Thetransmitter No

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Thetransmitter No The Official Publication of June 2000 the Telecommunications Vol. )0(11 Workers Union TheTransmitter No. 4 BROADWAY ElIEW 2 PRINTERS TWU wins Union merger vote with 70% The TWU will become the employer status which ulti- concerns of members were simi- bargaining agent for all union- mately brought the workers to- lar in both provinces. Shortly ized workers at Telus. gether in one union was initiated before the Alberta tour was un- By a vote of 9,629 to 4,047, by Telus in early 1999, shortly dertaken, the TWU opened of- union members in B.C. and after the merger of the B.C. tele- fices in Edmonton and Calgary Alberta have chosen the TWU phone company (BC TEL) and so that the Unionized workers over the IBEW to represent the Alberta company Telus, un- in that province could have them. There were just six der the name Telus. ready access to the TWU and to spoiled ballots. Prior to the merger, all BC obtain information about our In percentage terms, the TEL unionized workers, about Union and our plans following TWU captured 70.4% of the 10,000, were members of the a merger vote. vote, the IBEW 29.6%. TWU, while a majority of the Now that the members have The mail-in ballot was con- 7,000 Alberta Telus workers made their choice, the hard work ducted and supervised by the were members of IBEW Local begins. As President Hiebert Canada Industrial Relations 348. A relatively small number has stated, the Union is well Board (CIRB). Voting took of the Alberta workers were aware of the magnitude of the place between April 12 and May members of CSU52 and CEP. job that lies ahead. 24, and the vote count was con- (The CSU was involved as a "There are many issues and ducted and results released by result of an earlier corporate differences between the Collec- the CIRB on May 26. merger which had brought the tive Agreements in B.C.and The CIRB set aside the 961 Edmonton telephone company Alberta that need to be resolved ballots cast by Telesales and into Telus, and CEP was in- issues involving contracting Field Sales employees pending volved as bargaining agent for out, jurisdiction, benefit plans a decision on a Telus applica- the Telus mobility workers). and pensions and others," tion to have those employees The CSU and CEP leadership Any bets on which way he voted? Hiebert stated. "At the same excluded from the bargaining backed the TWU their efforts to TWU President Rod Hiebert mails in his ballot in CIRB vote to deter- time, we must work to bring the unit. create one bargaining unit for mine bargaining agent for Telus unionized workers Telus "Eastern Build" under our The application for common Alberta and B.C., and through- Collective Agreement. But I out the representation campaign. provinces, questions from mem- sues such as pensions, seniority have no doubt that together we MAILPOSTE TWU President Rod Hiebert, bers (and potential members) rights, and bargaining strategy. have the energy required to re- Canada Past Corporation &Weld nanadienne des posies centred on meat-and-potato is- The TWU officers noted that the on behalf of the entire Execu- solve the issues we face and Postage paid Port pate Blk Nbre tive Council, has expressed the move forward." Union's gratitude to the mem- The Union plans to move 6736 NACU moves ahead VANCOUVER, B.C. bers in both provinces for their quickly to begin the task of in- vote of confidence, and he Twenty TWU representatives attended a conference sponsored by tegrating the new members from the National Alliance of Communications Unions (NACU) in Ottawa Alberta into the TWU structure. pledged the TWU will work tire- April 28-29. The TWU contingent comprised the four table officers, lessly to prove itself worthy of members of the bargaining committee, and eight delegates elected at Almost immediately, the the trust which has been shown. convention. TWU will be setting up meet- Over the past year, and par- The purpose and primary focus of the conference was to explore ings in Alberta to work out a ticularly since the fall of 1999, closer ties and increased co-operation and co-ordination of activity transition plan, to deal with the TWU campaigned to bring between the various communications unions in Canada, in the wake of questions such as interim repre- our message to the member- the rapid globalization of the industry. The second and related focus sentation and local structures was on the unprecedented changes that are taking place in the industry. ships, beginning in B.C. In the Speakers included the heads of the major Communications Unions "Members in Alberta will fall, the Union held a leadership in Canada. TWU President Rod