65-407 C.M.R. ch. 202, § 3 - BLOCKING SERVICES
A. Comprehensive
blocking. Comprehensive blocking is a customer-initiated block of all audiotext
services. A telephone utility must offer all one-party residential and
single-line business customers an initial opportunity to block and also to
unblock access to all audiotext services at no extra charge. Thereafter, the
maximum charge for either blocking or unblocking access to audiotext service
providers shall not exceed $5.00.
B. Selective blocking. Selective blocking is
a customer-initiated request to block one or more individual audiotext service
numbers. A telephone utility may offer any class of customers the opportunity
to block individual audiotext service numbers at a charge not to exceed $5.00
per request.
C. Presumptive
blocking. Presumptive blocking is a telephone utility-initiated block of one or
more classes or types of audiotext services. A telephone utility may provide
blocking of all customers to one or more classes or types of audiotext services
on a presumptive basis, after a 30-day notice to all customers. When this
service is provided, the telephone utility must offer customers the opportunity
to unblock access to all or any class or type of audiotext services at no
charge when technical facilities exist. Thereafter, the charge for blocking or
unblocking shall not exceed $5.00. Presumptive blocking may be provided only
upon a finding by the Commission that it is in the public interest.
D. A telephone utility must offer the
blocking services described in subsections A, and may offer the services
described in subsections B or C, above, in every central office that is capable
of offering a blocking service.
E.
A telephone utility that has not complied with or cannot comply with this
section by the effective date of this rule may apply to the Commission for an
extension for good cause. The request must be in writing and contain facts
demonstrating that compliance with this section will work a hardship on the
utility. The application must contain:
1. The
reason why the deadline cannot be met;
2. When the utility proposes to comply;
and
3. The cost of complying with
the deadline and the savings incurred if the delay is granted.
Notes
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