Goto Section: 64.603 | 64.605 | Table of Contents
FCC 64.604
Revised as of October 1, 2009
Goto Year:2008 |
2010
§ 64.604 Mandatory minimum standards.
The standards in this section are applicable December 18, 2000, except
as stated in paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(7) of this section.
(a) Operational standards —(1) Communications assistant (CA). (i) TRS
providers are responsible for requiring that all CAs be sufficiently
trained to effectively meet the specialized communications needs of
individuals with hearing and speech disabilities.
(ii) CAs must have competent skills in typing, grammar, spelling,
interpretation of typewritten ASL, and familiarity with hearing and
speech disability cultures, languages and etiquette. CAs must possess
clear and articulate voice communications.
(iii) CAs must provide a typing speed of a minimum of 60 words per
minute. Technological aids may be used to reach the required typing
speed. Providers must give oral-to-type tests of CA speed.
(iv) TRS providers are responsible for requiring that VRS CAs are
qualified interpreters. A “qualified interpreter” is able to interpret
effectively, accurately, and impartially, both receptively and
expressively, using any necessary specialized vocabulary.
(v) CAs answering and placing a TTY-based TRS or VRS call must stay
with the call for a minimum of ten minutes. CAs answering and placing
an STS call must stay with the call for a minimum of fifteen minutes.
(vi) TRS providers must make best efforts to accommodate a TRS user's
requested CA gender when a call is initiated and, if a transfer occurs,
at the time the call is transferred to another CA.
(vii) TRS shall transmit conversations between TTY and voice callers in
real time.
(2) Confidentiality and conversation content. (i) Except as authorized
by section 705 of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. 605, CAs are
prohibited from disclosing the content of any relayed conversation
regardless of content, and with a limited exception for STS CAs, from
keeping records of the content of any conversation beyond the duration
of a call, even if to do so would be inconsistent with state or local
law. STS CAs may retain information from a particular call in order to
facilitate the completion of consecutive calls, at the request of the
user. The caller may request the STS CA to retain such information, or
the CA may ask the caller if he wants the CA to repeat the same
information during subsequent calls. The CA may retain the information
only for as long as it takes to complete the subsequent calls.
(ii) CAs are prohibited from intentionally altering a relayed
conversation and, to the extent that it is not inconsistent with
federal, state or local law regarding use of telephone company
facilities for illegal purposes, must relay all conversation verbatim
unless the relay user specifically requests summarization, or if the
user requests interpretation of an ASL call. An STS CA may facilitate
the call of an STS user with a speech disability so long as the CA does
not interfere with the independence of the user, the user maintains
control of the conversation, and the user does not object. Appropriate
measures must be taken by relay providers to ensure that
confidentiality of VRS users is maintained.
(3) Types of calls. (i) Consistent with the obligations of
telecommunications carrier operators, CAs are prohibited from refusing
single or sequential calls or limiting the length of calls utilizing
relay services.
(ii) Relay services shall be capable of handling any type of call
normally provided by telecommunications carriers unless the Commission
determines that it is not technologically feasible to do so. Relay
service providers have the burden of proving the infeasibility of
handling any type of call.
(iii) Relay service providers are permitted to decline to complete a
call because credit authorization is denied.
(iv) Relay services shall be capable of handling pay-per-call calls.
(v) TRS providers are required to provide the following types of TRS
calls: (1) Text-to-voice and voice-to-text; (2) VCO, two-line VCO,
VCO-to-TTY, and VCO-to-VCO; (3) HCO, two-line HCO, HCO-to-TTY,
HCO-to-HCO.
(vi) TRS providers are required to provide the following features: (1)
Call releasefunctionality; (2) speed dialing functionality; and (3)
three-way calling functionality.
(vii) Voice mail and interactive menus. CAs must alert the TRS user to
the presence of a recorded message and interactive menu through a hot
key on the CA's terminal. The hot key will send text from the CA to the
consumer's TTY indicating that a recording or interactive menu has been
encountered. Relay providers shall electronically capture recorded
messages and retain them for the length of the call. Relay providers
may not impose any charges for additional calls, which must be made by
the relay user in order to complete calls involving recorded or
interactive messages.
(viii) TRS providers shall provide, as TRS features, answering machine
and voice mail retrieval.
(4) Emergency call handling requirements for TTY-based TRS providers.
