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                           Before the
                Federal Communications Commission
                     Washington, D.C.  20554


In the Matter of                 )
                                )
STARPOWER COMMUNICATIONS, LLC,   )
                                 )
     Complainant,                )        
                                )       
               v.                )      File No. EB-00-MD-19
                                )
VERIZON SOUTH INC.,              )
                                )
      Respondent.                                                    )


                  MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

   Adopted:  November 5, 2003           Released:  November 7, 
2003

By the Commission:

I.   INTRODUCTION

     1. In this Order, we grant a supplemental complaint for 
damages filed by Starpower Communications, LLC (``Starpower'') 
against Verizon South Inc. (``Verizon South'') 1 pursuant to 
section 252(e)(5) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended 
(``Act'') and section 1.722 of the Commission's rules.2  In the 
liability phase of this proceeding, the Commission found that the 
parties' interconnection agreement requires Verizon South to pay 
reciprocal compensation for Starpower's delivery of traffic 
originated by Verizon South's customers and bound for Starpower's 
Internet service provider (``ISP'') customers.3  Consistent with 
that finding, we award damages to Starpower for reciprocal 
compensation that Verizon South owes for Starpower's delivery of 
traffic to all of Starpower's ISP customers, including such 
customers served by Starpower through ``virtual NXX'' 
arrangements.4  As explained below, because Verizon South 
stipulated that it rates and bills these ISP-bound calls as local 
traffic under its applicable state tariff, and because the 
interconnection agreement requires Verizon South to pay 
reciprocal compensation for the termination of local traffic as 
defined in that tariff, we conclude that Starpower is entitled to 
the damages it seeks.    

II.  BACKGROUND

     II.A.     The Parties and Their Interconnection Agreement

     2.   Starpower is a competitive local exchange carrier 
(``CLEC'') licensed to provide local exchange services in 
Virginia.5  Verizon South is an incumbent local exchange carrier 
also licensed to provide local exchange services in Virginia.6

     3. Pursuant to a written agreement (``Agreement''), 
Starpower and Verizon South interconnected their networks to 
enable end users subscribing to Starpower's local exchange 
service to place calls to and receive calls from end users 
subscribing to Verizon South's local exchange service.7  The 
Agreement provides that the parties ``shall reciprocally 
terminate POTS calls originating on each others' networks.''8  
``POTS'' stands for ``Plain Old Telephone Service'' traffic, 
which ``includes local traffic (including EAS) as defined in 
[Verizon South's] tariff.''9  Verizon South's General Customer 
Services Tariff (``Tariff''), in turn, defines Local Service as 
``[t]elephone service furnished between customer's stations [sic] 
located within the same exchange area.''10  The Agreement 
obligates the parties to pay reciprocal compensation ``[f]or the 
termination of local traffic.''11  No other provisions of the 
Agreement govern compensation for the delivery of local 
traffic.12  The Agreement currently is in effect and will remain 
in effect until it is superceded by a new agreement.13

     II.B.     The Liability Order

     4. Since April 1999, Verizon South has delivered to 
Starpower, at the point of interconnection between their 
respective networks, ISP-bound calls originated by Verizon 
South's customers.14  Starpower, in turn, delivered these calls 
to its ISP customers and billed Verizon South for reciprocal 
compensation for each call.15  Pursuant to the Agreement, 
Starpower based the reciprocal compensation charges on its 
records of total minutes of usage for traffic sent by Verizon 
South to Starpower over trunk groups provided by Starpower.16  
Verizon South disputed and refused to pay Starpower's reciprocal 
compensation charges for delivering the ISP-bound traffic,17 
claiming that such traffic is not subject to reciprocal 
compensation under the Agreement because such traffic is 
jurisdictionally interstate, not local.18  Hence, Starpower 
initiated legal processes to recover reciprocal compensation 
payments from Verizon South, which ultimately resulted in the 
Commission's Liability Order.19

     5.   The Liability Order found that the Agreement obligates 
Verizon South to pay reciprocal compensation to Starpower for 
whatever calls Verizon South bills to its own customers as local 
calls under the Tariff, regardless of whether a call is 
jurisdictionally interstate.20  The Liability Order so held 
because the Agreement expressly links compensability for 
reciprocal compensation purposes to Verizon South's own customer 
billing determinations.21  Because it was undisputed that Verizon 
South bills ISP-bound traffic as local calls under its Tariff, 
the Commission concluded that such calls are compensable under 
the Agreement, and that Verizon South therefore must pay 
reciprocal compensation to Starpower for the delivery of such 
calls.22  In reaching this conclusion, the Commission relied on 
the parties' stipulation that ``when a Verizon South customer 
places a call to an ISP, or to the Internet through an ISP, using 
a telephone number associated with the caller's local calling 
area, Verizon South rates and bills such customer, if at all, for 
a local call pursuant to the terms of [the Tariff].''23  

     6.   Pursuant to Commission rules,24 Starpower then filed 
its Supplemental Complaint seeking an order requiring Verizon 
South to pay all past due reciprocal compensation, including 
interest, and all future reciprocal compensation as it accrues, 
for delivering traffic identified as local traffic under the 
terms of the Agreement, including ISP-bound traffic.25  Verizon 
South challenges Starpower's entitlement to such damages, arguing 
for the first time, inter alia, that the calls at issue 
constitute virtual NXX traffic, which allegedly is not 
compensable under the Liability Order's interpretation of the 
Agreement.26    

     II.C.     Virtual NXX Traffic

     7. Telephone numbers consist of ten digits in the form NPA-
NXX-XXXX.  The first three digits, or the ``NPA,'' refer to the 
area code.  The second three digits, or the ``NXX,'' refer to the 
central office code.27  Pursuant to standard industry practice, 
an NXX code generally corresponds to a particular geographic area 
-- or ``rate center'' -- served by a local exchange carrier 
(``LEC'').28  By contrast, ``virtual NXX'' codes are central 
office codes that correspond to a particular rate center but are 
assigned to a customer located in a different rate center.29  For 
example, if a customer physically located in a rate center in Key 
West, Florida, received a telephone number containing an NXX code 
associated with a rate center in Miami, Florida, that customer 
would have a virtual NXX code.

