Title 47 › Chapter CHAPTER 5— - WIRE OR RADIO COMMUNICATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - COMMON CARRIERS › Part Part I— - Common Carrier Regulation › § 226
Requires operator-service companies and places that offer public phones to follow rules that protect callers and give them choices. An access code is a string of numbers that connects a caller to a particular operator service. An aggregator is someone who makes phones available to the public or to short-term users at a location for interstate calls. Call splashing means moving a call to another operator so the new operator cannot tell where the call started. A consumer is the person making an interstate operator-assisted call. Equal access and equal access code refer to the court-defined equal access system and the codes that provide it. Operator services are interstate calls from aggregator locations that include live or automatic help to set up billing or completion, except for calls billed to the originating phone or to a pre-established account. A presubscribed provider is the operator service a phone is connected to if the caller does not dial an access code. A provider of operator services is any carrier or other person the FCC finds to be offering such services. Provider and aggregator duties include many specific requirements and deadlines. Within 90 days after October 17, 1990, providers must identify themselves aloud at the start of each call before any charge, let callers hang up with no charge before connection, give free rate and billing information on request, file and keep up-to-date public tariffs of rates and fees, and stop billing for unanswered calls. For 3 years after the 90-day date, a presubscribed provider must identify itself twice before charges apply. Aggregators must post provider contact and rate-disclosure notices at each phone, allow use of “800” and “950” access codes, and not charge more for those codes than for the presubscribed service. Providers must not engage in call splashing unless the caller asks to be transferred, is warned that rates may not match the call’s origin, and agrees. The FCC (Commission) must write rules to protect consumers, set minimum standards for emergency call routing, monitor rates and complaints, and report to Congress with interim and final reports on set schedules (starting within 60 days, with reports at 5, 11, and 23 months). The FCC must decide within 9 months after October 17, 1990, whether payphone owners need compensation for calls routed to non-presubscribed providers. Equipment made or imported more than 18 months after October 17, 1990, and installed by aggregators must support equal access codes. The FCC must also act to prevent fraud against aggregators and may limit commissions or other compensation if it finds rates are not just and reasonable.
Full Legal Text
Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
47 U.S.C. § 226
Title 47 — Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73