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United States Telecom Association


FieldValue
nameUnited States Telecom Association
imageLogo ustelecom lg.jpg
size280px
altLogo of the United States Telecom Association
captionThe logo of the United States Telecom Association
abbreviationUSTelecom
formation
typeTrade Association
headquarters601 New Jersey Ave, NW Suite 600
Washington, D.C., United States
membershipCommunications carriers and small cooperatives
leader_titleChair
leader_nameJeff England, Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Silver Star Communications
leader_title2Chair of the Leadership Committee
leader_name2Josh Descant, Chief Executive Officer, REV
leader_title3President and CEO
leader_name3Jonathan Spalter
website
former nameUnited States Telephone Association

Washington, D.C., United States

The United States Telecom Association (USTelecom) is an organization that represents telecommunications-related businesses based in the United States. As a trade association, it represent the converged interests of the country's telecommunications industry. Member companies represent a diverse set of communications-related businesses, including those that provide wireless, Internet, cable television, long distance, local exchange, and voice services. Members include large publicly traded communications carriers as well as small telephone cooperatives that serve only a few hundred customers in urban and rural areas. The organization was founded as the Independent Telephone Association of America in 1897, and represented the telecommunication industry of North America that was not affiliated with the Bell System led by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT&T).

History

The United States Telecom Association (USTelecom) was founded in Chicago, Illinois, on May 17, 1897, when a group of independent telephone company executives convened at the Palmer House to create an organization called the Independent Telephone Association. After the 1894 expiration of Alexander Graham Bell's principal telephone patent, thousands of independent telephone companies sprouted in the telephone industry in the last decade of the 19th century. These companies organized to promote growth of their industry and develop alliances on issues that crossed state lines. Renamed as the United States Independent Telephone Association in 1915, the organization focused on educational programs for its members, standardization efforts and representing its members on relevant policy issues addressed by the federal government. For instance, as the telephone industry grew, Congress enacted new laws, including the Communications Act of 1934 that established the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), and the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which among a variety of initiatives, set a universal service goal of connecting all Americans via affordable, accessible telecommunications services. To meet the requirements of the new statutes, telephone companies worked through the association to educate members, develop common policy positions and interface with policymakers in Congress and at the FCC.

:{| class="wikitable" style="float:right;" |- ! Year ! Name of Association |- | 1897

Independent Telephone Association of America (ITAA)
1903
Independent Telephone Association of the United States of America (ITAUSA)
-
1904
National Independent Telephone Association of the United States (NITAUS)
-
1909
National Independent Telephone Association (NITA)
-
1915
United States Independent Telephone Association (USITA)
-
1983
United States Telephone Association (USTA)
-
1999
United States Telecom Association (USTelecom)
}

In modern times, USTelecom also advocates on behalf of the telecommunications industry to Courts, the White House, and the media.

Organization and leadership

As an American not-for-profit corporation, USTelecom is governed by a 19-member Board of Directors and an 18-member Leadership Committee. The Board of Directors is composed of member company executives that have been nominated by members of the Leadership Committee. The Leadership Committee comprises executives from small-to-mid-sized telecom companies that are members of the association. As of October 2025, the Chair is Jeff England, Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Silver Star Communications, and the Chair of the Leadership Committee is Josh Descant, Chief Executive Officer, REV. Since January 2017, Jonathan Spalter has served as President & CEO of USTelecom.

The association offers three different categories of paid membership:

  • Carrier Members - Companies that provide local telecommunications exchange and access services to residential, business and other customers in the United States.
  • Supplier Members - Companies that sell goods and services to the telecommunications industry.
  • International Members - Companies providing telecommunications services outside the United States and U.S. territories.

USTelecom serves as a forum in which member companies can coordinate advocacy of particular policy issues important to their companies and the telecommunications industry via the association's seven standing Committees and other ad hoc Committees.

Standing Committees:

  • Regulatory Affairs – Member companies develop policy and engage in advocacy before the FCC and other relevant American federal agencies.
  • Governmental Affairs – Member companies collaborate in their advocacy to lawmakers on mutually-beneficial policy issues.
  • External Affairs – These committee members develop and execute media and public relations strategies.
  • Tax Policy – Members develop the association's positions on tax and financial policy relevant to the telecommunications industry.
  • Engineering & Technology Policy – Members develop the association's position on a variety of technology issues and standards including numbering, IP services, open source software, network neutrality, DPI, and emerging technologies.
  • Intellectual Property and Privacy – Members develop the association's position on issues surrounding the ownership and distribution of content and protection of consumer information.
  • National Security and Public Safety – These committee members gather to inform and shape policies addressing cybersecurity, national security, emergency preparedness, and pandemic planning.

Notable Ad Hoc Committees:

  • Universal Service
  • Intercarrier compensation
  • Consumer protection
  • Video competition

Member education

Beyond representing member companies' interests to legislators, the administration, the FCC, and in courts, USTelecom conducts member education programs through webinars, conferences and leadership development programs. Other departments in the association dually support these educational and advocacy programs through the distribution of research briefs and industry-relevant newsletters.

References

References

  1. Systems Technology, Omnitron. "Association Memberships". Omnitron Systems Technology.
  2. Pleasance, Charles A.. (1989). "The Spirit of Independent Telephony". Independent Telephone Books.
  3. Therier, Adam D.. (Fall 1994). "Unnatural Monopoly: Critical Moments in the Development of the Bell System Monopoly". The Cato Journal.
  4. Pleasance, Charles A.. (1989). "The Spirit of Independent Telephony". Independent Telephone Books.
  5. Federal Communications Commission. "SEC. 254. Universal Service". Federal Communications Commission.
  6. Rockefeller, Senator Jay. "Speech to the United States Telephone Association "Rural Telecommunications Modernization Act"". Senator Jay Rockefeller.
  7. "Comments of the United States Telephone Association In the Matter of Federal-State Joint Board on Universal Service; CC Docket No. 96-45". Federal Communications Commission.
  8. "United States Telephone Association Announces Name Change - Becomes United States Telecom Association". PR Newswire Association LLC.
  9. De Land, Fred. (October 1904). "The National Convention". The Telephone Magazine Publishing Co..
  10. De Land, Fred. (October 1904). "The National Convention". The Telephone Magazine Publishing Co..
  11. McMeal, Harry B.. (July 1 – December 30, 1922). "Personal and Biographical Notes". Telephone Publishing Corporation.
  12. McMeal, Harry B.. (July 1 – December 30, 1922). "Personal and Biographical Notes". Telephone Publishing Corporation.
  13. Frank DeWitt Reese. (1997). "The Froehlich/Kent Encyclopedia of Telecommunications". Marcel Dekker, Inc..
  14. "United States Telephone Association Announces Name Change - Becomes United States Telecom Association". PR Newswire Association LLC.
  15. (2016-06-14). "Court Upholds FCC's Net Neutrality Rules". consumerist.com.
  16. (2016-04-15). "Broadband Providers Fire Back at White House for Backing FCC Set-Top Rules". morningconsult.com.
  17. (25 October 2019). "Leadership". United States Telecom Association.
  18. (6 October 2016). "Jonathan Spalter to be new USTelecom president and CEO".
  19. "Membership". USTelecom.
  20. "USTelecom Research Briefs". USTelecom.
  21. Brief, Smart. "USTelecom Association News". SmartBrief, Inc..
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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