TTY-based TRS providers must use a system for incoming emergency calls
that, at a minimum, automatically and immediately transfers the caller
to an appropriate Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP). An appropriate
PSAP is either a PSAP that the caller would have reached if he had
dialed 911 directly, or a PSAP that is capable of enabling the dispatch
of emergency services to the caller in an expeditious manner.
(5) STS called numbers. Relay providers must offer STS users the option
to maintain at the relay center a list of names and telephone numbers
which the STS user calls. When the STS user requests one of these
names, the CA must repeat the name and state the telephone number to
the STS user. This information must be transferred to any new STS
provider.
(b) Technical standards —(1) ASCII and Baudot. TRS shall be capable of
communicating with ASCII and Baudot format, at any speed generally in
use.
(2) Speed of answer. (i) TRS providers shall ensure adequate TRS
facility staffing to provide callers with efficient access under
projected calling volumes, so that the probability of a busy response
due to CA unavailability shall be functionally equivalent to what a
voice caller would experience in attempting to reach a party through
the voice telephone network.
(ii) TRS facilities shall, except during network failure, answer 85% of
all calls within 10 seconds by any method which results in the caller's
call immediately being placed, not put in a queue or on hold. The ten
seconds begins at the time the call is delivered to the TRS facility's
network. A TRS facility shall ensure that adequate network facilities
shall be used in conjunction with TRS so that under projected calling
volume the probability of a busy response due to loop trunk congestion
shall be functionally equivalent to what a voice caller would
experience in attempting to reach a party through the voice telephone
network.
(A) The call is considered delivered when the TRS facility's equipment
accepts the call from the local exchange carrier (LEC) and the public
switched network actually delivers the call to the TRS facility.
(B) Abandoned calls shall be included in the speed-of-answer
calculation.
(C) A TRS provider's compliance with this rule shall be measured on a
daily basis.
(D) The system shall be designed to a P.01 standard.
(E) A LEC shall provide the call attempt rates and the rates of calls
blocked between the LEC and the TRS facility to relay administrators
and TRS providers upon request.
(iii) Speed of answer requirements for VRS providers are phased-in as
follows: by January 1, 2006, VRS providers must answer 80% of all calls
within 180 seconds, measured on a monthly basis; by July 1, 2006, VRS
providers must answer 80% of all calls within 150 seconds, measured on
a monthly basis; and by Janury 1, 2007, VRS providers must answer 80%
of all calls within 120 seconds, measured on a monthly basis. Abandoned
calls shall be included in the VRS speed of answer calculation.
(3) Equal access to interexchange carriers. TRS users shall have access
to their chosen interexchange carrier through the TRS, and to all other
operator services, to the same extent that such access is provided to
voice users.
(4) TRS facilities. (i) TRS shall operate every day, 24 hours a day.
Relay services that are not mandated by this Commission need not be
provided every day, 24 hours a day, except VRS.
(ii) TRS shall have redundancy features functionally equivalent to the
equipment in normal central offices, including uninterruptible power
for emergency use.
(5) Technology. No regulation set forth in this subpart is intended to
discourage or impair the development of improved technology that
fosters the availability of telecommunications to person with
disabilities. TRS facilities are permitted to use SS7 technology or any
other type of similar technology to enhance the functional equivalency
and quality of TRS. TRS facilities that utilize SS7 technology shall be
subject to the Calling Party Telephone Number rules set forth at 47 CFR
64.1600 et seq.
(6) Caller ID. When a TRS facility is able to transmit any calling
party identifying information to the public network, the TRS facility
must pass through, to the called party, at least one of the following:
the number of the TRS facility, 711, or the 10-digit number of the
calling party.
(c) Functional standards —(1) Consumer complaint logs. (i) States and
interstate providers must maintain a log of consumer complaints
including all complaints about TRS in the state, whether filed with the
TRS provider or the State, and must retain the log until the next
application for certification is granted. The log shall include, at a
minimum, the date the complaint was filed, the nature of the complaint,
the date of resolution, and an explanation of the resolution.
(ii) Beginning July 1, 2002, states and TRS providers shall submit
summaries of logs indicating the number of complaints received for the
12-month period ending May 31 to the Commission by July 1 of each year.
Summaries of logs submitted to the Commission on July 1, 2001 shall
indicate the number of complaints received from the date of OMB
approval through May 31, 2001.
