Re: Can't Port from a Particular Rate Center

2021-06-10 Thread Jason Canady
Another trick I've used is to use a separate number and forward the old 
number to the new.  Set the caller ID to the original number, test 911.  
You may want to run the 911 with the new number instead though.  With 
this setup, you can try porting again down the road, but at least you 
have a solution in the current time.


On 6/10/21 7:32 AM, Ray Orsini wrote:
If there's wireless you can always try porting to wireless. We do that 
in a few rate centers

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*From:* NANOG  on behalf of Peter 
Beckman 

*Sent:* Thursday, June 10, 2021 12:33:45 AM
*To:* Mike Hammett 
*Cc:* NANOG Operators' Group 
*Subject:* EXTERNAL: Re: Can't Port from a Particular Rate Center
CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do 
not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender 
and know the content is safe. If you are unsure, please forward this 
email to the CSE team for review.



I had this happen to me recently.

Customer came in with a number that had very little coverage, but our
carrier had a 1,000 block in the same ratecenter, so we held out some 
hope.


Once we dug into it, the 1,000 block was designated for a different
"service offering" with the carrier. They were not offering portability in
that Ratecenter, despite having coverage, or even hardware or leased
hardware there.

So we had to send the customer off. There really were only about 5 
carriers

serving the Ratecenter, 3 of them wireless, one very local, and our
carrier.

If your carrier decides not to port a number, even when they seem to be
present in the ratecenter in question, they are not required by any law or
rule to port, AFAIK.

If a company will port in, the other carrier must (IMHO) port out. If not,
then you can't port. There may be some subtleties to that, but this is my
understanding.

Fun!

Beckman

On Wed, 9 Jun 2021, Mike Hammett wrote:

> I first asked on a list much more narrow in scope, but failing to get
> sufficient data points, I've expanded my scope.
>
> Assuming the number isn't held by someone exempt from porting, what 
would

> prevent someone from being able to port a number from a particular rate
> center in a LATA they have coverage in?
>
> We picked up a particular carrier for our out-of-area needs and the 
first

> thing we throw at them in a LATA we know they have coverage in, they
> can't do. They have a non-useful reason why. It doesn't appear to have
> moved to a state where they contacted the losing provider as the 
response

> was very fast, so my provider rejected the port, not theirs.
>
> When I started at this company (where we do our own porting), I made 
sure

> to port a bunch of numbers from all over our LATA to see what would
> happen. All successful. That seems to indicate that it doesn't matter
> which xLEC or tandem currently serves that number, it can move 
elsewhere.

>
>
>
> -
> Mike Hammett
> Intelligent Computing Solutions
> http://www.ics-il.com <http://www.ics-il.com>
>
> Midwest-IX
> http://www.midwest-ix.com <http://www.midwest-ix.com>
>
>

---
Peter Beckman Internet Guy
beck...@angryox.com http://www.angryox.com/ <http://www.angryox.com/>
---


Re: EXTERNAL: Re: Can't Port from a Particular Rate Center

2021-06-10 Thread Ray Orsini
If there's wireless you can always try porting to wireless. We do that in a few 
rate centers


Ray Orsini
Chief Executive Officer
OIT, LLC
 305.967.6756 x1009 |  305.571.6272
 r...@oit.co |  www.oit.co
 oit.co/ray
Headed to ASCII: Ohio on June 16th - 17th? Come meet the OITVOIP family!
​​Find your city and register for FREE using code "OIT" 
https://go.oit.co/ASCII2021
From: NANOG  on behalf of Peter Beckman 

Sent: Thursday, June 10, 2021 12:33:45 AM
To: Mike Hammett 
Cc: NANOG Operators' Group 
Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: Can't Port from a Particular Rate Center

CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click 
links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content 
is safe. If you are unsure, please forward this email to the CSE team for 
review.


I had this happen to me recently.

Customer came in with a number that had very little coverage, but our
carrier had a 1,000 block in the same ratecenter, so we held out some hope.

Once we dug into it, the 1,000 block was designated for a different
"service offering" with the carrier. They were not offering portability in
that Ratecenter, despite having coverage, or even hardware or leased
hardware there.

So we had to send the customer off. There really were only about 5 carriers
serving the Ratecenter, 3 of them wireless, one very local, and our
carrier.

If your carrier decides not to port a number, even when they seem to be
present in the ratecenter in question, they are not required by any law or
rule to port, AFAIK.

If a company will port in, the other carrier must (IMHO) port out. If not,
then you can't port. There may be some subtleties to that, but this is my
understanding.

Fun!

