I forgot to mention one more thing......if the third party tandem provider is handling the local and intraLATA traffic for you as well as the FGD traffic, then you don't have to mess with managing your own SS7 network or programming your switch for the PSTN routing.

MARY LOU CAREY
BackUP Telecom Consulting
Office: 615-791-9969
Cell: 615-796-1111

On 2019-08-09 03:14 PM, Mary Lou Carey wrote:
There are a couple differences for various reasons. In the LERG there
are actually 3 tandems listed: One for Local, One for IntraLATA, and
one for FGD traffic. When you interconnect with only the ILEC, they
only have you establish 2 trunk groups. A local tandem trunk group
that handles the Local and IntraLATA traffic, and an Access Tandem
trunk group that handles the transit traffic you and the IXC carriers.
When you are  connected to the ILEC, all 3 tandem offices in the LERG
are listed as the ILECs tandems.

If you hire a third party tandem provider for just "access traffic",
you're only changing that FGD tandem so the only trunk group you are
eliminating with the ILEC is the Access Tandem Trunk group.

If you're going to have a third party tandem provider handle your
local and IntraLATA traffic as well as your FGD traffic, then the LERG
records change significantly. Instead of using your own switch CLLI,
you get a POI CLLI for the LATA and populate the third party tandem
provider's switch CLLI in the actual switch field of the LERG. This
tells everyone that the NXXs belong to your company, but you're
leasing another company's switch to handle all the routing. This
service eliminates the need for all dedicated trunks between you and
the ILEC so you just have trunks between you and the third party
tandem.

However, there is one more caveat and that is that it depends on what
ILEC you are interconnecting with. Verizon will allow the 3rd party
tandem provider to add your company's NXXs onto their existing trunk
group. CenturyLink and AT&T do not do that. They require the third
party tandem providers to install a dedicated trunk group for each
company that they are providing switching service for. Because a
dedicated trunk group between them and the ILEC costs them more, they
will bill you differently in those areas.

So the upside to having a third party tandem provider for Local
IntraLATA traffic is that you don't have to manage the Local IntraLATA
trunks yourself. The downside is that you probably will pay more per
minute if you send the traffic through the third party tandem
provider. Make sense?


MARY LOU CAREY
BackUP Telecom Consulting
Office: 615-791-9969
Cell: 615-796-1111

On 2019-08-09 02:42 PM, Mike Hammett wrote:
I'm evaluating methods of extending our footprint. I purposely left
out company names.

One of the companies we talked to was really only interested in
getting us the inbound long distance calls, not the local ones. Well,
they would, but the terms were vastly different.

Given that I still need to build out to connect to the local tandem,
what's the point in using a third party to connect to long distance?

Are the terms for connecting to the local tandems different because
the access tandem is simpler, whereas the local tandem could
potentially involve connections to a bunch of other switches, once
volume dictated I needed direct connections...  and they don't want to
deal with that?

Are there third parties that don't have vastly different terms for
local tandem services?

Also, is it likely that I just don't understand what's going on? I
went circles with the sales rep to make sure I understood what he was
saying, but I could be wrong.

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

Midwest Internet Exchange
http://www.midwest-ix.com
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