(2) Contact persons. Beginning on June 30, 2000, State TRS Programs,
interstate TRS providers, and TRS providers that have state contracts
must submit to the Commission a contact person and/or office for TRS
consumer information and complaints about a certified State TRS
Program's provision of intrastate TRS, or, as appropriate, about the
TRS provider's service. This submission must include, at a minimum, the
following:
(i) The name and address of the office that receives complaints,
grievances, inquiries, and suggestions;
(ii) Voice and TTY telephone numbers, fax number, e-mail address, and
web address; and
(iii) The physical address to which correspondence should be sent.
(3) Public access to information. Carriers, through publication in
their directories, periodic billing inserts, placement of TRS
instructions in telephone directories, through directory assistance
services, and incorporation of TTY numbers in telephone directories,
shall assure that callers in their service areas are aware of the
availability and use of all forms of TRS. Efforts to educate the public
about TRS should extend to all segments of the public, including
individuals who are hard of hearing, speech disabled, and senior
citizens as well as members of the general population. In addition,
each common carrier providing telephone voice transmission services
shall conduct, not later than October 1, 2001, ongoing education and
outreach programs that publicize the availability of 711 access to TRS
in a manner reasonably designed to reach the largest number of
consumers possible.
(4) Rates. TRS users shall pay rates no greater than the rates paid for
functionally equivalent voice communication services with respect to
such factors as the duration of the call, the time of day, and the
distance from the point of origination to the point of termination.
(5) Jurisdictional separation of costs —(i) General. Where appropriate,
costs of providing TRS shall be separated in accordance with the
jurisdictional separation procedures and standards set forth in the
Commission's regulations adopted pursuant to section 410 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as amended.
(ii) Cost recovery. Costs caused by interstate TRS shall be recovered
from all subscribers for every interstate service, utilizing a
shared-funding cost recovery mechanism. Except as noted in this
paragraph, with respect to VRS, costs caused by intrastate TRS shall be
recovered from the intrastate jurisdiction. In a state that has a
certified program under § 64.606, the state agency providing TRS shall,
through the state's regulatory agency, permit a common carrier to
recover costs incurred in providing TRS by a method consistent with the
requirements of this section. Costs caused by the provision of
interstate and intrastate VRS shall be recovered from all subscribers
for every interstate service, utilizing a shared-funding cost recovery
mechanism.
(iii) Telecommunications Relay Services Fund. Effective July 26, 1993,
an Interstate Cost Recovery Plan, hereinafter referred to as the TRS
Fund, shall be administered by an entity selected by the Commission
(administrator). The initial administrator, for an interim period, will
be the National Exchange Carrier Association, Inc.
(A) Contributions. Every carrier providing interstate
telecommunications services shall contribute to the TRS Fund on the
basis of interstate end-user telecommunications revenues as described
herein. Contributions shall be made by all carriers who provide
interstate services, including, but not limited to, cellular telephone
and paging, mobile radio, operator services, personal communications
service (PCS), access (including subscriber line charges), alternative
access and special access, packet-switched, WATS, 800, 900, message
telephone service (MTS), private line, telex, telegraph, video,
satellite, intraLATA, international and resale services.
(B) Contribution computations. Contributors' contribution to the TRS
fund shall be the product of their subject revenues for the prior
calendar year and a contribution factor determined annually by the
Commission. The contribution factor shall be based on the ratio between
expected TRS Fund expenses to interstate end-user telecommunications
revenues. In the event that contributions exceed TRS payments and
administrative costs, the contribution factor for the following year
will be adjusted by an appropriate amount, taking into consideration
projected cost and usage changes. In the event that contributions are
inadequate, the fund administrator may request authority from the
Commission to borrow funds commercially, with such debt secured by
future years' contributions. Each subject carrier must contribute at
least $25 per year. Carriers whose annual contributions total less than
$1,200 must pay the entire contribution at the beginning of the
contribution period. Service providers whose contributions total $1,200
or more may divide their contributions into equal monthly payments.
Carriers shall complete and submit, and contributions shall be based
on, a “Telecommunications Reporting Worksheet” (as published by the
Commission in theFederal Register). The worksheet shall be certified to
by an officer of the contributor, and subject to verification by the
Commission or the administrator at the discretion of the Commission.
Contributors' statements in the worksheet shall be subject to the
provisions of section 220 of the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended. The fund administrator may bill contributors a separate
assessment for reasonable administrative expenses and interest
resulting from improper filing or overdue contributions. The Chief of
the Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau may waive, reduce, modify or
eliminate contributor reporting requirements that prove unnecessary and
require additional reporting requirements that the Bureau deems
necessary to the sound and efficient administration of the TRS Fund.