     8.   The disputed traffic in this proceeding consists 
exclusively of calls from Verizon South's customers in Virginia 
that Starpower delivered to its ISP customers' modem banks that 
are physically located at Starpower's switch in Lanham, 
Maryland.30  Although Lanham, Maryland is outside the local 
calling area of substantially all of Verizon South's customers 
located in Virginia, Starpower assigned its ISP customers in 
Lanham, Maryland NPA-NXX telephone numbers that correspond with 
Verizon South's local calling areas in Northern Virginia - i.e., 
Starpower utilized virtual NXX codes.31  Consequently, when a 
Verizon South customer physically located in Northern Virginia 
calls a Starpower ISP customer whose modem is physically located 
in Lanham, Maryland, the Verizon South customer dials a number 
that ordinarily would correspond with a caller physically located 
in Northern Virginia.

     9.   For purposes of billing its own customers, Verizon 
South rates calls to Starpower's customers as either ``local'' or 
``toll'' based on the NPA-NXX code assigned to the Starpower 
customer, not based on the physical location of the Starpower 
customer.32  In other words, for each call, Verizon South 
compares the NPA-NXX of the calling party's telephone number with 
the NPA-NXX of the called party's number, and if the NPA-NXXs 
correspond to the same local calling area, Verizon South rates 
and bills the call as a local call under its Tariff, regardless 
of whether the two parties actually are physically located in the 
same local calling area.  Consequently, when billing its own 
customers, Verizon South rated as local all calls placed by its 
customers in Northern Virginia and delivered by Starpower to ISP 
modem banks in Lanham, Maryland, because the NPA-NXXs for both 
the calling and called parties corresponded to Verizon South's 
Northern Virginia local calling areas.33  In the absence of this 
virtual NXX arrangement that Starpower used, Verizon South's 
Northern Virginia customers would have incurred toll charges for 
calls placed to Starpower's Lanham, Maryland ISP customers.34

     10.       Verizon South provides a service to its own 
customers that is similar to the virtual NXX service Starpower 
provides to its ISP customers.  Specifically, Verizon South's 
Foreign Exchange service permits a customer to obtain a telephone 
number associated with a local exchange area in which that 
customer has no physical presence.35  Verizon South rates calls 
to and from its Foreign Exchange customers as local or toll based 
upon the telephone number assigned to the customer (not the 
physical location of the customer),36 and it bills and collects 
reciprocal compensation for calls that it rates as local.37 

III.      DISCUSSION

     III.A.    The Agreement Obligates Verizon South to Pay 
          Starpower Reciprocal Compensation for Delivering 
          Virtual NXX Calls that Verizon South Bills to Its Own 
          Customers as Local Calls.

     11.         The Agreement obligates the parties to pay 
reciprocal compensation for the termination of ``local traffic . 
. . as defined in [Verizon South's] tariff.'' 38  Thus, as 
discussed above, the Liability Order determined that whatever 
traffic Verizon South rated and billed its own customers as local 
under the Tariff is compensable traffic under the Agreement.  
Accordingly, based on Verizon South's conduct in rating and 
billing calls to ISPs, the Liability Order held that Verizon 
South owed reciprocal compensation for Starpower's delivery of 
ISP-bound calls.39  Central to this finding was Verizon South's 
stipulation that when one of its customers places a call to an 
ISP, using a telephone number associated with the caller's local 
calling area, Verizon South rates and bills the customer for a 
local call pursuant to the terms of the Tariff.40  Although 
Verizon South argued during the liability phase that it would be 
unfair for the Commission to rely on Verizon South's manner of 
billing ISP calls to determine what traffic is local under the 
Tariff,41 the Commission soundly rejected the argument because, 
in the Agreement, Verizon South voluntarily linked the 
compensability of traffic to Verizon South's own classification 
of traffic in the Tariff.42  

     12.       Despite these findings, Verizon South argues that 
the Liability Order only held that, under the Agreement, the 
Tariff's definition of ``local service'' is controlling, and made 
no conclusion that ISP-bound traffic is compensable local 
traffic.43  Verizon South further argues that the Tariff's 
definition of ``local service'' hinges on the physical location 
of the calling and called parties, and not on the parties' 
respective telephone numbers.44  To support this argument, 
Verizon South observes that the Tariff defines local service as 
``telephone service furnished between customer's stations located 
within the same exchange area.''45  Thus, in Verizon South's 
view, ``local service'' under the Tariff consists solely of calls 
between customer stations physically located in the same calling 
area.46  Consequently, Verizon South asserts that, because 
virtual NXX traffic does not travel between customer stations 
physically located within the same local exchange areas, it is 
not compensable ``local service'' as defined in the Tariff.47  
Therefore, according to Verizon South, it owes no reciprocal 
compensation for Starpower's delivery of virtual NXX traffic from 
Verizon South's customers in Northern Virginia to Starpower's ISP 
customers in Lanham, Maryland.

     13.       Verizon South misapprehends the Liability Order, 
which expressly found that Verizon South's conduct in rating and 
billing ISP-bound traffic determines whether traffic is local 
under the Tariff.48  Regardless of Verizon South's present 
construction of its Tariff,49 Verizon South previously stipulated 
that, for rating and billing purposes, it considers the traffic 
at issue to be local under the Tariff.50  In other words, Verizon 
South stipulated that, in determining whether traffic is local 
under the Tariff, it looks to the respective telephone numbers of 
the call's parties, not the parties' physical location.  Verizon 
South cannot now distance itself from this stipulation by arguing 
that local traffic, in fact, is something different from what it 
plainly considered local traffic to be when rating and billing 
calls under the Tariff.51  Thus, Verizon South's acknowledged 
treatment of virtual NXX calls as local under the Tariff 
establishes its contractual obligation to pay reciprocal 
compensation for Starpower's delivery of such calls under the 
Agreement.52    

     14.  We also find relevant Verizon South's concession that 
it engaged in the very same conduct that it now alleges is 
unlawful when done by Starpower.  Specifically, Verizon South 
billed and collected reciprocal compensation for calls placed by 
a CLEC customer to a Verizon South Foreign Exchange customer with 
a ``local'' NXX, even when those calls were between parties 
physically located in different local calling areas.53  Verizon 
South has failed to demonstrate why its contractual obligation to 
Starpower should be different from its own practice.      

