Full opinion text
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER WOLF, District Judge. I. INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY Global NAPs, Inc. has sued Verizon New England Inc. (“Verizon”), the Massachusetts Department of Telecommunications and Energy (the “DTE” or the “Department”) and the Commissioners of the Department in an attempt to overturn an Order of the DTE interpreting and approving an interconnection agreement (“ICA”) between Global NAPs and Verizon because the DTE has construed that agreement as not requiring Verizon to make certain payments to Global NAPs. After filing suit to seek reversal of the original decision of the DTE, Global NAPs petitioned the DTE for reconsideration. When the DTE denied that request, Global NAPs filed a second suit seeking reversal of the denial of its petition for reconsideration. The court allowed the joint motion of all parties to consolidate the two cases. The parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment. On March 9, 2004, the court heard oral argument on those motions. For the reasons described in this Memorandum: there are no material facts in dispute; Global NAPs’ Motion for Summary Judgment in being allowed in part; Verizon and the DTE’s Motions for Summary Judgment are being denied; and this case is being remanded to the DTE for further proceedings consistent with this Memorandum. This case presents complex questions of law arising from a complicated statute, the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (the “Act”). Judges have understandably differed, and undoubtedly will continue to differ, on how the complex and not always clear Act apportions authority among state regulatory agencies, the Federal Communications Commission (the “FCC”), state courts, and federal courts. In what appears to be an issue of first impression in this circuit if not the nation, the court concludes that, in the facts and circumstances of this case, the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the Constitution mandates that if a first state’s regulatory agency acting in a judicial capacity issues a final decision interpreting an interconnection agreement, a second state must give that decision whatever preclusive effect the courts of the first state would give it. Since the DTE did not observe this mandate in the instant case, the court is remanding the case to the DTE so that it can conduct any necessary further proceedings and, in any event, issue a decision consistent with this requirement. However, as summarized below, while the DTE must accept the interpretation of the Rhode Island Public Utilities Commission (the “RIPUC”) on common language in agreements between the parties, the ultimate question of whether Verizon was, during the relevant period, required to pay Global NAPs reciprocal compensation for calls to internet service providers completed by Global NAPs (“ISP Traffic” or “ISP-bound Traffic”) subject to the Massachusetts agreement remains open and must be decided by the DTE. In summary, this Memorandum explains the following. In November 1999, the RI-PUC decided a complaint brought by Global NAPs against Verizon. Record (“R.”) at 313. The complaint was assigned to docket number 2967. Id. Global NAPs complained that Verizon was refusing to pay reciprocal compensation that it owed under Section 5.7.2.3 of their agreement concerning Rhode Island. Id. Section 5.7.2.3 provides, in pertinent part, that: The Parties ... disagree as to whether ... “ISP Traffic” ... constitutes Local Traffic as defined herein, and the charges to be assessed in connection with such traffic. The issue of whether such traffic constitutes Local Traffic on which reciprocal compensation mus[t] be paid pursuant to the 1996 Act is presently before the FCC in CCB/CPD 97-30 and may be before a court of competent jurisdiction. The Parties agree that the decision of the FCC in that proceeding, or [of] such court, shall determine whether such traffic is Local Traffic (as defined herein) and the charges to be assessed in connection with ISP Traffic. If the FCC or such court determines that ISP Traffic is Local Traffic, as defined herein, or otherwise determines that ISP Traffic is subject to reciprocal compensation, it shall be compensated as Local Traffic under this Agreement unless another compensation scheme is required under such FCC or court determination. Until resolution of this issue, [Verizon] agrees to pay GNAPS Reciprocal Compensation for ISP traffic. R. at 356-57 (emphasis added). Thus, Section 5.7.2.3 provided that until the dispute concerning whether the Act required reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic (the “issue”) was decided by the FCC or a court of competent jurisdiction, Verizon would pay reciprocal compensation to Global NAPs. Verizon argued that its interim obligation to pay reciprocal