(C) Data collection from TRS providers. TRS providers shall provide the
administrator with true and adequate data, and other historical,
projected and state rate related information reasonably requested by
the administrator, necessary to determine TRS Fund revenue requirements
and payments. TRS providers shall provide the administrator with the
following: total TRS minutes of use, total interstate TRS minutes of
use, total TRS operating expenses and total TRS investment in general
accordance with part 32 of this chapter, and other historical or
projected information reasonably requested by the administrator for
purposes of computing payments and revenue requirements. The
administrator and the Commission shall have the authority to examine,
verify and audit data received from TRS providers as necessary to
assure the accuracy and integrity of TRS Fund payments.
(D) [Reserved]
(E) Payments to TRS providers. TRS Fund payments shall be distributed
to TRS providers based on formulas approved or modified by the
Commission. The administrator shall file schedules of payment formulas
with the Commission. Such formulas shall be designed to compensate TRS
providers for reasonable costs of providing interstate TRS, and shall
be subject to Commission approval. Such formulas shall be based on
total monthly interstate TRS minutes of use. TRS minutes of use for
purposes of interstate cost recovery under the TRS Fund are defined as
the minutes of use for completed interstate TRS calls placed through
the TRS center beginning after call set-up and concluding after the
last message call unit. In addition to the data required under
paragraph (c)(5)(iii)(C) of this section, all TRS providers, including
providers who are not interexchange carriers, local exchange carriers,
or certified state relay providers, must submit reports of interstate
TRS minutes of use to the administrator in order to receive payments.
The administrator shall establish procedures to verify payment claims,
and may suspend or delay payments to a TRS provider if the TRS provider
fails to provide adequate verification of payment upon reasonable
request, or if directed by the Commission to do so. The TRS Fund
administrator shall make payments only to eligible TRS providers
operating pursuant to the mandatory minimum standards as required in
§ 64.604, and after disbursements to the administrator for reasonable
expenses incurred by it in connection with TRS Fund administration. TRS
providers receiving payments shall file a form prescribed by the
administrator. The administrator shall fashion a form that is
consistent with parts 32 and 36 procedures reasonably tailored to meet
the needs of TRS providers. The Commission shall have authority to
audit providers and have access to all data, including carrier specific
data, collected by the fund administrator. The fund administrator shall
have authority to audit TRS providers reporting data to the
administrator. The formulas should appropriately compensate interstate
providers for the provision of VRS, whether intrastate or interstate.
(F) TRS providers eligible for receiving payments from the TRS Fund
are:
( 1 ) TRS facilities operated under contract with and/or by certified
state TRS programs pursuant to § 64.606; or
( 2 ) TRS facilities owned by or operated under contract with a common
carrier providing interstate services operated pursuant to § 64.604; or
( 3 ) Interstate common carriers offering TRS pursuant to § 64.604; or
( 4 ) Video Relay Service (VRS) and Internet Protocol (IP) Relay
providers certified by the Commission pursuant to § 64.606.
(G) Any eligible TRS provider as defined in paragraph (c)(5)(iii)(F) of
this section shall notify the administrator of its intent to
participate in the TRS Fund thirty (30) days prior to submitting
reports of TRS interstate minutes of use in order to receive payment
settlements for interstate TRS, and failure to file may exclude the TRS
provider from eligibility for the year.
(H) Administrator reporting, monitoring, and filing requirements. The
administrator shall perform all filing and reporting functions required
in paragraphs (c)(5)(iii)(A) through (c)(5)(iii)(J) of this section.
TRS payment formulas and revenue requirements shall be filed with the
Commission on May 1 of each year, to be effective the following July 1.
The administrator shall report annually to the Commission an
itemization of monthly administrative costs which shall consist of all
expenses, receipts, and payments associated with the administration of
the TRS Fund. The administrator is required to keep the TRS Fund
separate from all other funds administered by the administrator, shall
file a cost allocation manual (CAM) and shall provide the Commission
full access to all data collected pursuant to the administration of the
TRS Fund. The administrator shall account for the financial
transactions of the TRS Fund in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles for federal agencies and maintain the accounts of
the TRS Fund in accordance with the United States Government Standard
General Ledger. When the administrator, or any independent auditor
hired by the administrator, conducts audits of providers of services
under the TRS program or contributors to the TRS Fund, such audits
shall be conducted in accordance with generally accepted government
auditing standards. In administering the TRS Fund, the administrator
shall also comply with all relevant and applicable federal financial
management and reporting statutes. The administrator shall establish a
non-paid voluntary advisory committee of persons from the hearing and
speech disability community, TRS users (voice and text telephone),
interstate service providers, state representatives, and TRS providers,
which will meet at reasonable intervals (at least semi-annually) in
order to monitor TRS cost recovery matters. Each group shall select its
own representative to the committee. The administrator's annual report
shall include a discussion of the advisory committee deliberations.