     15.       Even if we focus exclusively on the language of 
the Tariff, as Verizon South urges us to do,54 Verizon South's 
argument that virtual NXX traffic is not compensable under the 
Agreement still fails.  First and foremost, the Tariff does not 
expressly address whether the ``location'' of a customer station 
turns on physical presence or number assignment, so Verizon 
South's course of performance in implementing the Tariff - which 
relied exclusively on the latter - is compelling.55 Moreover, 
other provisions of the Tariff suggest that a customer's physical 
location is not determinative in defining local traffic.  The 
Tariff's definition of ``local calling area,'' for example, 
refers to ``a geographical area in which a customer has access 
for placing and receiving local calls at a fixed monthly rate or 
at a lower basic monthly rate plus usage charge for each local 
call completed.''56  The definition does not refer to a 
geographical area in which a customer is physically located.57  
Similarly, the Tariff defines ``exchange service'' in terms of 
the manner in which calls are billed, rather than the physical 
location of the customer:  ``Exchange service is a general term 
describing as a whole the facilities provided for local 
intercommunication, together with the right to originate and 
receive a specified or an unlimited number of local messages at 
charges in accordance with the provisions of this tariff.''58  
This comports with the Tariff's specification that customers 
subscribing to Verizon South's Foreign Exchange service pay the 
same local service rate to call the ``foreign'' exchange in which 
they are not physically located as customers who are physically 
located within the same local exchange area.59  In short, the 
Tariff's conception of local traffic includes all traffic for 
which a customer is billed at a local rate, regardless of the 
customer's physical location.60       

     16.       Moreover, Verizon South offers no persuasive 
evidence that, at the time the parties entered into the 
Agreement, they intended that a customer's physical location 
rather than number assignment would dictate compensation 
obligations under the Agreement.  In fact, the record shows just 
the opposite.

     17.  First, as stated repeatedly above, for purposes of 
billing its own customers, Verizon South always has rated calls 
to Starpower telephone numbers as either local or toll based on 
the NPA-NXX code assigned to the Starpower customer.61  And at 
all relevant times, industry practice among local exchange 
carriers similarly appears to have been that calls are designated 
as either local or toll by comparing the NPA-NXX codes of the 
calling and called parties.62  Indeed, Verizon South apparently 
lacks the technical capability to identify virtual NXX calls as 
non-local based on the physical end points of the call.63  
Furthermore, Verizon South presents no evidence in this record 
that the parties proposed or discussed alternatives to the 
industry-wide system of rating calls by NPA-NXX.64  Finally, at 
the time the parties entered into the Agreement, no court or 
state commission (including Virginia's) or Commission decision 
had declared virtual NXX arrangements to be unlawful or held that 
virtual NXX traffic was not subject to reciprocal 
compensation;65and state commissions that since have addressed 
the issue have split on whether virtual NXX calls should be 
treated as local traffic subject to reciprocal compensation.66  
In sum, neither the legal context in which the parties entered 
the Agreement, nor any other evidence in this record, 67 provides 
any basis to conclude that the parties intended to link 
reciprocal compensation obligations to the physical location of 
the parties' customers.68

     III.B.    We Award Interest to Starpower in Accordance  with 
          Virginia Law.

     18.  The parties agree that if Starpower prevails, it should 
receive prejudgment interest on any damages awarded.69  They 
disagree, however, on the rate of interest that we should apply.  
Starpower argues that because Virginia law governs the parties' 
obligations under the Agreement, Virginia law should supply the 
appropriate interest rate.70  Starpower contends that section 
6.1-330.54 of the Virginia Code provides an annual interest rate 
of nine percent for both prejudgment and post-judgment interest 
on contractual obligations, where no different rate is fixed by 
the contract.71  In contrast, Verizon South argues that, 
consistent with past precedent, we should award prejudgment 
interest equal to the Internal Revenue Service Rate for 
overpayments and underpayments (``IRS rate''), and that this rate 
will ensure that Starpower receives proper compensation for the 
time-value of money.72  Verizon South also contends that section 
8.01-382 of the Virginia Code, a companion statute to section 
6.1-330.54, renders the Virginia interest rate inapplicable, 
because it provides that interest applies only to ``action[s] at 
law or suit[s] in equity,'' not to Starpower's regulatory claim 
regarding the interpretation and enforcement of an 
interconnection agreement under the Act.73

     19.  We agree with Starpower.  It is well established that 
the award of prejudgment interest in complaint proceedings is a 
matter left to our sound discretion, and is one in which we are 
guided by considerations of fairness.74  In awarding prejudgment 
interest in this proceeding, we look primarily to the 
Commission's finding in the Liability Order that Virginia law 
supplies the applicable rules of contract interpretation.75  
Indeed, the parties agreed that the Agreement would be governed 
and construed in accordance with Virginia law.76  Accordingly, we 
conclude that it is appropriate and fair to award prejudgment 
interest at the Virginia statutory interest rate applicable to 
judgments enforcing contracts, namely, section 6.1-330.54 of the 
Virginia Code.