compensation was resolved by the FCC when it issued its February 26, 1999 Internet Traffic Order (“ITO”). R. at 313. The RIPUC decided that the ITO did not decide the issue and that the ITO alone did not resolve the parties’ dispute. R. at 316. The RIPUC decided that, under the ITO, it had the authority and, implicitly, a duty to resolve disputes concerning reciprocal compensation. Id. It further decided that the fact that Global NAPs filed a complaint against Verizon created a presumption that the issue was not resolved and that Verizon had failed to rebut this presumption by showing that Global NAPs’ complaint did not have a good faith basis. R. at 316-17. Accordingly, the RIPUC ordered Verizon to pay Global NAPs reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic pending the resolution of Docket No. 2967. R. at 317. In January 2002, the RIPUC decided a second complaint brought by Global NAPs against Verizon in the same docket. R. at 192. Verizon had once again ceased paying reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic under the parties’ agreement. Id. Verizon argued that the FCC’s Order on Remand from the D.C. Circuit, which was effective June 14, 2001, resolved the issue of whether ISP Traffic was subject to reciprocal compensation under the Act, thus terminating its interim obligation to pay. R. at 193. Global NAPs asserted that the issue was not resolved because the parties had not yet had an opportunity to fully appeal the Order on Remand. Id. The RIPUC decided that the Order on Remand resolved the issue within the meaning of the parties’ agreement notwithstanding any appeals that might be taken from it. R. at 199. The RIPUC distinguished its earlier decision that the Internet Traffic Order “was not dispositive of the reciprocal compensation issue because: (1) the FCC did not definitively resolve whether ISP-bound traffic was subject to reciprocal compensation, (2) the FCC left jurisdiction with the state commissions to determine whether reciprocal compensation payments were due for ISP-bound traffic, and (3) the FCC had not established a recovery mechanism or interim recovery mechanism for ISP-bound traffic, but rather, had indicated the parties should be bound by their ICAs.” R. at 198. In June 2002, the DTE issued its decision in this case. R. at 353. The parties had asked the DTE to approve their interconnection agreement. R. at 354. That agreement included, verbatim, the language of Section 5.7.2.3 of the Rhode Island agreement. However, Verizon arid Global NAPs disputed the impact of Section 5.7.2.3 in Massachusetts. Compare R. at 359 with R. at 363. Verizon also argued that if Global NAPs’ interpretation of the agreement were correct, the DTE should reject the agreement because it is contrary to Massachusetts public policy. R. at 360. Global NAPs asserted that Verizon was collaterally estopped from relitigating the issues decided by the' RIPUC. R. at 363. The DTE rejected this argument. R. at 365-66. Instead, the DTE decided that the issue was “resolved in Massachusetts with the issuance of the FCC’s Internet Traffic Order.” R. at 368. Based on that interpretation of the effect of the ITO, the DTE approved the agreement. This court finds that the issue of whether the ITO alone “resolved the issue” within the meaning of, the parties’ identical agreements was litigated and decided by the RIPUC and cannot be relitigated before the DTE. Because the DTE did not, as required, adopt the RIPUC’s interpretation and application of Section 5.7.2.3, this case is being remanded. On remand, the DTE must accept that the ITO alone did not, within the meaning of .the parties’ Massachusetts agreement, resolve the question of whether Verzion was obligated to pay Global NAPs reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic because the ITO left open the possibility that state legal or equitable principles might establish a duty to pay. The DTE must then decide, in the first instance, whether and when the Massachusetts state legal or equitable principles that might serve as the foundation of any obligation to pay reciprocal compensation were so well-settled that the issue was resolved within the meaning of the parties’ agreement through a combination of the ITO and Massachusetts state law. The RIPUC decided that the issue was not resolved because, in 1999, there was a good faith dispute over whether reciprocal compensation might be required under Rhode Island state legal or equitable principles. The RIPUC did not consider, let alone decide, whether the issue was resolved under Massachusetts state legal or equitable principles. Thus, the DTE can and should decide this question de novo. Although it might be argued that the DTE already decided this question, see R. at 368-70 & n. 12, this contention is inconsistent with the decision in Global Naps, Inc. v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co., 226 F.Supp.2d 279, 294-95 (D.Mass.2002) (“Global NAPs /”), in which the court stated with reference to several of the decisions cited by the DTE in its decision in this case: “DTE has only looked to federal law as the source of reciprocal compensation; it has not looked to whether the interconnection agreements give rise to reciprocal compensation as a matter of Massachusetts contract law.”