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Bell Canada Launches VoIP without Reg Approval
By Charlotte Wolter
Posted on: 04/01/2005

In a move that could put it head to head with Canadian regulator CRTC
(Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Council), Bell
Canada (BCE Inc.) has launched its consumer voice-over-IP service,
Bell Digital Voice, in one of its local service areas without waiting
for approval by the regulatory authority.

The CRTC has been in the process of developing explicit policies for
VoIP services, but is not expected to issue formal regulations until
later this year. In the meantime, Bell Canada has launched the service
in three locations in Quebec province: Sherbrooke, Quebec City and
Trois-Rivieres, after a trial of several months in Sherbrooke.

"Bell Canada is throwing down the gauntlet," says Jon Arnold,
principal of J. Arnold Associates, a VoIP consulting firm. "They are
saying, 'You're taking too long to make a decision on VoIP.'"

Bell Canada is using the carefully chosen term "retail Internet
applications" to describe its new service. The reason for the wording
is the only explicit CRTC regulation on Internet services is a 1998
ruling that exempts "retail Internet applications" from pricing
regulations.

Incumbent services providers in Canada – such as Bell Canada and its
western counterpart Telus – must follow tightly controlled tariffs for
their voice services. Basic home service is priced at about CAN$30
with features such as voice mail charged extra.

Bell Canada is offering Bell Digital Voice for CAN$38 for unlimited
calling within the province, $40 for Canada-wide and $45 for unlimited
calling to Canada and the United States. The pricing includes many
standard features, plus voice mail to e-mail, service portability,
find-me with the ability to ring up to three phones and a Web
interface. The pricing is clearly far below similar packages for the
TDM service.

Bell Canada is making this move shortly after Vidéotron Ltée – a
wholly owned subsidiary of Quebecor Media Inc. and a cable operator
serving Quebec province and surrounding areas – launched its own VoIP
service. In addition, Vonage Holdings Corp. just celebrated a year of
offering service in Canada.

"They are saying 'Videotron launched VoIP in our home market, and they
compete with our business, and you [CRTC] are taking forever to make
up your minds about our VoIP, and we can't sit by and let these guys
take our market without a fair shot at it,'" says Arnold, who is based
in Toronto.

It is not clear how the CRTC will react to the challenge, Arnold says.
"That is everyone's question right now. They are being pushed into a
corner and I'm sure they are not very happy about it. Perhaps they are
going to see it as another case of the big bad Bell coming to bully
us."

There are ways for competitors, such as Vonage, to offer services in
Canada because there is widespread high-speed cable data service and
the incumbents sell so-called "naked" DSL – that is, consumers can get
DSL without also paying for a phone line, Arnold says. VoIP providers
have been able to get local phone numbers in most metropolitan areas.
However, in more remote areas, such as Saskatchewan, VoIP providers
have not been able to obtain local phone numbers.

Canada also has one of the highest rates of adoption of broadband in
the world, more than 30 percent by most estimates.

Another competitive tussle is going on is western Canada, where Telus,
the western incumbent, is asking the CRTC to prevent Shaw
Communications Inc., the second-largest cable operator in Canada, from
offering VoIP. Telus says Shaw has not obtained required CLEC status.
Canadian cable companies have some limits on bundling services.

Also, all of the VoIP offerings "are very local, small-scale
launches," Arnold points out. Shaw is offering service only in
Calgary, while Videotron's services are only in South Montreal (Bell
Canada's heartland), and Bell Canada is offering service only in three
Quebec cities.

Service providers likely have limited offerings because there still is
no clear mandate from the CRTC on VoIP. "Yes they are limited, but I
like that they are forcing the issue," says Arnold. "The CRTC needs to
be shaken up. It is taking too long, and the market is moving forward.
They are not doing the market any favors by just sitting. Meanwhile
Vonage does not care, because the regulations do not affect them."



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* Simon P. Ditner / ON-Asterisk Mailing List / http://uc.org/asterisk *

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