Attachment teleglobe

This document pretains to SCL-T/C-20000330-00013 for Transfer of Control on a Submarine Cable Landing filing.

IBFS_SCLTC2000033000013_159151

                                 Federal Communications Commission                               DA 00-1805


                                                Before the
                                 Federal Communications Commission
                                       Washington, D.C. 20554

In the Matter of                                     )
                                                     )
Teleglobe USA, Inc.                                  )    File No. SCL-T/C-20000330-00012
OPTEL Telecommunications, Inc.                       )    File No. SCL-T/C-20000330-00013
                                                     )
Application for Authority, Pursuant to               )
Submarine Cable Landing License Act,                 )
To Transfer Control of Cable Landing                 )
Licenses to BCE, Inc.                                )


                            MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

       Adopted: August 8, 2000                                     Released: August 9, 2000

By the Associate Chief, Telecommunications Division, International Bureau:

                                      I.       INTRODUCTION

        1.      In this Order, we grant the application of Teleglobe USA, Inc. ("Teleglobe USA"),
OPTEL Telecommunications, Inc. ("OPTEL") (collectively, "Licensees"), and BCE, Inc. ("BCE")
                                                                                           1
(collectively, "Applicants") seeking authority to transfer control of the Licensees to BCE. On
March 30, 2000, Applicants filed the instant application pursuant to the Cable Landing License
Act,2 and Section 1.767 of the Commission's rules.3 The Applicants agree to comply with the
dominant carrier regulations under Section 63.10(c) of the Commission's rules 4 with respect to


1
       Application for Transfer of Control, File Nos . SCL-T/C-20000330-00012, SCL-T/C-20000330-00013,
       filed by Teleglobe USA, Inc., OPTEL Telecommunications, Inc., and BCE, Inc., dated March 30, 2000
       ("Application").

2
       An Act Relating to the Landing and Operation of Submarine Cables in the United States, 47 U.S.C. §§
       34-39 (Cable Landing License Act). We also note that each of the cable landing licenses granted to
       Teleglobe USA and OPTEL contain an ordering clause stating that "[n]either this license, nor the rights
       granted herein, shall be transferred, assigned, or in any manner either voluntarily or involuntarily
       disposed of or disposed of indirectly by transfer of control of the Licensee to any persons, unless the
       Federal Communications Commission shall give prior consent in writing." See., e.g, Optel
       Communications, Application for a license to land and operate in the United States a submarine cable
       extending between Canada and the United States, File No. S-C-L-92-004, Final Cable Landing License, 9
       FCC Rcd 6153, 6154 ¶ 6(4) (1994), recon. 11 FCC Rcd 1878 (1996).

3
       47 C.F.R. § 1.767.

4
       47 C.F.R. § 63.10(c).


                                Federal Communications Commission                                     DA 00-1805


common carrier cable facilities on the U.S.-Canada route.5 We placed the application on public
                         6
notice on April 17, 2000. We did not receive any comments. For the reasons discussed below
we grant the Applicants' request.

                                          II.      BACKGROUND

        2.       Teleglobe USA, a Delaware corporation, operates primarily as a facilities-based
international carrier providing voice and data, private line, and other services on a wholesale basis
to carriers in the United States and Canada. OPTEL, a Delaware corporation, operates a non-
common carrier undersea cable system providing telecommunications capacity on a wholesale
basis to carriers in the United States. The Licensees are both subsidiaries of Teleglobe, Inc.
(Teleglobe), which is a Canadian corporation publicly traded on the New York and Toronto
Stock Exchanges. Teleglobe USA holds cable landing licenses for the Japan-US, Columbus III,
CHINA-US, AMERICAS-II, TAT-14, and MAYA I cable systems, and OPTEL holds a cable
landing license for the CANUS-1 cable system.7
        3.      BCE is a Canadian holding company which is publicly traded on the New York
Stock Exchange, and, according to the Applicants, there are no shareholders of BCE who directy
or indirectly own 10 percent or more of the equity of BCE. 8 BCE’s investments include a 23
percent ownership of Teleglobe through Bell Canada. BCE has an 80 percent interest in Bell
Canada, with SBC Corporation holding the other 20 percent.9 Outside of the U.S. and Canada,
BCE has indirect investments in affiliates that develop and operate telecommunications systems in
various markets, primarily in Latin America and the Asia-Pacific region.