. The DTE did not decide whether state law might provide a basis for reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic because it believed that the parties’ agreement to be bound by the FGC decision meant that state law, as opposed to federal law, could not provide a basis for an obligation to pay reciprocal compensation. Since the DTE viewed state law as irrelevant, it did not consider whether state law was sufficiently clear to render the issue “resolved” after the ITO was issued in February 1999. Once the DTE applies the RIPUC’s interpretation of what the contract means, i.e. that the issue is not resolved if there is the potential that Verizon owes reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic under state law, the DTE must decide whether this issue was resolved in Massachusetts in all or part of the period from July 24, 2000 to June 14, 2001. Verizon would owe reciprocal compensation for any part of that period in which the issue was unresolved. In the event that the DTE determines that the parties’ agreement requires Verizon to make reciprocal compensation payments for ISP Traffic for any period of time, the DTE may also address Verizon’s argument that it should reconsider and now reject the parties’ agreement because it is contrary to public policy. See R. at 360. This issue has not been addressed by the RIPUC or the DTE. II. FACTS AND LEGAL BACKGROUND This dispute centers around compensation of one telephone company, Global NAPs, by another, Verizon, for Global NAPs’ role in completing calls made by Verizon customers to Global NAPs customers. More specifically, the calls at issue are calls placed by Verizon customers to their ISPs, who are customers of Global NAPs. Many people access the internet through a dial-up service, such as America Online. For purposes of this case, a typical customer has a computer with a modem, a telephone line connected to Verizon’s network, and an account with his or her ISP. The customer pays Verizon a monthly fee to use the telephone network and pays the ISP a monthly fee to access the internet. The ISP pays its telephone company a monthly fee for each of its many telephone lines, as well as other services. In order to connect to the internet, the customer uses his or her modem to dial a telephone number provided by the ISP. If the ISP is a Verizon customer, Verizon is able to complete the call. If the ISP is not a Verizon, customer and is instead a Global NAPs customer, then Verizon must transfer the customer’s call from its network to Global NAPs’ network and Global NAPs completes or, in the vernacular of the industry “terminates,” the call to the ISP. Once an ISP receives a call from its customer’s modem — regardless of how many networks it must pass through to get from the customer to the ISP — the ISP connects the customer to the internet. The court has considered the parties dispute in the context of the history- of the telecommunications industry and associated regulatory schemes. Magistrate Judge Joyce Alexander recently summarized much of the relevant history in a Report & Recommendation adopted in large part by Judge Reginald Lindsay in another case involving the parties now before the court, Global NAPs I, supra. With the advent of integrated telephone service at the turn of the twentieth century, local telephone companies initially competed for customers in their geographic areas. Those telephone companies refused to cooperate with one another in connecting their respective customers, leading to consumer dissatisfaction and, eventually, the emergence of a particular company to serve the telephonic needs of a community. These “natural monopolies” were supported by the rudimentary physical limitations imposed in providing telephone service via underground cables and telephone poles. With' the passage of the Communications Act of 1934, Congress attempted to “harness” those monopolies through some regulation, but largely left oversight of the telephone companies to state commissions. For most of the last century, the federal and state governments disfavored direct competition amongst the telephone service providers and permitted them to maintain monopolistic fiefdoms over blocs of individual, public and corporate consumers within their defined geographic areas. The [Telecommunications] Act [of 1996] radically altered the protectionist scheme that cloaked the monopolies from the forces of free enterprise. The