     20.  We disagree with Verizon South that we are barred from 
applying a Virginia interest rate in this case because this is 
not an action at law or a suit in equity.77  Verizon South cites 
no authority holding that section 6.1-330.54 is inapplicable to 
an award on a contract entered by a regulatory agency in an 
adjudicatory context.  In fact, the only Virginia statute Verizon 
South addresses is section 8.01-382.  Although section 8.01-382 
begins with the phrase ``[i]n any action at law or suit in 
equity,'' section 6.1-330.54 does not, and instead applies 
without qualification to ``an action arising from a contract.''  
Starpower argues persuasively that section 8.01-382 is a 
procedural statute that governs the manner of entering judgments 
in court proceedings and does not specify an interest rate at 
all.78  Indeed, section 8.01-382 looks to section 6.1-330.54 to 
supply the statutory interest rate, which, in contract actions, 
is nine percent.79  The only alternative Verizon South offers is 
for us to apply the IRS rate,80 which we have done in other 
proceedings.  Although it would not be improper to apply the IRS 
rate, we find the Virginia rate to be the better choice, given 
the parties' and the Commission's conclusion that Virginia law 
generally controls the parties' rights in this proceeding.  
Accordingly, we award prejudgment interest at the rate specified 
in section 6.1-330.54 of the Virginia Code.

     21.  For all the same reasons, we also conclude that it is 
appropriate and fair to apply the nine percent rate contained in 
section 6.1-330.54 to post-judgment interest due to Starpower.81  
Starpower argues that the nine percent rate should apply until 
the earlier of the date of payment by Verizon South or the entry 
of a judicial judgment on Starpower's claim, because an order by 
the Commission does not have the legal effect of a federal court 
judgment.82  We need not reach the issue of when prejudgment 
interest ends and post-judgment interest begins, because section 
6.1-330.54 establishes a nine percent rate for both prejudgment 
and post-judgment interest.  

     III.C.    Damages Calculation

     22.  The parties have stipulated that, for traffic exchanged 
through May 2003, the amount of reciprocal compensation that has 
been invoiced and remains unpaid totals $12,059,149.83  The 
parties further stipulate that any interest due to Starpower 
should accrue beginning 30 days from the date of each invoice 
that Starpower sent to Verizon South.84  Based on these 
stipulations and our findings above, we award damages to 
Starpower in the amount of $12,059,149, plus all reciprocal 
compensation amounts due and owing between June 1, 2003 and the 
date of this Order under the analysis set forth herein, plus 
interest, as set forth below.

IV.  ORDERING CLAUSES

     23.       Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED, pursuant to sections 
1, 4(i), 4(j), and 252(e)(5) of the Communications Act of 1934, 
as amended, 47 U.S.C. §§ 151, 154(i), 154(j), and 252(e)(5), that 
the Supplemental Complaint filed by Starpower is hereby GRANTED.

     24.       IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, pursuant to sections 1, 
4(i), 4(j), and 252(e)(5) of the Communications Act of 1934, as 
amended, 47 U.S.C. §§ 151, 154(i), 154(j), and 252(e)(5), that 
Verizon South shall pay Starpower, within 90 days of release of 
this Order, damages in the amount of $12,059,149, plus all 
reciprocal compensation amounts due and owing between June 1, 
2003 and the date of this Order under the analysis set forth 
herein, plus interest at an annual rate of nine percent, computed 
beginning 30 days from the date of each invoice that Starpower 
sent to Verizon South and continuing through the date of payment.

                              FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION



                              Marlene H. Dortch
                              Secretary
_________________________