(I) Information filed with the administrator. The administrator shall
keep all data obtained from contributors and TRS providers confidential
and shall not disclose such data in company-specific form unless
directed to do so by the Commission. Subject to any restrictions
imposed by the Chief of the Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau, the
TRS Fund administrator may share data obtained from carriers with the
administrators of the universal support mechanisms ( See 47 CFR 54.701
of this chapter), the North American Numbering Plan administration cost
recovery ( See 47 CFR 52.16 of this chapter), and the long-term local
number portability cost recovery ( See 47 CFR 52.32 of this chapter).
The TRS Fund administrator shall keep confidential all data obtained
from other administrators. The administrator shall not use such data
except for purposes of administering the TRS Fund, calculating the
regulatory fees of interstate common carriers, and aggregating such fee
payments for submission to the Commission. The Commission shall have
access to all data reported to the administrator, and authority to
audit TRS providers. Contributors may make requests for Commission
nondisclosure of company-specific revenue information under § 0.459 of
this chapter by so indicating on the Telecommunications Reporting
Worksheet at the time that the subject data are submitted. The
Commission shall make all decisions regarding nondisclosure of
company-specific information.
(J) The administrator's performance and this plan shall be reviewed by
the Commission after two years.
(K) All parties providing services or contributions or receiving
payments under this section are subject to the enforcement provisions
specified in the Communications Act, the Americans with Disabilities
Act, and the Commission's rules.
(6) Complaints —(i) Referral of complaint. If a complaint to the
Commission alleges a violation of this subpart with respect to
intrastate TRS within a state and certification of the program of such
state under § 64.606 is in effect, the Commission shall refer such
complaint to such state expeditiously.
(ii) Intrastate complaints shall be resolved by the state within 180
days after the complaint is first filed with a state entity, regardless
of whether it is filed with the state relay administrator, a state PUC,
the relay provider, or with any other state entity.
(iii) Jurisdiction of Commission. After referring a complaint to a
state entity under paragraph (c)(6)(i) of this section, or if a
complaint is filed directly with a state entity, the Commission shall
exercise jurisdiction over such complaint only if:
(A) Final action under such state program has not been taken within:
( 1 ) 180 days after the complaint is filed with such state entity; or
( 2 ) A shorter period as prescribed by the regulations of such state;
or
(B) The Commission determines that such state program is no longer
qualified for certification under § 64.606.
(iv) The Commission shall resolve within 180 days after the complaint
is filed with the Commission any interstate TRS complaint alleging a
violation of section 225 of the Act or any complaint involving
intrastate relay services in states without a certified program. The
Commission shall resolve intrastate complaints over which it exercises
jurisdiction under paragraph (c)(6)(iii) of this section within 180
days.
(v) Complaint procedures. Complaints against TRS providers for alleged
violations of this subpart may be either informal or formal.
(A) Informal complaints —( 1 ) Form. An informal complaint may be
transmitted to the Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau by any
reasonable means, such as letter, facsimile transmission, telephone
(voice/TRS/TTY), Internet e-mail, or some other method that would best
accommodate a complainant's hearing or speech disability.
( 2 ) Content. An informal complaint shall include the name and address
of the complainant; the name and address of the TRS provider against
whom the complaint is made; a statement of facts supporting the
complainant's allegation that the TRS provided it has violated or is
violating section 225 of the Act and/or requirements under the
Commission's rules; the specific relief or satisfaction sought by the
complainant; and the complainant's preferred format or method of
response to the complaint by the Commission and the defendant TRS
provider (such as letter, facsimile transmission, telephone
(voice/TRS/TTY), Internet e-mail, or some other method that would best
accommodate the complainant's hearing or speech disability).
