Media Kit - Industry Overview
NATIONAL
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 deregulated local telephone
service throughout the U.S. Opportunities in the exchange market for
Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (CLECs) then became similar to
the conditions present in the long distance marketplace in the early
’80s. The rapid acceleration of computer processing speeds, wireless
technology and expanding bandwidth is creating whole new consumer
segments, such as Movies on Demand, High-Speed Internet Access and
Internet telephone service. This nexus of unprecedented choice and
complexity has given rise to a generation of telecommunications
consultants specializing in flexible, scalable enterprise-wide
telecommunications planning. According to the National
Telecommunications and Information Administration (http://www.ntia.doc.gov),
telecommunications and information-related industries account for
approximately 20 percent of the U.S. economy. The rapid growth and
importance of the telecommunications and information industries will
continue for at least the next decade, domestically and
internationally. In fact, 33 percent of GPD growth in the past year
traces back to information-tech industries. Currently, consumers and
businesses spend about $282 billion on info-technology alone.
FLORIDA
Currently, there are ten incumbent local exchange carriers
licensed to operate in Florida. Of the ten, nine are price-regulated
and one is rate-of-return regulated, according to the Florida Public
Service Commission (http://www.psc.state.fl.us).
With price regulations, the law limits upward movement of rates by
setting the maximum allowable price that may be charged for
services. Price regulation provides companies with greater pricing
flexibility. With rate of return regulation, rates are set to
achieve a pre-approved revenue level. This process constrains the
company's ability to act, or react, quickly to competitive changes.
The 1996 Telecommunications Act allowed Competitive Local Exchange
Carriers (CLECs) to penetrate the local telecommunications market.
This legislation offers many new competitive local service providers
the chance to compete against Florida’s Incumbent Local Exchange
Carriers (ILECs), listed below:
- ALLTEL Florida, Inc.
- BellSouth Telecommunications, Inc.
- Frontier Communications of the South, Inc.
- GTC, Inc. d/b/a GT Com
- ITS Telecommunications Systems, Inc.
- Northeast Florida Telephone Company d/b/a NEFCOM
- Smart City Telecommunications LLC d/b/a Smart City Telecom
- Quincy Telephone Company d/b/a TDS Telecom/Quincy Telephone
- Sprint-Florida, Incorporated
- Verizon Florida Inc.
There are currently 429 CLECs in Florida.
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