1 Supplemental Complaint for Damages, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed 
June 7, 2002) (``Supplemental Complaint'').  On November 28, 
2000, Starpower filed its initial complaint.  See Complaint, File 
No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed Nov. 28, 2000) (``Complaint'').  In a 
December 8, 2000 Supplemental Submission, Starpower requested 
that, in addition to the relief sought in the Complaint, the 
Commission enter an award of damages in a subsequent phase of the 
proceeding.  Supplemental Submission, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed 
Dec. 8, 2000) (``Supplemental Submission'') at 2.  The Commission 
treated the Supplemental Submission as a motion to bifurcate the 
issue of liability from the issue of damages, and, on January 16, 
2001, granted the motion.  Letter dated January 19, 2001 from 
William H. Davenport, Special Counsel, Market Disputes Resolution 
Division, Enforcement Bureau, to Russell M. Blau and Michael L. 
Schor, counsel for Starpower, and Lawrence W. Katz and Aaron M. 
Panner, counsel for Verizon South, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (rel. 
Jan. 19, 2001) at 1.  See 47 C.F.R. § 1.722. 
2 47 U.S.C. § 252(e)(5); 47 C.F.R. § 1.722.  
3 Starpower Communications, LLC  v. Verizon South Inc., 
Memorandum Opinion and Order, 17 FCC Rcd 6873 (2002) (``Liability 
Order''), rev'd on other grounds sub nom. Starpower 
Communications, LLC  v. FCC, 334 F.3d 1150 (D.C. Cir. 2003) 
(reversing portion of order ruling in Verizon Virginia Inc.'s 
favor with respect to two different interconnection agreements 
than those at issue here).
4 See ¶ 8, infra, for a description of virtual NXX arrangements.  
5 Report and Revised Joint Statement, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed 
Aug. 14, 2002) (``Damages Phase Joint Statement'') at 2, ¶ 1.
6 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 2, ¶ 1.
7 Joint Statement, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed Jan. 12, 2001) 
(``Liability Phase Joint Statement'') at 2, ¶ 9.  By letter dated 
February 17, 1998, Starpower notified Verizon South that 
Starpower had elected to obtain interconnection with Verizon 
South by adopting, pursuant to section 252(i) of the Act (47 
U.S.C. § 252(i)), the interconnection agreement that Verizon 
South had entered into with MFS Intelenet of Virginia on 
September 5, 1996 (``Verizon South-MFS Intelenet Agreement'').  
The Virginia State Corporation Commission (``Virginia SCC'') 
approved the Verizon South-MFS Intelenet Agreement on July 9, 
1997.  Joint Statement, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed Jan. 12, 
2001) (``Liability Phase Joint Statement'') at 2, ¶ 5.   The 
Virginia SCC declined to take any action to approve Starpower's 
adoption of the Verizon South-MFS Intelenet Agreement, because 
the adopted agreement had not been negotiated or arbitrated.  Id. 
at 2, ¶ 8.  Subsequently, by letter dated October 1, 1998, 
Starpower and Verizon South ``agree[d] they will honor the 
[section] 252(i) adoption by . . . Starpower of the rates terms 
and conditions of the [Verizon South-MFS Intelenet Agreement] as 
effective and binding upon . . . [Verizon South] and Starpower in 
accordance with the 252(i) adoption letter[] executed by the 
parties on . . . March 11, 1998. . . .''  Id. at 2, ¶ 9.
8 Liability Phase Joint Statement at 3, ¶ 10.
9 Liability Phase Joint Statement at 3, ¶ 11.
10 Liability Phase Joint Statement at 3, ¶ 12.
11 Liability Phase Joint Statement at 3, ¶ 13.
12 Liability Phase Joint Statement at 4, ¶ 18.
13 Supplemental Joint Statement, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed Oct. 
26, 2001) (``Liability Phase Supplemental Joint Statement'') at 
2; Damages Phase Joint Statement at 6, ¶ 23.
14 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 4, ¶¶ 9-10.
15 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 4, ¶¶ 10-11.
16 Supplemental Complaint at 6-7,  ¶¶ 18-21; Damages Phase  Joint 
Statement at 4, ¶ 11.
17 Verizon South did not dispute any reciprocal compensation 
charges billed by Starpower for non-ISP-bound traffic.  
Supplemental Complaint at 7-8, ¶¶ 22-23.  
18 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 4, ¶ 12.    
19 In 1999, Starpower filed petitions with the Virginia SCC 
seeking a declaration requiring Verizon South to pay reciprocal 
compensation for Starpower's delivery of ISP-bound traffic under 
the terms of the parties' Agreement.  The Virginia SCC declined 
jurisdiction.  Starpower then filed a petition with this 
Commission requesting that, pursuant to section 252(e)(5) of the 
Act, 47 U.S.C. § 252(e)(5), the Commission preempt the 
jurisdiction of the Virginia SCC over the reciprocal compensation 
dispute.  Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6880-81, ¶¶ 18-19.  The 
Commission granted the preemption petition, stating that it would 
resolve the question of whether the Agreement requires Verizon 
South to pay reciprocal compensation to Starpower for the 
delivery of ISP-bound traffic.  Id. at 6880-81, ¶¶ 18-20 (citing 
Starpower Communications, LLC Petition for Preemption of 
Jurisdiction of the Virginia State Corporation Commission 
Pursuant to Section 252(e)(5) of the Telecommunications Act of 
1996, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 15 FCC Rcd 11277, 11281, ¶ 9 
(2000)).  Starpower then filed its Complaint.  See note 1, supra.
20 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6892-93, ¶¶ 44-46, 49.
21 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6892-93, ¶¶ 44-46, 49.
22 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6892-93, ¶¶ 44-46, 49.
23 Liability Phase Joint Statement at 7-8, ¶ 36.  See Liability 
Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6892, ¶ 45. 
24 47 C.F.R. §§ 1.721, 1.722.
25 Supplemental Complaint at 8-9.  Verizon South filed a Petition 
for Review of the Liability Order in the United States Court of 
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.  The Court of 
Appeals subsequently dismissed the Petition, holding that because 
the Commission had not yet resolved Starpower's claim for damages 
under the Agreement, the Liability Order is not a final agency 
action subject to court review.  Verizon South Inc. v. FCC, No. 