Hiebert's speech is printed on p. 6. now be able to elect all local tour, a series of membership In addition, the conference heard from representatives from a num- executive officers and shop meetings throughout B.C. to ber of international labour organizations, including Morton Bahr, Presi- stewards as they set up locals to which TWU members were in- dent of the Communications Workers of America (CWA), from the conform to their needs," Hiebert vited. The tour had the joint pur- U.S.; Philip Bowyer, Deputy General Secretary of the Union Network said. "At the same time, we will International (UND, the new international organization which has su- pose of celebrating the Union's perceded the PTTI and CI; and Francisco Hernandez Juarez, Secre- be working with members and 50th anniversary and of giving tary General of the Telephone Workers Union in Mexico. officers in Alberta to deal with the membership the opportunity Analysis of the latest developments in the communications indus- issues such as orientation ses- to discuss issues of concern try in Canada was provided by industry analysts lain Angus, Presi- sions and courses members may prior to the representation vote. dent of the Iain Angus Telemanagement Group, whose topic was "How be interested in." Table Officers and Local convergence, competition and emerging technologies are reshaping our Over the next while, the industry"; and by Vincent Mosco, Professor of Communications, So- Union will be issuing bulletins Business Agents attended the ciology and Political Economy at Carleton University, who spoke on membership meetings. In addi- "Labour Convergence and what it means for union-management re- and other communications with tion to speeches and question lations, including jurisdictional and bargaining issues." the new members in Alberta on and answer sessions, the meet- There was general agreement among delegates that closer co-op- what is being proposed and on ings featured a 15-minute TWU eration between the Unions is imperative to deal with the rapidly evolv- any decisions taken or agree- video on the Union's history and ing industry, and a good deal of discussion centred on what form that ments achieved. Collective Agreement, and en- co-operation should take and how it should be achieved. Any member with a concern Some delegates proposed that the Unions expand the idea even fur- tertainment by folk-singer ther and explore a formal merger of Communications Unions in or issue that they need addressed Valdy. Canada, either as an immediate or a longer-term objective. can telephone the TWU office Early in the New Year, the NACU leaders are meeting again in Regina in mid-June, where the in Burnaby at 604-437-8601 or TWU took its leadership tour to issues discussed at the April conference will be explored further. in Edmonton at 780-448-8911 various Alberta centres. In both A complete report on the NACU conference appears on Page 5. or in Calgary at 403-237-6990. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Variety club thanks Dear TWU: Congratulations Retirement I would like to thank you for my Dear TWU: honourary life membeship, retired Canadian This year the Variety Club Show thanks member pin, and $1,000 which I re- on winning ceived upon my retirement May 1, of Hearts on BCTV raised a record Dear TWU: 2000. total of $5,413,682 for BC's special Just a short note to thank all my merger vote kids — a remarkable total that is truly I greatly enjoyed my 25 years as a workers friends and many associates for their TWIT. member. Many achievements Dear TWU: a testament to the inherent goodness congratulations and kind words on my were gained over these years, thanks Congratulations, you did a hell of of humankind, and in particular, the retirement. It has been a very inter- a job! You not only won, you won big, people of British Columbia. to member solidarity and TWU sup- falling esting 35 years and I would not have port. ensuring support in the upcoming ne- In my tenure as a member of the missed any of it for the world. Sincerely, gotiations. Variety Club of British Columbia, I My path was set many years ago Dorothy MacDougall, Please extend my congratulations have been constantly amazed at the when Don McRobb, an early mentor Campbell River behind to all the business agents, table offic- magnitude of generosity and commit- in Terrace, told me the following: ers, staff and local leaders for a job ment exhibited by the thousands of in- "Croft, there are three types of people Dear TWU: CCPA/CALM well done. dividuals and groups at the annual Va- in this world. The first are the ones Thank you for the $1000 cheque Canadians are working May 26 was my birthday and I riety Club Show of Hearts.
