Saturday, September 25, 2010

ECTEL Publishes Draft Electronic Communications Bill

On Thursday, the Eastern Caribbean Telecommunications Authority (ECTEL) published on its website a draft Electronic Communications BillAccording to the explanatory notes, the purpose of the Bill is to update the telecommunications legislation in the ECTEL Member States – Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines -  and to promote "liberalized and non-discriminatory entry into the electronic communications sector" while enabling a "robust competitive environment in which there is fairness, transparency and accountability on the part of the regulators of the sector".

Although I have not yet reviewed the Bill in detail, I noticed that it emphasizes the need to create a converged licensing regime.  This appears to be a reference to clause 39(2) of the Bill, which states that "[a] service provider may provide more than one service under a licence in accordance with the terms of the licence".  Therefore, instead of forcing an operator to manage several licences for the various telecom services it offers (for example, in the case of Digicel, one licence to offer wireless voice service, another to offer Internet service, and perhaps perhaps another one for TV service), the legislation would require the operator to manage only one integrated licence. 

This "converged" approach to licensing is an interesting one.  It is similar to the approach taken in the Cayman Islands since 2002 and, more recently, by URCA in the Bahamas.  In addition to simplifying the licence management process for the operators (e.g. payment of fees, quarterly reports, licence renewals, etc), it enables the regulator to focus on the "big picture", rather than micro-managing specific components of the licensees' business. 

The draft Bill is available for public comments, discussions and recommendations and forms part of a wide range of awareness and consultative activities in all the ECTEL Member States. A discussion Board will soon be established to facilitate comments, ideas and suggestions. 

Interestingly, the ECTEL website does not mention any specific deadline for comments, nor does it provide any timeline for the tabling of the legislation in ECTEL countries.

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