02-1131, Order (D.C. Cir. Sept. 26, 2002).
26 Answer of Verizon South Inc. to Starpower's Supplemental 
Complaint for Damages, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed June 27, 2002) 
(``Supplemental Answer'') at 2-3, 4-6, 12-13, ¶¶ 4-9; Opening 
Brief on the Merits of Verizon South Inc., File No. EB-00-MD-19 
(filed Oct. 2, 2002) (``Verizon South Opening Brief'') at 2-8;  
Response Brief on the Merits of Verizon South Inc., File No. EB-
00-MD-19 (filed Oct. 11, 2002) (``Verizon South Response Brief'') 
at 3; Reply Brief on the Merits of Verizon South Inc., File No. 
EB-00-MD-19 (filed Oct. 18, 2002) (``Verizon South Reply Brief'') 
at 2-3.  Because we address Verizon South's virtual NXX defense 
on its merits, we do not address the question of whether 
Starpower's complaint in the liability phase of this proceeding 
provided sufficient notice to Verizon South of Starpower's intent 
to collect compensation for virtual NXX calls that Verizon South 
should have raised its virtual NXX defense in its answer in the 
liability phase.  See 47 C.F.R. §§ 1.720(a) (``[a]ll matters 
concerning a . . . defense . . . should be pleaded fully and with 
specificity''); 1.724(b) (the defendant's answer ``shall advise 
the complainant and the Commission fully and completely of the 
nature of any defense, and shall respond specifically to all 
material allegations of the complaint''); Starpower's Reply to 
Verizon South's Answer, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed July 2, 2002) 
(``Starpower Reply'') at 4-9; Opening Brief of Starpower 
Communications, LLC, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed Sept. 27, 2002) 
(``Starpower Opening Brief'') at 5-22; Reply Brief of Starpower 
Communications, LLC, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed Oct. 18, 2002) 
(``Starpower Reply Brief'') at 6-11 (arguing that Verizon South's 
defense should be barred as untimely).  Contra Verizon South 
Response Brief at 11-18 (arguing that Starpower did not make 
clear in its original complaint that it was claiming compensation 
for virtual NXX traffic).
27 See 47 C.F.R. §§ 52.7(a), (c)
28 See, e.g., In the Matter of Numbering Resource Optimization, 
Second Report and Order, Order on Reconsideration in CC Docket 
No. 96-98 and CC Docket No. 99-200, and Second Further Notice of 
Proposed Rulemaking in CC Docket No. 99-200, 16 FCC Rcd 306, 384 
n.11 (2000).  Rate centers are telephone company-designated 
geographic locations that are assigned vertical and horizontal 
coordinates within an area code.  Newton's Telecom Dictionary, 
17th Edition, at 570.  The local calling area for a LEC is based 
on a defined list of rate centers.  Calls placed from one rate 
center to another rate center not on the local list for the 
caller's rate center generally are considered toll calls.  Id.; 
Starpower Opening Brief, Attachment A (Declaration of Rahul 
Dedhiya (``Dedhiya Declaration'')) at 4, ¶ 11; Verizon Opening 
Brief, Attachment 1 (Declaration of William Munsell (``Munsell 
Declaration'')) at 2, ¶ 5.
29 Developing a Unified Intercarrier Compensation Regime, Notice 
of Proposed Rulemaking, 16 FCC Rcd 9610, 9652 n.188 (2001) 
(``Intercarrier Compensation Proceeding''); Starpower Opening 
Brief, Attachment A (Dedhiya Declaration) at 4-5, ¶¶ 11-12; 
Verizon Opening Brief, Attachment 2 (Reply Declaration of William 
Munsell (``Munsell Reply Declaration'')) at 2-3, ¶ 5 (stating 
that a call may or may not be routed to the rate center 
associated with the NPA-NXX of the called number).
30 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 5, ¶ 17.
31 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 5, ¶ 15.
32 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 5, ¶ 16.  
33 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 5, ¶ 17.
34 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 5, ¶ 15.
35 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 6, ¶ 24.   Verizon South 
imposes a separate charge on its Foreign Exchange customers for 
the ability to make and receive calls in a foreign exchange 
without imposition of per-minute toll charges.  Id. at 6, ¶ 25.
36 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 6, ¶ 25.
37 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 6, ¶ 26.
38 Liability Phase Joint Statement at 3, ¶¶ 11, 13; Liability 
Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6892, ¶ 42.
39 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6892-93, ¶¶ 44-45, 49.
40 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6892, ¶ 45 (citing Liability 
Phase Joint Statement at 7-8, ¶ 36).
41 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6893, ¶ 46.
42 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6893, ¶ 46.
43 Supplemental Answer at 2-3, 4-6, 12-13, ¶¶ 4-9; Verizon South 
Opening Brief at 2-8;  Verizon South Response Brief at 3; Verizon 
South Reply Brief at 2-3.  We note that the Agreement requires 
compensation for the termination of ``local traffic,'' as defined 
in the Tariff, and does not refer to the term ``local service.''
44 Supplemental Answer at 2-3, 4-6, 12-13, ¶¶ 4-9; Verizon South 
Opening Brief at 2-8; Verizon South Reply Brief at 2-3. 
45 Verizon  South  Opening Brief  at  3 (quoting  Attachment  1-B 
(Tariff), § 1 at 8 (``Local Service'')).
46 Supplemental Answer at 2-3, 4-6, 12-13, ¶¶ 4-9; Verizon South 
Opening Brief at 2-8; Verizon South Reply Brief at 2-3.
47 Supplemental Answer at 2-3, 4-6, 12-13, ¶¶ 4-9; Verizon South 
Opening Brief at 2-8; Verizon South Reply Brief at 2-3.
48 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6892, ¶ 45.  
49 As discussed in paragraph 15, infra, we find Verizon South's 
interpretation of its Tariff to be unpersuasive.
50 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6892-94, ¶¶ 45-46, 49.      
51 See Starpower Opening Brief at 15-18 (arguing that under both 
federal law and Virginia law, a stipulation is an admission that 
cannot be set aside at the whim of the admitting party) 
(citations omitted).
52 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6894, ¶ 49 (``given the . . .  
Agreement's reference to the Tariff, whatever calls Verizon South 
bills to its customers as local calls under the Tariff must be 
compensable local calls under the . . .  Agreement'').