Recommended publications
  • A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfilment Of
    TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT by Donald Ross McDonald B.A., Simon Fraser University, 1969 A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS in an Interdisciplinary Program in Urban Studies We accept this thesis as conforming to the required standard THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Jan. ^9%~ In presenting this thesis in partial fulfilment of the requirements for an advanced degree at the University of British Columbia, I agree that the Library shall make it freely available for reference and study. I further agree that permission for extensive copying of this thesis for scholarly purposes may be granted by the Head of my Department or by his representatives. It is understood that copying or publication of this thesis for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. Department of UffB^ STODlE^ The University of British Columbia Vancouver 8, Canada Date . itf , (Q7^ i ABSTRACT This thesis is broadly concerned with the relationship of com• munications to urban development. It specifically develops a communications perspective on spatial structure in the Vancouver, B.C., metropolitan area by examination of one communication variable, telephone traffic. Origin-destination calling data are used to identify communication networks, suggest functional associations, and relate social area structure to communicative (interactive) behaviour. A further purpose is to employ the above findings in developing suggestions as to possible imports of future communication technologies. For the first three chapters, the mode, i.e. telephone hardware, is held constant, in the fourth chapter the hardware is considered as a variable. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I am deeply indebted to Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Deterministic Communications for Protection Applications Over Packet-Based Wide-Area Networks
    Deterministic Communications for Protection Applications Over Packet-Based Wide-Area Networks Kenneth Fodero, Christopher Huntley, and Paul Robertson Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories, Inc. © 2018 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works. This paper was presented at the 71st Annual Conference for Protective Relay Engineers and can be accessed at: https://doi.org/10.1109/CPRE.2018.8349789. For the complete history of this paper, refer to the next page. Presented at RVP-AI 2018 Acapulco, Mexico July 15–20, 2018 Previously presented at the 71st Annual Conference for Protective Relay Engineers, March 2018, IEEE ROC&C 2017, November 2017, and 44th Annual Western Protective Relay Conference, October 2017 Previous revised edition released March 2018 Originally presented at the 4th Annual PAC World Americas Conference, August 2017 1 Deterministic Communications for Protection Applications Over Packet-Based Wide-Area Networks Kenneth Fodero, Christopher Huntley, and Paul Robertson, Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories, Inc. Abstract—There is a growing trend in the power utility Time-division multiplexing (TDM) has been widely adopted industry to move away from traditional synchronous optical across the power utility industry as the preferred WAN network/synchronous digital hierarchy (SONET/SDH) systems transport technology because it provides low-latency, for wide-area network (WAN) communications. Information technology (IT) teams and equipment manufacturers are deterministic, and minimal-asymmetry performance.
    [Show full text]
  • Paging Companies IXO/TAP Modem Numbers ([email protected])
    Head Office Suite 135 4474 Blakie Road London, ON, Canada N6L 1G7 Phone : +1.519.652.0401 Paging Companies IXO/TAP Modem Numbers ([email protected]) This document contains the known IXO/TAP dial-up phone numbers that can be used with First PAGE. Please send any questions, problems or additions to: [email protected] Provider Coverage Phone Number Speed Modem Settings Alpha Length A Better Beep Bakersfield, CA 805-334-7002 A Better Beep Fresno, CA 209-778-9451 A Better Beep San Luis Obispo, CA 805-542-4050 A Better Beep Santa Barbara, CA 805-730-3118 A Better Beep Santa Rosa, CA 707-523-6571 A Better Beep Stockton, CA 209-762-3094 Action Page 800-933-4585 7,e,1 (1200 baud) Advanced Paging US New Orleans, LA 888-723-2337 Advantage 805-647-5962 AirPage Austria 43 688 3322111 7,e,1 Air Touch 800-310-2193 Air Touch 800-326-0038 Air Touch 312-514-9243 2400,7,e,1 Air Touch 800-326-0038 Air Touch 800-310-2193 Air Touch Albuquerque, NM 505-883-1977 Air Touch Athens, GA 706-369-8134 Air Touch Atlanta, GA 404-873-6337 Air Touch Austin, TX 512-873-8719 Air Touch Austin/San Antonio, TX 210-349-2159 Air Touch Bakersfield, CA 805-324-5934 Air Touch Boca Raton, FL 407-994-3507 800-870-9537 Air Touch Boise, ID 208-869-0004 Air Touch Brandenton, FL 813-751-3658 Air Touch CA 888-287-7108 Air Touch Casa Grande, AZ 520-426-1220 800-624-7868 Air Touch Chicago, IL 708-708-4027 Air Touch Chula Vista, CA 619-296-0771 Air Touch Cincinnati, OH 513-665-9917 Air Touch Cleveland, OH 216-241-3825 Air Touch Dallas/Fort Worth, TX 800-672-4371 817-265-1848 Air Touch Daytona, FL 904-252-4184 Air Touch Denver, CO 303-368-4727 Air Touch Detroit, MI 800-371-8800 800-564-7079 810-539-9667 Air Touch Escondido, CA 619-747-5007 Air Touch Flagstaff, AZ 520-744-7317 Air Touch Fort Myers, FL 813-275-8934 Air Touch Fresno, CA 209-222-9811 Air Touch Ft.