5
       Application at 1-2. The Applicants retain the right to petition for reclassification at a later date. Id. at 2.
       Bell Canada, a majority-owned subsidiary of BCE, has pending before the Commission a petition for
       declaratory ruling seeking its removal from the Commission’s “List of Foreign Telecommunications
       Carriers That Are Presumed to Possess Market Power in Foreign Telecommunications Markets.” See
       International Bureau Seeks Comment on Bell Canada Request for Removal from the Commission's List of
       Foreign Telecommunications Carriers that are Presumed to Possess Market Power in Foreign
       Telecommunications Markets, Public Notice, DA 99-2981 (rel. Dec. 22, 1999).

6
       Teleglobe USA, Et Al., and BCE Seek Consent for Transfer Control of Applications and Foreign Carrier
       Affiliation, Public Notice, DA 00-871 (rel. Apr. 17, 2000).

7
       See Appendix A, which lists the specific cable landing licenses held by Teleglobe USA and OPTEL.

8
       Application at 7.

9
       According to the Applicants, SBC holds no ownership interest in BCE, and its indirect ownership of
       Teleglobe Inc. is approximately 4.6 percent. Thus the Applicants argue that SBC is not an “affiliate” of
       Teleglobe Inc. under 47 U.S.C. § 153(1). Application at 4 n. 5.
                                                         2


                               Federal Communications Commission                                   DA 00-1805


        4.     BCE proposes to acquire the 77 percent of Teleglobe that it does not already own
through Bell Canada. At the conclusion of a three-step process, BCE will directly own 80 percent
of Teleglobe with the other 20 percent to be owned by Bell Canada, which is itself 80 percent
owned by BCE.10 Consequently, BCE will control Teleglobe and through Teleglobe will control
the Licensees.

        5.      Pursuant to Section 1.767(b) of the Commission's rules,11 the Cable Landing
License Act, and Executive Order No. 10530,13 we informed the Department of State of the
             12

application.14 The Department of State, after coordinating with the National Telecommunications
and Information Administration and the Department of Defense, has no objection to the proposed
                   15
ownership change.

                                          III.     DISCUSSION

        6.     Applicants argue that the proposed transaction will serve the U.S. public interest
by enhancing competition, increasing consumer choices, and stimulating service and technological
                                                                                   16
innovations without causing any undue concentration in any one market segment. They state
that the combined company will offer a full range of services and will provide increased choice to
                                                                                            17
consumers for competitively priced international telecommunications and Internet services.


10
       See Application at 4-5, Exhibit A. According to the Applicants, as a result of the proposed transaction,
       SBC’s indirect ownership interest in Teleglobe will be reduced to less than 4 percent. Application at 4 n.
       5.

11
       47 C.F.R. § 1.767(b).

12
       47 U.S.C. §§ 34-39.

13
       Exec. Ord. No. 10530 reprinted as amended in 3 U.S.C. § 301.

14
       See Letter from Rebecca Arbogast, Chief, Telecommunications Division, International Bureau, Federal
       Communications Commission, to Steven W. Lett, Deputy U.S. Coordinator, Office of International
       Communications and Information Policy, U.S. Department of State, dated April 18, 2000.

15
       See Letter from Malcom R. Lee, United States Coordinator, Office of International Communications and
       Information, U.S. Department of State, to Donald Abelson, Chief, International Bureau, Federal
       Communications Commission, dated Aug. 3, 2000.

16
       Application at 5-6.

17
       Id. at 5.
                                                       3


                                  Federal Communications Commission                           DA 00-1805


They contend that neither Teleglobe nor BCE controls any bottleneck facilities in the United
                                                      18
States or has market power in any U.S. market sector. They also agree to comply with the
                                                   19
dominant carrier regulations under Section 63.10(c) with respect to common carrier cable
                                    20
facilities on the U.S.-Canada route. No comments were filed on the application.

         7.       Pursuant to Section 1.767(a)(8) of the Commission’s rules,21 BCE is required to
disclose its affiliations with foreign carriers. According to the Application, BCE is affiliated with
foreign carriers in Canada, Colombia, India, Mexico, Venezuela, and Brazil.22 Because Canada,
Colombia, India, Mexico, Venezuela, and Brazil are Members of the World Trade Organization, it
is presumed that the BCE’s affiliations with these carriers do not pose any concerns that would
justify conditioning or denying this applications.23 Moreover, with respect to the carriers in
Colombia, India, Mexico, Venezuela, and Brazil, the Applicants have certified that these carriers
do not have market power in their respective markets or the ability to discriminate against
unaffiliated U.S. carriers on the foreign end of routes through the control of bottleneck facilities
or services.24

       8.      We conclude that grant of the application would be consistent with the Cable
Landing License Act. We therefore consent to the transfer of control of Teleglobe and OPTEL to
BCE. We modify the conditions of the initial authorizations to reflect this transfer of control. We
do not modify any of the other conditions of the authorizations.

