Title 47 › Chapter 5— WIRE OR RADIO COMMUNICATION › Subchapter II— COMMON CARRIERS › Part I— Common Carrier Regulation › § 226
The law starts by naming key words and what they mean in one line each: access code — a number sequence a caller dials to reach an operator service provider; aggregator — a business that lets the public or guests use phones for interstate calls; call splashing — moving a call between operator providers so the new provider can’t tell where the call started; consumer — the person making the interstate operator-assisted call; equal access — the legal idea that lets callers reach their chosen carrier; equal access code — an access code that gives equal access; operator services — interstate calls from an aggregator location that include live or automated help to bill or complete a call except when the call is billed to the originating phone or to a prearranged account; presubscribed provider — the operator provider the phone is set up to use if no access code is dialed; provider of operator services — a carrier or other person that offers these operator services. Providers must clearly identify themselves by voice at the start of each call and before charging, let the caller hang up free before connection, give rate quotes and explain how charges are collected and how to complain on request at no charge, and stop paying or withhold commissions to aggregators who block access to carriers. Providers must not bill for unanswered calls where equal access exists and 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. For 3 years starting 90 days after October 17, 1990, the presubscribed provider must identify itself twice before charging. Aggregators, starting not later than 90 days after October 17, 1990, must post provider contact info, tell callers that rates are available on request and how to reach the FCC enforcement office, let phones use “800” and “950” codes to reach the carrier the caller wants, and not charge more for using those codes than for the presubscribed provider. The FCC must make rules to protect consumers, set emergency-call standards, require public notice of service changes, and require equal access by either phone-level equal access codes, nationwide “950” or “800” codes, or both. The FCC must decide within 9 months after October 17, 1990, whether owners of competitive pay phones should get extra compensation for calls routed to non-presubscribed providers. Any equipment made or imported more than 18 months after October 17, 1990 must support equal access codes. Providers must file and keep public an informational tariff within 90 days after October 17, 1990 listing rates, terms, commissions, surcharges, fees collected from consumers, and traffic estimates, and the FCC will monitor rates and report to Congress on a schedule beginning within 60 days after October 17, 1990 (with reports at not later than 5, 11, and 23 months) and may set further rules to ensure rates are just and reasonable unless it finds market forces are already doing so.
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 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60