    [Show full text]
  • Competition and Price Regulation in the Market for Public Long-Distance Telephone Services
    Competition and Price Regulation in the Market for Public Long-Distance Telephone Services Michael H. Ryan' In 1992, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommu- En 1992, le Conseil de Ia radiodiffusion et des tdecom- nications Commission decided to permit competition in the pro- munications canadiennes a d6cid6 de permettre Ia concurrence vision of public long-distance telephone services. The advent of dans le domaine des services t~l~phoniques interurbains. competition has compelled the Commission to make sweeping L'avnement de cette concurrence a contraint le Conseil Aeffec- changes to the manner in which it regulates the prices charged by tuer des modifications radicales dans sa fagon de r6glementer les the telephone companies and other telecommunications carriers tarifs exigda par les compagnies de tdl~phone et par d'autres under its jurisdiction. transporters en teldcommunications sous sajuridiction. The article begins with a brief overview of the regulatory L'article dbute avec un bref survol du rigime rnglemen- regime as it stood prior to the introduction of competition. The taise en place avant l'introduction de la concurrence. L'auteur author describes the new measures the C.R.T.C. has introduced dderit les nouvelles mesures introduites par le C.RIT.C. afin de to permit the incumbent telephone companies and their rivals in- permettre aux compagnies de t~lphones ainsi qu'A leurs rivales creased flexibility in the pricing of the services they provide to d'augmenter ler flexibilit6 dans la tarification des services the public. qu'elles offrent au public. The author then focuses on the Commission's approach to L'auteur se penche ensuite sur 'approche du Conseil rela- the special issues presented by the pricing of "access".
    [Show full text]
  • Regulation of International Communications in the Age of the Internet: Lagging Behind the Future
    CORE Metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk Provided by Southern Methodist University Regulation of International Communications in the Age of the Internet: Lagging Behind the Future AILEEN A. PIsciOTrA* I. Background In international communications, 1998 brought watershed events and several major mile- stones. The World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement on Basic Telecommunications Ser- 2 vices came into force,' and a cascade ofliberalization initiatives ensued around the world, setting off a mad rush of corporate realignment,3 multinational expansion,4 and private international infrastructure investment.' The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) took several bold *Aileen A. Pisciona is a partner in the Telecommunications Practice Group at Kelley Drye & Warren LLP in Washington, DC. 1. The Fourth Protocol to the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), April 30, 1996, 36 I.L.M. 366 (1997) [hereinafter WTO Basic Telecommunications Agreement] was signed on Apr. 15, 1997 and came into force on Feb. 5, 1998. 2. The following countries made commitments in the WTO Basic Tdecommunications Agreement to various degrees of liberalized market access in 1998: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Denmark, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Finland, France, Germany, Guatemala, Iceland, Italy, Japan, Mexico, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Philippines, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, and United States. See Kelley, Dyc, & Warren L.L.P., The WI/ Agrwmen: A CountryBy-County Guide to Commiments, TE.comm. RP. INT'L, Oct. 1998. 3. Among the many corporate alliances announced in 1998, one of the more notable realignments was the "divorce" between MCI Corporation and British Telecom occasioned by the successful tender offer for MCI by WorldCom; seeApplication of WorldCom, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Privateline Magazine-November-December-1995.Pdf
