Société en commandite Télébec,
and TELUS Communications Inc., including the former TELUS Communications
(Québec) Inc. (the telephone companies), are made parties to
this proceeding. |
37. |
Other parties who plan to participate in
this proceeding are required to notify the Commission of their intention
to do so by 4 May 2005 (the registration date) and to provide
their contact information. They should do so by contacting the Secretary
General by mail at CRTC, Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0N2, by fax at (819)
994-0218 or by e-mail at procedure@crtc.gc.ca. They are to indicate
in the notice their e-mail address where available. If such parties
do not have access to the Internet, they are to indicate in their
notice whether they wish to receive disk versions of hard copy filings. |
38. |
The Commission will issue, as soon as
possible after the registration date, a complete list of parties and
their mailing address (including their e-mail address, if available),
identifying those parties who wish to receive disk versions. |
39. |
The telephone companies are to file with
the Commission, serving a copy on all parties, by 13 May 2005,
their lists of tariffed local exchange services that they consider to be
within the scope of this proceeding. For each service, the telephone
companies are to provide details including the following: tariff number
and website link directly to the tariff, item number, service name,
service description, and basket to which the service is assigned.
Additionally, if the service is dependent on another service, the
telephone companies are to provide a description of the nature of the
dependency and identification of the underlying service, including:
tariff number and website link directly to the tariff, item number (if
tariffed), service name, and service description. The telephone
companies are requested to file this information in a Microsoft Excel
spreadsheet (current version), formatted with the following columns for
each service: |
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- Tariff number and website link directly to the tariff;
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- Basket to which the service is assigned; and
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- Dependency on underlying service(s), if applicable, specifying for
each such service:
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- Tariff number and website link directly to the tariff (if
tariffed),
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- Item number (if tariffed),
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- Service name,
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- Service description, and
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- Nature of the dependency.
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Companies are requested to use 'Not
Applicable' (N/A) to indicate areas that are not relevant. |
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Telephone companies are not required to
file the above information with respect to CSAs and bundles which
include local exchange services. |
40. |
Aliant Telecom is to file with the
Commission, serving a copy on all parties, by 18 May 2005 any
updates to its forbearance application. |
41. |
Parties are invited to comment, serving a
copy on all parties, on the lists of tariffed local exchange services
provided by the telephone companies pursuant to paragraph 39 by
20 May 2005. |
42. |
The Commission will issue a determination
on the final list of services which are within the scope of this
proceeding as soon as possible. |
43. |
Parties are invited to file written
comments with the Commission with respect to the issues described in
this Public Notice, serving a copy on all other parties, by
22 June 2005. Each submission is to include a table of contents and
the portion of the submission that addresses the matters identified as
issues 2 to 6 in paragraph 21 is to be structured as described in that
paragraph. Parties are to include with their comments any evidence that
they consider necessary to support their arguments. This includes any
research studies or other material that parties wish to refer to in this
proceeding. |
44. |
Any members of the public who wish to file
written comments,
without receiving copies of the various submissions, may do so by
submitting their comments in writing to the Commission by 22 June
2005. |
45. |
The Commission will not formally
acknowledge comments. It will, however, fully consider all comments and
they will form part of the public record of the proceeding. |
46. |
Parties are to indicate their intent to
participate in the oral consultation detailed below by 13 July 2005. |
47. |
The Commission and the parties may address
interrogatories to the telephone companies and to any party who filed
comments pursuant to paragraph 43. Any such interrogatories must be
filed with the Commission and served on the party in question by
20 July 2005. |
48. |
Responses to those interrogatories are to
be filed with the Commission and served on all parties by 15 August
2005. |
49. |
The Commission will issue an organization
and conduct letter to outline the process of the public consultation by
19 August 2005. |
50. |
Requests by parties for further responses
to their interrogatories, specifying in each case why a further response
is both relevant and necessary, and requests for public disclosure of
information for which confidentiality has been claimed, setting out in
each case the reasons for disclosure, must be filed with the Commission
and served on the relevant party or parties by 22 August 2005. |
51. |
Written responses to requests for further
responses to interrogatories and for public disclosure must be filed
with the Commission and served on the party or parties making the
request by 26 August 2005. |
52. |
A determination with respect to requests
for further information and for public disclosure will be issued as soon
as possible. Any information to be provided pursuant to that
determination must be filed with the Commission and served on all
parties, by 8 September 2005. |
53. |
Parties may file written argument with the
Commission, serving a copy on all parties no later than 15 September
2005. Written argument shall be no longer than 30 pages. |
54. |
A public consultation will be held on
26-29 September 2005 at 140 Promenade du Portage, Niveau 0, Phase
IV, Gatineau, Quebec. Only those parties who have filed comments in
accordance with paragraph 43 above will be permitted to make an oral
presentation at the public consultation. |
55. |
The Commission reserves the right to group
parties of similar views together for the purpose of presenting their
views at the public consultation. |
56. |
Parties may file reply argument with the
Commission, serving a copy on all other parties by 7 October 2005.