        9.      In addition to the application for the transfer of control of the cable landing
licenses, as part of BCE's planned acquisition of Teleglobe, the Applicants and their affiliates filed
                                                                          25
a request for transfer of control of several Section 214 authorizations. Grant of those

18
       Id.

19
       47 C.F.R. § 63.10(c).

20
       Application at 1-2.

21
       47 C.F.R. § 1.767(a)(8).

22
       Application at 8.

23
       See Rules and Policies on Foreign Participation in the U.S. Telecommunications Market, IB Docket Nos.
       97-142 and 95-22, Report and Order and Order on Reconsideration, 12 FCC Rcd 23,891, 23912 at ¶ 50,
       23933-34 at ¶ 93 (1997) (Foreign Participation Order), recon. pending.

24
       Application at 8.

25
       See Streamlined International Applications Accepted for Filing, Public Notice, Report No. TEL-00224S
                                                     4


                                Federal Communications Commission                               DA 00-1805


applications was conditioned on issuance of written Order granting transfer of cable landing
licenses.26 As we are granting the transfer of control of the cable landing licenses by this Order,
the release of this Order also makes effective the grant of the transfer of control of the Section
214 authorizations.

                                       IV.      Ordering Clauses

       10.   In consideration of the foregoing, IT IS ORDERED that the applications, File
Nos. SCL-T/C-20000330-00012 and SCL-T/C-20000330-00013, ARE GRANTED, and the
Applicants are authorized to transfer control of Teleglobe USA Inc. and OPTEL
Telecommunications, Inc. to BCE, Inc. The cable landing licenses set forth in Appendix A ARE
MODIFIED to reflect this transfer of control.

        11.    This Order is issued under Section 0.261 of the Commission’s rules, 47 C.F.R. §
0.261, and is effective upon release. Petitions for reconsideration under Section 1.106 or
applications for review under Section 1.115 of the Commission’s rules, 47 C.F.R. §§ 1.106,
1.115, may be filed within 30 days of the date of public notice of this order (see 47 C.F.R. §
1.4(b)(2)).


                                                  FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION



                                                  Jacquelynn Ruff
                                                  Associate Chief, Telecommunications Division
                                                  International Bureau




       (rel. May 3, 2000) at 2-3.

26
       See International Authorizations Granted, Public Notice, DA No. 00-1080 (rel. May 18, 2000) corrected,
       DA 00-1080 (rel. May 25, 2000).
                                                     5


                          Federal Communications Commission                       DA 00-1805


                                      APPENDIX A

    CABLE LANDING LICENSES OF TELEGLOBE INC. AND ITS SUBSIDIARIES



Licensee             FCC File Number         Description
Teleglobe USA Inc.   SCL-LIC-19981117-       Japan-US Cable Landing License
                     00025*
                     SCL-LIC-19980527-       Columbus III Cable Landing License
                     00007*
                     SCL-LIC-19980309-       Authority to land and operate in the United
                     00005*                  States a digital submarine cable system
                                             (CHINA-US) extending between the United
                                             States, China, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea,
                                             and Guam
                     SCL-LIC-19980430-       Authority to land and operate a digital
                     00006*                  submarine cable system (AMERICAS-II)
                     SCL-AMD-                among Florida, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin
                     19980430-00006*         Islands, Martinique, Curacao, Trinidad,
                                             Venezuela, French Guinea, and Brazil
                     SCL-LIC-19990303-       TAT-14 Cable Landing License
                     00004*
                     SCL-LIC-19990325-       MAYA I Cable Landing License
                     00006*
OPTEL                SCL-LIC-19930503-       Final Cable Landing License for CANUS-1
Telecommunications   00004
Inc.
                     SCL-T/C-19980115-       Transfer of control of CANUS-1 from
                     00001                   OPTEL Telecommunications Inc. to
                                             Teleglobe Inc.


*     These licenses were acquired by group applications filed by AT&T and others.




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Document Created: 2019-04-19 22:41:24
Document Modified: 2019-04-19 22:41:24

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