    Volume 2, No. 6 Nov ember/December $4.50 rivate line a journal of inquiry into the telephone system Alexander Graham Bell CABLE STATION ... OPERATIONS J • > , t f CANADIAN i TELECOM, - PART2 DIGITAL TELEPHONY BILL UPDATE MICROWAVE PROPAGATION BASICS DEF CON Ill REVIEW INDEX TO PR/VA TE LINE, VOLUME2 As reported oo CBS "60 Mlnu111•: How cortaln de­ vices can slowd own - 1v1nslop - watthour mel11I- Damien Thorn's ceLLULAR+co MPUTERS+TELco+sEcuRrrv :!'~:~d:,,~r~~Jro~: :ii~~~/!l!~~~~~:~ scrlbesm eler creep, overload droop, elc. Plans $29. 1,0, MANUAL,Exte rnal maoneUcwa ys (applled lo the melerlts eH)l o slow down and slopwaltllo ur melers 1 ULTIMATE HACKER 2011 Cruc en t Dr ., P.O . Drawer 537 ;l'~Ed~s ~'io~ ~~~~~r ~e~~~s :~~ ~ Alamogordo , NM 8831 o error modes( many), ANSI Standards, etc.Dem and and ~ (5051 439-1776 439 -8551 · Polyphan Melen. E,perlmcntalresulls l o slow and 8A M _ 7PM MST, Mon_ sai stop metersby others. $19. Any 2, $38. All 3, $59. Ell.!G (5051 434-0234, 434 -1778 (orde,s FILE ARCHIVE ON CD-ROM only;W you g el voice,enler• 111 111· anyUme): 24-hr ATMcrlm11 , abuses,,u ln111blllUn and dalHls 11- Fcea Te c h Byooo n; (relates dlrecUy1 0 your posedl1 00+ methodsd eta!ed, Include:Physka l, Reg. orderor prospectiveOfde~: Tu••· and Thurs. only. E. cipher, PINcompromise. card counterteltino, mao­ lili.lllunJJ tdlltlJl~ ZJ!ll±.AddS5 neticslrlpe, fa lse froo~ TEMrEST, Van Ed<.tapping , 10131s;lffOS: Canada) . Al aemsIn slock. VI SA.M C11dOK. spoollng,Inside lob , •~r-<ool, vfbrallon,pulse, high The entire underground NoCODs °' 'bill me•s.Ne w Catalog (200+ olfersl $2 voltage- olhers.C ase his1<>f1es,law, comlermeasures, order $5'N1! (check or MO).li!l..d.Qlru.
    [Show full text]
  • Alberta Service Area Volume I
    Linking Canadians with each other and the world 2500 MHz Multipoint Communications Systems License Application Canada Gazette Notice No. DGRB-006-99 Submitted by BC TEL Mobility Cellular Inc. October 12, 1999 Alberta Service Area Volume I 2500 MHz Multipoint Communications Systems License Application for the Service Area of Alberta Application Submitted to Industry Canada Pursuant to Canada Gazette Notice No. DGRB-006-99 by BC TEL Mobility Cellular Inc. October 12, 1999 2500 MHz MCS License Application Preface Preface In response to Canada Gazette Notice No. DGRB-006-99 2500 MHz Multipoint Communications Systems in the 2500 MHz Range, Policy and Licensing Procedures, (the “Notice”) BC TEL Mobility Cellular Inc. (the "Company") is pleased to submit the attached Multipoint Communications Systems (“MCS”) Application (the “Application”). The Notice establishes 14 service areas that are closely aligned with provincial boundaries except for an additional area that encompasses Eastern Ontario and Outaouais. The spectrum licensing policy, which provides for the utilization of specified radio frequencies in each of the service areas, is designed to facilitate the deployment of a high-quality, affordable MCS information infrastructure in the prescribed service areas. The Company is applying for MCS licenses in seven of the service areas set out by Industry Canada in the Notice. These Applications are made as part of the Company’s vision to become a national telecommunications services provider and as such include the service areas of British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario, Eastern Ontario and Outaouais, Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. BC TEL Mobility Cellular Inc. has determined that these specific service areas are ideal candidates for the Company’s proposed MCS service because they correspond to the current and future routing plans of the majority of the TELUS national network.