Reply arguments shall be no longer than 10 pages. |
57. |
A Decision will be issued within 150 days
after the record closes. |
58. |
Where a document is to be filed or served
by a specific date, the document must be actually received, not merely
sent, by that date. |
59. |
Parties may file their submissions
electronically or on paper. Submissions longer than five pages should
include a summary. |
60. |
Where the submission is filed by electronic
means, the line ***End of document*** should be entered following the
last paragraph of the document as an indication that the document has
not been damaged during electronic transmission. |
61. |
Please note that only those submissions
electronically filed will be available on the Commission's website and
only in the official language and format in which they are submitted. |
62. |
Each paragraph of all submissions should be
numbered. |
63. |
The Commission also encourages parties to
monitor the record of this proceeding (and/or the Commission's website)
for additional information that they may find useful when preparing
their submissions. |
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Important
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64. |
All information submitted, including your
name, e-mail address, and any other information not submitted under a
claim for confidentiality, will be posted on the Commission's website.
Documents received in electronic format will be posted on the
Commission's website exactly as you send them, and in the official
language and format in which they are received. Documents not received
electronically will be available in .pdf format. |
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Location of CRTC offices
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65. |
Submissions may be examined or will be made
available promptly upon request at the Commission offices during normal
business hours: |
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Central Building
Les Terrasses de la Chaudière
1 Promenade du Portage, Room 206
Gatineau, Quebec J8X 4B1
Tel: (819) 997-2429 - TDD: 994-0423
Fax: (819) 994-0218 |
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Metropolitan Place
99 Wyse Road, Suite 1410
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia B3A 4S5
Tel: (902) 426-7997 - TDD: 426-6997
Fax: (902) 426-2721 |
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205 Viger Avenue West, Suite 504
Montréal, Quebec H2Z 1G2
Tel: (514) 283-6607 |
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55 St. Clair Avenue East, Suite 624
Toronto, Ontario M4T 1M2
Tel: (416) 952-9096 |
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Kensington Building
275 Portage Avenue, Suite 1810
Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 2B3
Tel: (204) 983-6306 - TDD: 983-8274
Fax: (204) 983-6317 |
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Cornwall Professional Building
2125 - 11th Avenue, Suite 103
Regina, Saskatchewan S4P 3X3
Tel: (306) 780-3422 |
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10405 Jasper Avenue, Suite 520
Edmonton, Alberta T5J 3N4
Tel: (780) 495-3224 |
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580 Hornby Street, Suite 530
Vancouver, British Columbia V6C 3B6
Tel: (604) 666-2111 - TDD: 666-0778
Fax: (604) 666-8322 |
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Secretary General |
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This document is available in alternative
format upon request, and may also be examined in PDF
format or in HTML at the following Internet site: http://www.crtc.gc.ca
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