Beckman

On Wed, 9 Jun 2021, Mike Hammett wrote:

> I first asked on a list much more narrow in scope, but failing to get
> sufficient data points, I've expanded my scope.
>
> Assuming the number isn't held by someone exempt from porting, what would
> prevent someone from being able to port a number from a particular rate
> center in a LATA they have coverage in?
>
> We picked up a particular carrier for our out-of-area needs and the first
> thing we throw at them in a LATA we know they have coverage in, they
> can't do. They have a non-useful reason why. It doesn't appear to have
> moved to a state where they contacted the losing provider as the response
> was very fast, so my provider rejected the port, not theirs.
>
> When I started at this company (where we do our own porting), I made sure
> to port a bunch of numbers from all over our LATA to see what would
> happen. All successful. That seems to indicate that it doesn't matter
> which xLEC or tandem currently serves that number, it can move elsewhere.
>
>
>
> -
> Mike Hammett
> Intelligent Computing Solutions
> http://www.ics-il.com
>
> Midwest-IX
> http://www.midwest-ix.com
>
>

---
Peter Beckman  Internet Guy
beck...@angryox.com http://www.angryox.com/
---


Re: Can't Port from a Particular Rate Center

2021-06-09 Thread Peter Beckman

I had this happen to me recently.

Customer came in with a number that had very little coverage, but our
carrier had a 1,000 block in the same ratecenter, so we held out some hope.

Once we dug into it, the 1,000 block was designated for a different
"service offering" with the carrier. They were not offering portability in
that Ratecenter, despite having coverage, or even hardware or leased
hardware there.

So we had to send the customer off. There really were only about 5 carriers
serving the Ratecenter, 3 of them wireless, one very local, and our
carrier.

If your carrier decides not to port a number, even when they seem to be
present in the ratecenter in question, they are not required by any law or
rule to port, AFAIK.

If a company will port in, the other carrier must (IMHO) port out. If not,
then you can't port. There may be some subtleties to that, but this is my
understanding.

Fun!

Beckman

On Wed, 9 Jun 2021, Mike Hammett wrote:


I first asked on a list much more narrow in scope, but failing to get
sufficient data points, I've expanded my scope.

Assuming the number isn't held by someone exempt from porting, what would
prevent someone from being able to port a number from a particular rate
center in a LATA they have coverage in?

We picked up a particular carrier for our out-of-area needs and the first
thing we throw at them in a LATA we know they have coverage in, they
can't do. They have a non-useful reason why. It doesn't appear to have
moved to a state where they contacted the losing provider as the response
was very fast, so my provider rejected the port, not theirs.

When I started at this company (where we do our own porting), I made sure
to port a bunch of numbers from all over our LATA to see what would
happen. All successful. That seems to indicate that it doesn't matter
which xLEC or tandem currently serves that number, it can move elsewhere.



-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com

Midwest-IX
http://www.midwest-ix.com




---
Peter Beckman  Internet Guy
beck...@angryox.com http://www.angryox.com/
---


Re: Can't Port from a Particular Rate Center

2021-06-09 Thread Mike Hammett
Naw, the losing carrier is a major cable company. 




- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

Midwest-IX 
http://www.midwest-ix.com 

- Original Message -

From: sro...@ronan-online.com 
To: "Mike Hammett"  
Cc: "NANOG Operators' Group"  
Sent: Wednesday, June 9, 2021 3:46:03 PM 
Subject: Re: Can't Port from a Particular Rate Center 

Coming from another one of their customers? 


Shane Ronan 



On Jun 9, 2021, at 4:32 PM, Mike Hammett  wrote: 








I first asked on a list much more narrow in scope, but failing to get 
sufficient data points, I've expanded my scope. 






Assuming the number isn't held by someone exempt from porting, what would 
prevent someone from being able to port a number from a particular rate center 
in a LATA they have coverage in? 




We picked up a particular carrier for our out-of-area needs and the first thing 
we throw at them in a LATA we know they have coverage in, they can't do. They 
have a non-useful reason why. It doesn't appear to have moved to a state where 
they contacted the losing provider as the response was very fast, so my 
provider rejected the port, not theirs. 




When I started at this company (where we do our own porting), I made sure to 
port a bunch of numbers from all over our LATA to see what would happen. All 
successful. That seems to indicate that it doesn't matter which xLEC or tandem 
currently serves that number, it can move elsewhere. 



- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

Midwest-IX 
http://www.midwest-ix.com 






Re: Can't Port from a Particular Rate Center

2021-06-09 Thread sronan
Coming from another one of their customers?

Shane Ronan

> On Jun 9, 2021, at 4:32 PM, Mike Hammett  wrote:
> 
> 
> I first asked on a list much more narrow in scope, but failing to get 
> sufficient data points, I've expanded my scope.
> 
> 
> 
> Assuming the number isn't held by someone exempt from porting, what would 
> prevent someone from being able to port a number from a particular rate 
> center in a LATA they have coverage in?
> 
> 
> We picked up a particular carrier for our out-of-area needs and the first 
> thing we throw at them in a LATA we know they have coverage in, they can't 
> do. They have a non-useful reason why. It doesn't appear to have moved to a 
> state where they contacted the losing provider as the response was very fast, 
> so my provider rejected the port, not theirs.
> 
> 
> When I started at this company (where we do our own porting), I made sure to 
> port a bunch of numbers from all over our LATA to see what would happen. All 
> successful. That seems to indicate that it doesn't matter which xLEC or 
> tandem currently serves that number, it can move elsewhere.
> 
> 
> 
> -
> Mike Hammett
> Intelligent Computing Solutions
> http://www.ics-il.com
> 
> Midwest-IX
> http://www.midwest-ix.com
>