The Communications Act of 1978: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Communications of the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, House of Representatives, Ninety-fifth Congress, Second Session on H.R. 13015 ....U.S. Government Printing Office, 1979 |
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Page 33
... users . We cannot avoid the fact that one group of citizens is being burdened in order to benefit another . The current practice of accomplishing these transfers in the private sector -- by separations and settlements -- is governed by ...
... users . We cannot avoid the fact that one group of citizens is being burdened in order to benefit another . The current practice of accomplishing these transfers in the private sector -- by separations and settlements -- is governed by ...
Page 86
... user and the costs of the services offered . I seriously question whether there are suffi- cient safeguards in the bill to protect the interest of users of overseas services when those differ from the interests of the U.S. carriers and ...
... user and the costs of the services offered . I seriously question whether there are suffi- cient safeguards in the bill to protect the interest of users of overseas services when those differ from the interests of the U.S. carriers and ...
Page 101
... users , other carriers and the Commission staff to study new tariff proposals in detail . In several instances the Commission has been able to determine that a tariff filing was violative of previous Commission decisions . Early ...
... users , other carriers and the Commission staff to study new tariff proposals in detail . In several instances the Commission has been able to determine that a tariff filing was violative of previous Commission decisions . Early ...
Page 127
... users . It would appear that the bill's authors are torn between a desire to maintain average pricing on the one hand and to reap the benefits of competition on the other . Their method of resolving this problem seems to be to avoid it ...
... users . It would appear that the bill's authors are torn between a desire to maintain average pricing on the one hand and to reap the benefits of competition on the other . Their method of resolving this problem seems to be to avoid it ...
Page 158
... user community . For a number of reasons , however , it is important that Congress clearly recognize how users view the competitive environment as it exists today and appreciate the factors that influence this environ- ment . Currently ...
... user community . For a number of reasons , however , it is important that Congress clearly recognize how users view the competitive environment as it exists today and appreciate the factors that influence this environ- ment . Currently ...
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Expressions et termes fréquents
agencies AT&T authority basic believe Bell Operating Companies Bell System Bell's bill cable systems cable television Chairman circuits COLEMAN Commission committee common carrier Communications Act competitive services Comsat concern Congress consumer Corp customers Dataphone decision DEERLIN domestic economic efficient EFFROS elasticities entity EPRI equitable established exchange facilities planning Federal Federal Communications Commission filed foreign franchise fund industry INTELSAT interconnection international facilities international record carriers international telecommunications IRC's legislation long distance marginal costs marketplace ment monopoly operating Pareto optimal percent private line problems proposed public interest question rates regulation regulatory result revenues satellite facilities Section SHOOSHAN statement Subcommittee subscribers subsidiary suppliers switching tariff task force tele telecommunications services telephone company telephone service Telex terminal equipment testimony tion traffic transmission users utilities Western Electric Western Union WIRTH
Fréquemment cités
Page 511 - Communications Satellite Act of 1962". DECLARATION OF POLICY AND PURPOSE SEC. 102. (a) The Congress hereby declares that it is the policy of the United states to establish, in conjunction and in cooperation with other countries, as expeditiously as practicable a commercial communications satellite system, as part of an improved global communications network...
Page 1049 - ... act, matter or thing in this act prohibited or declared to be unlawful...
Page 1049 - ... together with a reasonable counsel or attorney's fee, to be fixed by the court in every case of recovery, which attorney's fee shall be taxed and collected as part of the costs In the case.
Page 1021 - United States" means the several States and Territories, the District of Columbia, and the possessions of the United States, but does not include the Canal Zone.
Page 1049 - ... shall be liable to the person or persons injured thereby for the full amount of damages sustained in consequence of any such violation...
Page 1093 - ... communications; the furtherance of various governmental programs on a Federal, State and municipal level, eg, employment services and manpower utilization, special communications systems to reach particular neighborhoods or ethnic groups within a community, and for municipal surveillance of public areas for protection against crime, fire detection, control of air pollution and traffic; various educational and training programs, eg, job and literacy training, preschool programs in the nature of...
Page 830 - Let me first clarify the term "gas utility industry." Three segments compose the gas industry: the gas producers, which are principally oil companies; the transmission pipelines, which are regulated by federal authority (formerly the Federal Power Commission (FPC) , now the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC...
Page 337 - ... therein named shall apply to the board of railroad commissioners for a certificate that public convenience and necessity require the construction of a railroad as proposed in such agreement.
Page 29 - For the purpose of regulating Interstate and foreign commerce in communication by wire and radio so as to make available, so far as possible, to all the people of the united States a rapid, efficient, nation-wide, and worldwide wire and radio communication service with adequate facilities at reasonable charges...
Page 756 - Western is ordered and directed to maintain cost accounting methods that conform with such accounting principles as may be generally accepted and that afford a valid basis, taking into account the magnitude and complexity of the manufacturing operations involved, for determining the cost to Western of equipment sold to AT & T and Bell Operating Companies for use by them in furnishing common carrier communications services.