( 3 ) Service; designation of agents. The Commission shall promptly
forward any complaint meeting the requirements of this subsection to
the TRS provider named in the complaint. Such TRS provider shall be
called upon to satisfy or answer the complaint within the time
specified by the Commission. Every TRS provider shall file with the
Commission a statement designating an agent or agents whose principal
responsibility will be to receive all complaints, inquiries, orders,
decisions, and notices and other pronouncements forwarded by the
Commission. Such designation shall include a name or department
designation, business address, telephone number (voice and TTY),
facsimile number and, if available, internet e-mail address.
(B) Review and disposition of informal complaints. ( 1 ) Where it
appears from the TRS provider's answer, or from other communications
with the parties, that an informal complaint has been satisfied, the
Commission may, in its discretion, consider the matter closed without
response to the complainant or defendant. In all other cases, the
Commission shall inform the parties of its review and disposition of a
complaint filed under this subpart. Where practicable, this information
shall be transmitted to the complainant and defendant in the manner
requested by the complainant (e.g., letter, facsmile transmission,
telephone (voice/TRS/TTY) or Internet e-mail.
( 2 ) A complainant unsatisfied with the defendant's response to the
informal complaint and the staff's decision to terminate action on the
informal complaint may file a formal complaint with the Commission
pursuant to paragraph (c)(6)(v)(C) of this section.
(C) Formal complaints. A formal complaint shall be in writing,
addressed to the Federal Communications Commission, Enforcement Bureau,
Telecommunications Consumer Division, Washington, DC 20554 and shall
contain:
( 1 ) The name and address of the complainant,
( 2 ) The name and address of the defendant against whom the complaint
is made,
( 3 ) A complete statement of the facts, including supporting data,
where available, showing that such defendant did or omitted to do
anything in contravention of this subpart, and
( 4 ) The relief sought.
(D) Amended complaints. An amended complaint setting forth
transactions, occurrences or events which have happened since the
filing of the original complaint and which relate to the original cause
of action may be filed with the Commission.
(E) Number of copies. An original and two copies of all pleadings shall
be filed.
(F) Service. ( 1 ) Except where a complaint is referred to a state
pursuant to § 64.604(c)(6)(i), or where a complaint is filed directly
with a state entity, the Commission will serve on the named party a
copy of any complaint or amended complaint filed with it, together with
a notice of the filing of the complaint. Such notice shall call upon
the defendant to satisfy or answer the complaint in writing within the
time specified in said notice of complaint.
( 2 ) All subsequent pleadings and briefs shall be served by the filing
party on all other parties to the proceeding in accordance with the
requirements of § 1.47 of this chapter. Proof of such service shall also
be made in accordance with the requirements of said section.
(G) Answers to complaints and amended complaints. Any party upon whom a
copy of a complaint or amended complaint is served under this subpart
shall serve an answer within the time specified by the Commission in
its notice of complaint. The answer shall advise the parties and the
Commission fully and completely of the nature of the defense and shall
respond specifically to all material allegations of the complaint. In
cases involving allegations of harm, the answer shall indicate what
action has been taken or is proposed to be taken to stop the occurrence
of such harm. Collateral or immaterial issues shall be avoided in
answers and every effort should be made to narrow the issues. Matters
alleged as affirmative defenses shall be separately stated and
numbered. Any defendant failing to file and serve an answer within the
time and in the manner prescribed may be deemed in default.
(H) Replies to answers or amended answers. Within 10 days after service
of an answer or an amended answer, a complainant may file and serve a
reply which shall be responsive to matters contained in such answer or
amended answer and shall not contain new matter. Failure to reply will
not be deemed an admission of any allegation contained in such answer
or amended answer.
(I) Defective pleadings. Any pleading filed in a complaint proceeding
that is not in substantial conformity with the requirements of the
applicable rules in this subpart may be dismissed.
(7) Treatment of TRS customer information. Beginning on July 21, 2000,
all future contracts between the TRS administrator and the TRS vendor
shall provide for the transfer of TRS customer profile data from the
outgoing TRS vendor to the incoming TRS vendor. Such data must be
disclosed in usable form at least 60 days prior to the provider's last
day of service provision. Such data may not be used for any purpose
other than to connect the TRS user with the called parties desired by
that TRS user. Such information shall not be sold, distributed, shared
or revealed in any other way by the relay center or its employees,
unless compelled to do so by lawful order.
[ 65 FR 38436 , June 21, 2000]
Editorial Note: ForFederal Registercitations affecting § 64.604, see
the List of CFR Sections Affected, which appears in the Finding Aids
section of the printed volume and on GPO Access.
Goto Section: 64.603 | 64.605
Goto Year: 2008 |
2010
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