53 Damages Phase Joint Statement at 6, ¶ 26; Verizon Opening 
Brief, Attachment 1 (Munsell Declaration) at 4-5, ¶ 10.  See 
Opposing Brief of Starpower Communications, LLC, File No. EB-00-
MD-19 (filed Oct. 11, 2002) (``Starpower Opposing Brief'') at 8; 
Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 202(4) (2003) (``Restatement 
of Contracts'') (states that, in circumstances similar to those 
here, course of performance evidence is given ``great weight'').
54 Verizon South Opening Brief at 5-8.
55 See, e.g., Restatement of Contracts § 202(4).
56 August 2 Letter, Attachment (Tariff), § 1 at 8 (``Local 
Calling Area'') (emphasis added).
57 Accordingly, Verizon South is incorrect when it asserts that, 
in order to receive local calls under the Tariff, customers must 
be physically located within the local calling area.  Verizon 
South Opening Brief at 6.  As discussed above, the definition of 
``local calling area'' does not impose such a requirement, 
focusing instead on whether customers have ``access'' to local 
calls at a local rate.
58 August 2 Letter, Attachment A (Tariff), § 1 at 5 (``Exchange 
Service'').
59 Starpower Opposing Brief at 5-6 & Attachment A (Tariff), § 
9.1.3(d) (``Foreign Exchange Service'').
60 Verizon South argues that Foreign Exchange traffic is not 
local traffic under the Tariff, because a customer purchases 
Foreign Exchange service, and pays a separate charge, in order to 
avoid toll charges that otherwise would apply to a call between 
customer stations located in different exchange areas.  Verizon 
South Response Brief at 9-10; Verizon South Reply Brief at 3-4.  
This argument misses the point.  Verizon South admits that it 
rates calls to and from its Foreign Exchange customers as local 
or toll based upon the telephone number assigned to the customer, 
not the physical location of the customer.  Damages Phase Joint 
Statement at 6, ¶ 25.  Therefore, calls placed between a Foreign 
Exchange customer and another customer, both of whom have phone 
numbers that correspond to the same local calling area, are 
treated as local calls under the Tariff, regardless of the 
separate charge. 
61 Liability Phase Joint Statement at 5, ¶ 16.
62 Starpower Opposing Brief at 5-6, 17 (citing Attachment A 
(Dedhiya Declaration) at 5, ¶ 14 (``At the time a call is 
received at a local exchange switch, the only information 
available to that switch to determine the treatment of the call 
is the originating and terminating telephone numbers.  To the 
best of my knowledge, all local exchange carriers use the NPA-NXX 
codes, and not the physical location of each customer, to 
determine whether calls are local or toll for purposes of 
routing, rating, and billing their end users''); Verizon Opening 
Brief, Attachment 1-A (Engineering and Operations in the Bell 
System 63 (2d ed. 1983)) (stating in reference to Foreign 
Exchange service that ``calls to other customers in the distant 
exchange are then treated as local calls instead of toll calls'' 
).  Indeed, Verizon Virginia Inc. (``Verizon Virginia'') 
acknowledged in the Commission's Virginia Arbitration Proceeding 
that rating a call based on the NPA-NXX code assigned to the 
customers is the established rating system used by all local 
exchange carriers, including Verizon Virginia.  Petition of 
WorldCom, Inc. Pursuant to Section 252(e)(5) of the 
Communications Act for Preemption of the Jurisdiction of the 
Virginia State Corporation Commission Regarding Interconnection 
Disputes with Verizon Virginia Inc., and for Expedited 
Arbitration, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 17 FCC Rcd 27039, 
27181, ¶ 300 (Wireline Comp. Bur. 2002) (``Virginia Arbitration 
Proceeding''), apps. for review and recon. pending.   Although 
Verizon Virginia, formerly known as Bell Atlantic-Virginia, Inc., 
and Verizon South, formerly known as GTE South Incorporated 
(``GTE South''), were separate companies at the time the parties 
entered into the Agreement, nothing in the record suggests that 
GTE South did not follow standard industry practice in rating 
calls based on the NPA-NXX codes of the call's parties.
63 Virginia Arbitration Proceeding, 17 FCC Rcd at 27181, ¶ 300 
(noting that virtual NXX traffic cannot be distinguished from 
other local traffic at Verizon's end office switches, and parties 
to an interconnection agreement would have to conduct a traffic 
study or develop a factor to identify the percentage of virtual 
NXX traffic for which Verizon would not pay reciprocal 
compensation).  In choosing between the parties' proposals in the 
Virginia Arbitration Proceeding, the Wireline Competition Bureau 
adopted contract language one consequence of which was to subject 
virtual NXX calls to reciprocal compensation.  The Wireline 
Competition Bureau did not address the legal question of whether 
incumbent local exchange carriers have an affirmative obligation 
under the Act to provide reciprocal compensation for virtual NXX 
traffic.  Nevertheless, as the Commission has emphasized 
previously, parties to an interconnection agreement have been and 
remain free to negotiate compensation arrangements for virtual 
NXX traffic pursuant to sections 251 and 252 of the Act.   
Application by Verizon Maryland Inc., et al. to Provide In-
Region, InterLATA Services In Maryland, Washington, D.C., and 
West Virginia, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 18 FCC Rcd 5212, 
5314 n.603 (2003).  
64 Verizon South argues that the parties' inability to accurately 
identify virtual NXX traffic from other local traffic is 
irrelevant, because Starpower has acknowledged that all of the 
traffic at issue was virtual NXX traffic.  Verizon South Opening 
Brief at 10 n.5; Verizon South Reply Brief at 6.  We find this 
argument to be unpersuasive, given that the Agreement includes no 
procedure for distinguishing between the two types of traffic, 
which, again, indicates that the parties did not intend to 
characterize traffic according to the physical location of 
customers.  In addition, Verizon South argues for the first time 
in its Reply Brief that Starpower does not maintain that, on a 
going-forward basis, it would be difficult to distinguish between 
non-local traffic and local traffic based on whether virtual NXX 
traffic was involved.  Verizon South Reply Brief at 6.  However, 
if Verizon South currently possessed the technical capability to 
distinguish traffic for reciprocal compensation purposes (and it 
clearly did not in 2002, see note 63, supra), we believe Verizon 
South would have brought this fact to our attention.
65 See Letter to Russell M. Blau and Michael L. Shor, Counsel for 
Starpower, and Aaron M. Panner, Counsel for Verizon South, from 
Lisa  B. Griffin, Deputy Chief, Market Disputes Resolution 
Division, FCC Enforcement Bureau, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (dated 
Aug. 16, 2002) (directing the parties to file a joint addendum 
containing ``all state commission decisions, including Virginia 
and Maryland state decisions, relevant to Verizon South's 