    [Show full text]
  • Telecommunications Service Providers IAC Codes, Exchange Carrier Names, Company Codes - Telcordia and Regions
    COMMON LANGUAGE® Telecommunications Service Providers IAC Codes, Exchange Carrier Names, Company Codes - Telcordia and Regions Telcordia Technologies Practice BR-751-100-112 Issue 2 April 1999 Proprietary — Licensed Material Possession or use of this material or any of the COMMON LANGUAGE Codes, Rules, and Information disclosed herein requires a written license agreement and is governed by its terms and conditions. For more information, visit www.commonlanguage.com/notices. An SAIC Company BR-751-100-112 TSP IAC Codes, EC names, Company Codes - Telcordia and Regions Issue 2 Copyright Page April 1999 COMMON LANGUAGE® Telecommunications Service Providers IAC Codes, Exchange Carrier Names, Company Codes - Telcordia and Regions Prepared for Telcordia Technologies by: Lois Modrell Target audience: Telecommunications Service Providers This document replaces: BR-751-100-112, Issue 1, March 1998 Technical contact: Lois Modrell To obtain copies of this document, contact your company’s document coordinator or call 1-800-521-2673 (from the USA and Canada) or 1-732-699-5800 (all others), or visit our Web site at www.telcordia.com. Telcordia employees should call (732) 699-5802. Copyright © 1997-1999 Telcordia Technologies, Inc. All rights reserved. Project Funding Year: 1999 Trademark Acknowledgments Telcordia is a trademark of Telcordia Technologies, Inc. COMMON LANGUAGE is a registered trademark of Telcordia Technologies. Proprietary — Licensed Material See confidentiality restrictions on title page. 2 BR-751-100-112 Issue 2 TSP IAC Codes, EC Names, Company Codes - Telcordia and Regions April 1999 Disclaimer Notice of Disclaimer This document is issued by Telcordia Technologies, Inc. to inform Telcordia customers of the Telcordia practice relating to COMMON LANGUAGE® Telecommunications Service Providers IAC Codes, Exchange Carrier Names - Company Codes - Telcordia and Regions.
    [Show full text]
  • 2.2 Satellite Communications MPR Teltech-Designed Satellite
    2.2 Satellite Communications MPR Teltech-designed satellite communications products have been selected by BC Telephone Company (BC Tel), Alberta Government Telephones, Manitoba Telephone Systems, NorthwesTel, GTE Spacenet, American Satellite Company, Shell Oil Company, and the Thai Police to provide rugged, high-qualitY voice and data communications in remote locations and extremely severe environmental conditions. The satellite communications system, called SPACETELTM, is a SCPC toll quality voice and data communications system which is available in both star and point-to-point configurations and was the fIrst system in the world with full DAMA capability. The largest satcom system to date, based on SPACETEL, is the NORAD North Warning System which was designed by MPR Teltech for CANAC/Microtel under a $260 million contract to the Canadian Department of National Defense. MPR Teltech signed, on May 31, 1991, a $9 million technology transfer and joint development project with South Korea's Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRn. The collaborative project will develop a new VSAT satellite communications system for two-way low speed data communications, to be produced and marketed by Samsung, Goldstar and Hyundai, all of Korea. In recent years, MPR Teltech has been diversifying its activities to include an ever-growing emphasis on military communication systems and avionic sub-systems. To date, MPR Teltech has won three contracts under the DND's EHF/SATCOM program, and is currently prime contractor for the $33 million EHF "FASSET" Phase II Contract, leading a team consisting of COMDEV and Raytheon Canada. This development will include payload with on-board processing and 20/40 GHz rugged ground terminals.
