Abbreviation USTelecom Founded 1 May 1897 | President and CEO Walter McCormick Type of business Trade association | |
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Formation May 1, 1897; 119 years ago (1897-05-01) Membership Communications carriers and small cooperatives Chairman of the Board Jeffery Gardner, CEO of Windstream Communications Chairman of the Leadership Committee Robert A. Hunt, Vice President of Regulatory Affairs and Business Operations of GVTC Communications Similar CTIA – The Wireless Association, Universal Service Fund, Alliance for Telecommunications Industry S, Washington Legal Foundation, Competitive Enterprise Institute Profiles |
The United States Telecom Association (USTelecom) is an organization that represents telecommunications-related businesses based in the United States. As a trade association, they 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.
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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. According to some industry historians, thousands of independent telephone companies sprouted in the telephone industry at the turn of the century largely due to the expiration of the first Alexander Graham Bell telephone patents on January 30, 1894. These companies banded together 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. USTelecom also advocates on behalf of the telecommunications industry to Courts, the White House, and the media.
Mission
USTelecom's mission:
"To unite the US broadband industry across our membership spectrum through collaborative advocacy and provide a forum for pro-investment policies which will enhance our economy and quality of life."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 April 2012, the Chairman of the Board is Jeffery Gardner, CEO of Windstream Communications and the Chairman of the Leadership Committee is Robert A. Hunt, Vice President of Regulatory Affairs and Business Operations of GVTC Communications. Since 2001, Walter B. McCormick, Jr. has served as President & CEO of USTelecom.
The association offers three different categories of paid membership:
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:
Notable Ad Hoc Committees:
Non-Advocacy Programs
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.