`virtual' NXX defense,'' and that ``the parties' briefs, in 
discussing Verizon's `virtual' NXX defense, shall discuss all 
Commission orders and proceedings relevant to the defense. . . 
.''); Joint Addendum (and cases contained therein).   Neither 
party asserts that the Virginia SCC has addressed the virtual NXX 
issue.  But cf. Letter to Marlene H. Dortch, Secretary, FCC, from 
Russell M. Blau, Counsel for Starpower, File No. EB-00-MD-19 
(filed May 23, 2003) (``May 23 Letter''), Attachment A 
(Application of MFS Intelenet of Pennsylvania, Inc., et al., 
Opinion and Order-Short Form, 1996 Pa. PUC LEXIS 196 (Pa. PUC 
July 31, 1996) at 8) (imposing a regulatory requirement, that 
does not exist in the present case, on CLECs to comply with the 
incumbent LEC's local calling area)).
66 Starpower Opposing Brief at 11-12 (and cases cited therein); 
Verizon South Opening Brief at 10-12 (and cases cited therein).  
The Commission cases Verizon South cites do not directly address 
the virtual NXX issue, and were issued after the parties entered 
into the Agreement.  See Verizon South Opening Brief at 8; 
Verizon South Reply Brief at 5 (both citing Mountain 
Communications, Inc. v. Qwest Communications International, Inc., 
Order on Review, 17 FCC Rcd 15135 (2002), affirming Mountain 
Communications, Inc. v. Qwest Communications International, Inc., 
Memorandum Opinion and Order, 17 FCC Rcd 2091 (Enf. Bur. 2002) 
(addressing a wide area calling arrangement between Qwest and a 
wireless carrier)); Verizon South Opening Brief at 9-10 (citing 
AT&T Corporation, MCI Telecommunications Corporation  v. Bell 
Atlantic-Pennsylvania, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 14 FCC Rcd 
556, 587, 590, ¶¶ 71-80 (1998), recon. denied, 15 FCC Rcd 7467 
(2000) (adjudicating formal complaints concerning the assessment 
of carrier common line charges for interstate calls involving 
optional calling services, including Foreign Exchange service, 
and not addressing intercarrier compensation for virtual NXX 
calls under section 251 or 252 of the Act)).
67 Verizon South asserts that, regardless of how it rated and 
billed virtual NXX traffic, it never intended to allow Starpower 
to collect reciprocal compensation for those calls under the 
Agreement, and that Starpower instead should pay Verizon 
originating access charges.  Verizon South Response Brief at 11; 
Verizon South Reply Brief at 7-8.  As explained at length above, 
however, this bald contention runs directly counter to all the 
record's indicia of intent, including the language of the 
Agreement.  
68 In this complaint proceeding, we need not and do not address 
the legal and policy question of whether incumbent LECs have an 
affirmative obligation under sections 251(b)(5) and 252(d)(2) of 
the Act (47 U.S.C. §§ 251(b)(5), 252(d)(2)) to pay reciprocal 
compensation for virtual NXX traffic. This issue has been raised 
and ultimately may be resolved in a pending rulemaking 
proceeding.  See Intercarrier Compensation Proceeding, 16 FCC Rcd 
at 9652, ¶ 115.  Verizon South argues that, for several reasons, 
requiring the payment of reciprocal compensation to Starpower for 
virtual NXX traffic is contrary to sound regulatory policy.  
Verizon South Opening Brief at 12-15, 17-18; Verizon South Reply 
Brief at 6-9.  None of these arguments, which Verizon South has 
already raised in the Intercarrier Compensation Proceeding, is 
relevant to the parties' obligations under the current Agreement, 
which is all that is before us here.  See, e.g., Intercarrier 
Compensation Proceeding, Comments of Verizon (filed Aug. 21, 
2001) at 4-11.
69 Damages Phase  Joint Statement  at 8, ¶  6; Starpower  Opening 
Brief at 22-23; Verizon South Response Brief at 29.
70 Starpower Opening Brief at 24-25.
71 Starpower Opening Brief at 24-25; Starpower Reply Brief at 11-
12.  Section 6.1-330.53 of the Virginia Code states:
     The judgment rate of interest shall be an annual rate 
     of nine percent, except that a money judgment entered 
     in an action arising from a contract shall carry 
     interest at the rate lawfully charged on such contract, 
     or at nine percent annually, whichever is higher.  
     Interest at the judgment rate, where no rate is fixed 
     by contract, shall apply to both prejudgment interest 
     pursuant to § 8.01-382 and to post-judgment interest.
Va. Code Ann.  § 6.1-330.54.   The Starpower  Opening Brief  also 
cites section 8.01-382 of the  Virginia Code, which provides,  in 
pertinent part:
     In any action at law or suit in equity, the verdict of 
     the jury, or if no jury the judgment or decree of the 
     court, may provide for interest on any principal sum 
     awarded, or any part thereof, and fix the period at 
     which the interest shall commence.  The judgment or 
     decree entered shall provide for such interest until 
     such principal sum be paid.  If a judgment or decree be 
     rendered which does not provide for interest, the 
     judgment or decree awarded shall bear interest from its 
     date of entry, at the rate as provided in § 6.1-330.54, 
     and judgment or decree entered accordingly; . . . .
Va. Code Ann. § 8.01-382.
72 Verizon South Response Brief at 29 (citing Rainbow Programming 
Holdings, Inc. v. Bell Atlantic-New Jersey, Inc., Memorandum 
Opinion and Order, 15 FCC Rcd 11754, 11763 n.58 (Enf. Bur. 
2000)).  The IRS rate is set pursuant to section 6621 of the 
Internal Revenue Code.  26 U.S.C. § 6621; see also 26 C.F.R. §§ 
301.6621-1. Current IRS interest rates are listed at Rev. Rul. 
2003-25 I.R.B. 1037 (2003).
73 Verizon South Response Brief at 28-29 (citing Va. Code Ann. § 
8.01-382).
74 See, e.g., General Communications, Inc. v. Alaska 
Communications Systems Holdings, Inc., Memorandum Opinion and 
Order, 16 FCC Rcd 2834, 2862, ¶ 73 (2001) (and cases cited 
therein), aff'd in substantial part, remanded in part sub. nom. 
ACS of Anchorage, Inc. v. FCC, 290 F.3d 403 (D.C. Cir. 2002) 
(ordering the Commission to explain why it calculated prejudgment 
interest based on the IRS rate for corporate overpayments rather 
than the rate for ``large'' corporate overpayments), dismissed, 
18 FCC Rcd 6331 (Enf. Bur. 2003).
75 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6882-83, ¶ 24.
76 Liability Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 6882 n.73 (citing Complaint, 
Exhibit A (Agreement) at 27, ¶ XIX.J (``This Agreement shall be 
governed by and construed in accordance with the domestic laws of 
the state of Virginia. . . .'')).
77 Verizon South Response Brief at 28-29.
78 Starpower Reply Brief at 11-12.
79 Va. Code Ann. § 6.1-330.54.
80 Verizon South Response Brief at 29.
81 Post-judgment interest is mandatory under both state and 
federal law.  See, e.g., Dairyland Ins. Co. v. Douthat, 248 Va. 
627, 631 (1994); 28 U.S.C. § 1961.
82 Starpower Opening Brief at 24.  
83 Supplemental Joint Statement, File No. EB-00-MD-19 (filed July 
31, 2003) (``Supplemental Damages Phase Joint Statement'') at 2, 
¶ 3.
84 Supplemental Damages Phase Joint Statement at 1, ¶ 2.