    [Show full text]
  • The Consumer Case for Telecom Reform and Results-Based Regulation
    Waiting for the Dream: The Consumer Case for Telecom Reform and Results-Based Regulation By: Michael Janigan Public Interest Advocacy Centre 1204 - ONE Nicholas St. Ottawa, ON K1N 7B7 December 2010 1 Copyright 2010 PIAC Contents may not be commercially reproduced. Any other reproduction with acknowledgment is encouraged. The Public Interest Advocacy Centre (PIAC) Suite 1204 ONE Nicholas Street Ottawa, ON K1N 7B7 Canadian Cataloguing and Publication Data Waiting for the Dream: The Consumer Case for Telecom Reform and Results-Based Regulation ISBN 1-895060-96-6 2 Acknowledgement The Public Interest Advocacy Centre (PIAC) received funding from Industry Canada’s Contributions Program for Non-profit Consumer and Voluntary Organizations. The views expressed in this report are not necessarily those of Industry Canada or of the Government of Canada. The assistance with research and editing of this report provided by Michael DeSantis, Laman Meshadiyeva, Eden Maher, Amy Zhao and Janet Lo is also gratefully acknowledged. 3 Table of Contents Acknowledgement ........................................................................................................................................ 3 Executive Summary ...................................................................................................................................... 5 Summary of Recommendations .................................................................................................................. 10 Introduction ................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Telework Centers. an Evaluation of the North American and Japanese Experience. Workscape 21: the Ecology of New Ways of Working. INSTITUTION State Univ
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 418 276 CE 076 202 AUTHOR Becker, Franklin; Rappaport, Andrew J.; Quinn, Kristen L.; Sims, William R. TITLE Telework Centers. An Evaluation of the North American and Japanese Experience. Workscape 21: The Ecology of New Ways of Working. INSTITUTION State Univ. of New York, Ithaca. Coll. of Human Ecology at Cornell Univ. PUB DATE 1993-12-00 NOTE 149p. AVAILABLE FROM International Workplace Studies Program, E-213 MVR Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853 ($20). PUB TYPE Reports Research (143) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC06 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Adult Education; *Computer Centers; *Decentralization; Foreign Countries; Information Technology; Job Satisfaction; *Office Automation; Office Management; *Organizational Change; *Telecommunications; Work Environment; Workstations IDENTIFIERS Canada; *Japan; *Telecommuting ABSTRACT Telework Centers are work locations used by firms to acommodate staff who live near the telework center location. A study examined the impact of using telework centers on communication, work groups/departments, performance, supervision, travel/environment, and type of work done in various locations. A case study approach was used to investigate 10 telework centers and 2 resort offices in the United States, Canada, and Japan. Questionnaire, interview, and archival data were collected. Telework centers had primary (transportation issues, economic development, marketing) and secondary drivers (quality of life, cost reduction, better way of working, disaster recovery). Goals and objectives for telework centers related to the drivers were reducing traffic congestion and employee stress due to commuting and promoting use of new telecommunications and economic development in rural areas. Standard technology at most telework centers included telephones, computers and modem, printers, fax machines, and copy machines.
    [Show full text]
  • ABRIDGED CRTC 1005 Communications (B.C.) Inc
    TELUS ABRIDGED CRTC 1005 Communications (B.C.) Inc. 90th Revised Page 108 Cancels 89th Revised Page 108 EXCHANGE CLASSIFICATION AND RATES Item 32 A. EXCHANGE RATES Tables 1. and 2. specify the monthly exchange rates which shall apply to each exchange service access line in all rate bands. Rates include Touch Calling (TC) or Dual Tone Multi- Frequency (DTMF) service. Existing customers with rotary dial service may retain it until they move. Each exchange service access line will be provided to a Company's service provider demarcation point as specified in Item 97. Depending on CS-03 standards for customer-provided equipment Information System Access lines may require termination on a data jack (refer to A.2. and A.3., Note 9). 1. Basic Residence Exchange Rate Schedule RESIDENCE SERVICES Rate Band Individual (Notes 1, 2 and 3) A1 N/A B1 N/A B2 N/A B3 N/A B4 N/A B5 Notes 4, 5 B6 N/A B7 N/A B8 N/A C N/A D1 Notes 4, 5 D2 Notes 4, 5 D4 Notes 4, 5 E1 31.55 A E2 31.70 | E3 31.70 | E4 31.55 | F1 31.55 | F2 31.70 | F3 N/A F4 31.55 | G1 31.55 | G2 31.70 | G3 31.70 | G4 31.55 | Notes: 1. Also available as One-Way Outgoing Line Service in telephone number delivery-equipped exchanges as specified in Item 143-A, SmartTouch Supplemental Services. 2. A maximum of 3 residence lines per billed number may be configured with multi-line capability.
    [Show full text]