Thank you, and good afternoon.
My name is Matt Stein, from Primus Canada. I'm the vice-president of Network Services.
I am pleased to have this opportunity to provide Primus Telecommunications Canada's views on the matters under consideration. Before I comment specifically on those matters, I'd like to take a brief moment to provide some details about Primus. I believe this will assist in providing an understanding of the foundation upon which Primus' views are built.
Primus is a full-service telecommunications provider that operates across Canada. We provide competitively priced and high-quality telecommunications services, including telephone, wireless, and Internet services to over a million Canadians.
In addition to our high-value service offerings that assist in disciplining market rates, we also have a history of innovation. For example, in 2004, Primus became the first to offer a national voice-over-IP telephone service. Today, Primus' telephone customers benefit from our patented Telemarketing Guard service, which, provided free of charge, stops well over a million unwanted telemarketing calls per month from reaching our customers. In fact, this unique Canadian-invented technology is in the process of being licensed for international use by other telecommunications companies worldwide.
In regard to Internet services, Primus provides Internet services across Canada using wholesale access services, as well as Primus' own network, which stretches across five provinces and is capable of reaching over 20% of the Canadian population.
In 2006, Primus became the first in Canada to broadly deploy high-speed DSL technology, known as ADSL2Plus. Primus uses unique Internet traffic management practices on its network that ensure that Primus customers receive high-quality Internet service at all times, yet address capacity and congestion issues as they arise, when they arise, without throttling or unnecessarily impacting users' experience. This is regardless of whether the customer is an early adopter, a heavy user, experimenting with the Internet, or just simply checking their e-mail.
We believe that Primus' innovative and differentiated service offerings represent the very competition that the government wants and are beneficial to both the Canadian market and consumers.
Turning to the issues at hand, we believe that forcing all competitors to offer similar, if not the same, Internet options as the incumbent telephone and cable companies will limit the ability for Primus and other competitors to provide innovative and differentiated services to Canadian consumers.
To date, Internet service providers have been permitted to determine how to price their services, whether to implement usage-based billing, and if so, determine the appropriate thresholds and the rates that will apply over the threshold. If incumbent telephone and cable companies are permitted to impose their retail usage-based billing frameworks on their wholesale access services, all of these aspects are removed from the control of competitive ISPs, or Internet service providers.
It's clear that consumers benefit when market forces are allowed to work in the retail market. All competitors should not only be permitted, but encouraged, to create new and innovative services to meet the changing needs of Canadian consumers.
In contrast, competition and market forces are stifled when competitors are required to mirror the offerings of the large incumbents.
As a market participant, Primus is at all times willing to pay a just and reasonable rate to obtain the wholesale access services that we use as a component to provide our Internet services. To date, the rates for these services have been based on genuine costs plus a reasonable markup to ensure that the incumbent telephone company is fully and fairly compensated. However, the usage-based billing rates applied by incumbents on their retail services are not based on cost. They are expensive by design. They are expensive to disincent heavy Internet use. Accordingly, imposing these rates on wholesale services represents a fundamental and inappropriate change in the pricing of these services.
Primus wants the ability to continue paying reasonable rates for the wholesale access services it utilizes to provide Internet services and continue offering differentiated and innovative services that respond to the needs of Canadians.
Canadians have enjoyed an Internet market with many choices. Some Canadians have taken the choice offered by competitive Internet service providers like Primus. Some have not. But even those who did not make that choice are relying on you to make sure that option remains. Without it, we would all have to live with low caps and excessive usage charges.
Thank you for inviting me today. I look forward to your questions.