The dramatic changes in telecommunications in the past decade have caused many states to try new approaches to the regulation of local telephone companies. The Vermont Telecommunications Agreement was one of the earliest attempts at such innovative regulatory approaches. To learn more about that experience, the PURE \u2793 conference and Maine Policy Review invited representatives with three different perspectives on the Vermont experience to share their observations
This study compares the perspectives of the Departments of Public Utilities Control (DPUC), Incumben...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996, passed by Congress and signed by the president in February, rewr...
This Article critically examines the division of regulatory jurisdiction over telecommunications iss...
The dramatic changes in telecommunications in the past decade have caused many states to try new app...
The dramatic changes in telecommunications in the past decade have caused many states to try new app...
The regulation of public utilities in Maine continues to evolve in response to changing economic, po...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Engineering Systems Division, Technology and P...
This article is based on a presentation at the Pure \u2793 Conference last January. Richard Silkman ...
The Vermont Supreme Court may soon consider whether federal law permits the Public Service Board to ...
In August, 1991, Maine Policy Review interviewed Kenneth Gordon, the current chair of the Maine Publ...
Municipal electric utilities (MEUs) are increasingly expanding into telecommunications services. Suc...
This paper explores the relationship between technology and the policies that govern competition in ...
Regulatorypolicies in the United States are not created via some centralizedprocedure, but through t...
The telecommunications industry has been affected by innovation and technological changes. Technolog...
Good morning, everybody. I am Tony Gambardella with the firm of Woods, Rogers & Hazelgrove in Richmo...
This study compares the perspectives of the Departments of Public Utilities Control (DPUC), Incumben...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996, passed by Congress and signed by the president in February, rewr...
This Article critically examines the division of regulatory jurisdiction over telecommunications iss...
The dramatic changes in telecommunications in the past decade have caused many states to try new app...
The dramatic changes in telecommunications in the past decade have caused many states to try new app...
The regulation of public utilities in Maine continues to evolve in response to changing economic, po...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Engineering Systems Division, Technology and P...
This article is based on a presentation at the Pure \u2793 Conference last January. Richard Silkman ...
The Vermont Supreme Court may soon consider whether federal law permits the Public Service Board to ...
In August, 1991, Maine Policy Review interviewed Kenneth Gordon, the current chair of the Maine Publ...
Municipal electric utilities (MEUs) are increasingly expanding into telecommunications services. Suc...
This paper explores the relationship between technology and the policies that govern competition in ...
Regulatorypolicies in the United States are not created via some centralizedprocedure, but through t...
The telecommunications industry has been affected by innovation and technological changes. Technolog...
Good morning, everybody. I am Tony Gambardella with the firm of Woods, Rogers & Hazelgrove in Richmo...
This study compares the perspectives of the Departments of Public Utilities Control (DPUC), Incumben...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996, passed by Congress and signed by the president in February, rewr...
This Article critically examines the division of regulatory jurisdiction over telecommunications iss...