COLUMBIA, S.C. - Residents in some South
Carolina cities will have to wait until next year before they can
take advantage of new federal rules that let people transfer their
home phone numbers to cell phones.
The new rules take effect Monday for cell phone customers in and
around Columbia, Charleston, the urban Upstate and suburbs of
Charlotte, N.C.
But, people who live near those areas and get their local phone
service from small companies with mostly rural customers will have
to wait six months under an exemption approved last week by the
state's utility regulators.
Twenty-seven local phone service providers requested the waiver,
saying the Federal Communication Commission rules need more review.
The providers also said implementing the rules would require costly
upgrades.
"The commission, based on evidence, believed it was the correct
thing to do," said Bruce Duke, acting executive director of the
Public Service Commission. "They just weren't ready to go ahead with
this. Most of them were rural and that's part of the reason why we
granted the exemption."
The new FCC rules become effective in March for most rural
customers. Only rural customers who live close enough to cities
considered among the nation's 100 largest markets would have been
able to take advantage of the rules this month.
The U.S. Telecom Association, which represents local phone
companies, has said the new rules will allow wireless companies to
take away their customers while limiting their ability to do the
same to cell phone users.
The commission should not have granted a waiver based only on a
petition by a group of local providers, said Consumer Advocate
Elliott Elam.
Elam wants the Public Service Commission to hold a hearing for
public comment, which he said it should have done before making its
decision.
Duke said no hearing is planned.
"We think those companies may have the right to say this thing
was kind of thrown on us at the last minute, and we need more time,"
Elam said. "But if the PSC has in essence on the face of one
document from these telephone companies said 'Well you don't have to
do anything,' that's probably going too far."
Musician Christine Poulson doesn't plan to change her home phone
number to her cell phone anytime soon, but she's upset that she must
wait. Poulson, 43, lives in the Lowcountry town of Bluffton and gets
local service from one of the companies on the list.
Poulson says she considered switching to cell phone service and
it would be much more convenient to keep the same number because
it's the one most people know.
"If the United States is making a declaration that everybody has
the right to make a change and my little county isn't able to ...
I'd be kind of pissed off," Poulson said. "Maybe I could give them
the benefit of the doubt. But they better be ready in six months,
don't you
think?"