regulatory shift embodied in the Act is rooted in the exponential advances in the telecommunications arena. As technology marched through the twentieth century, it brought developments far beyond the imagination of Depression-era legislators. The rise of fiber optics, cellular and mobile telephones, and the Internet fundamentally altered the way in which Congress, policymakers, and the business world viewed the industry. Regulators eventually began to believe that the most efficient manner of reigning the industry and serving the public was one in which the market played a role. Indeed, the philosophy underlying the Act is one of classic American market theory. Congress and the executive branch believe that “vigorous competition [within the telecommunications industry] will serve consumers by providing wider choices, better service, and lower prices.” Rather than supporting" the monopolies, the Act forbade the states from enforcing laws that impeded competition with them. In" the wake of the Act, regional monopolies were subject to the full forces of free enterprise and capitalism — a dramatic watershed in how Congress viewed the telecommunications industries in this country, and how consumers receive telecommunications services. To insure the injection of competition into the telecommunications industry, the Act facilitates the entry of other telecommunications entities into the market to compete vigorously with the former monopolies. The Act forces preexisting regional monopolies, now mon-ikered as “incumbent local exchange carriers” or “ILECs,” to enter contractual agreements with younger telecommunications companies that had not been protected pursuant to the prior regulatory rubric. Those entities are typically referred to as “competing local exchange carriers” or “CLECs.” By imposing a duty on each telecommunications carrier “to interconnect directly or indirectly” with other telecommunications carriers, the Act gives rise to “interconnection agreements.” Interconnection agreements are expected to define what compensation is due to each carrier for the “transport and termination of telecommunications.” The process by which parties enter into interconnection agreements has been described by other courts: [Pursuant to] Sections 251 and 252 of the Act, [ILECs] have the duty to negotiate in good faith the terms and conditions of agreements regarding facilities access, interconnection, resale of services, and other arrangements contemplated by the Act. Section 252 provided that parties may enter into agreements either voluntarily or through arbitration with a state public utility commission. If the parties are unable to reach an agreement voluntarily, either party may petition the state public utility commission for arbitration. A final interconnection agreement, whether negotiated or arbitrated, is reviewed by the state commission in order to determine whether it complies with the Act. Thus, the interconnection agreement represents the parties’ negotiated outcome to such subjects as the CLEC’s access to the ILEC’s infrastructure and the terms of that access, including any fees charged by one to the other. Reciprocal compensation provisions in interconnection agreements “Reciprocal compensation is the principle by which interconnected telecommunications companies compensate one another for calls their customers initiate but which must be terminated by the competitor telecommunications company.” “If a subscriber of Company A calls a subscriber of Company B, then A must share with B some of the revenues A collects from its subscriber, to compensate B for the use of its facilities.” As Judge Coar more fully explicates: Section 251(b)(5) of [the Act] provides that all LECs have a “duty to establish reciprocal compensation arrangements for the transport and termination of telecommunications.” The corresponding regulations define “reciprocal” compensations as an “arrangement between two carriers ... in which each of the two carriers receives compensation from the other carrier for the transport and termination of each carrier’s network facilities of local telecommunications traffic that originates on the network facilities of the other carrier.” The reciprocal compensation system functions in the following manner: a local caller pays charges to her LEC which originates the call. In turn, the originating carrier must compensate the terminating LEC for completing the call. Reciprocal compensation applies only to “local telecommunications traffic.” Local telecommunications traffic is defined as traffic that “originates and terminates within a local service area established by the state commission.” The theory of reciprocal compensation is seemingly simple: when telecommunications traffic originates and terminates within a local area, reciprocal compensation is due. The application of the reciprocal compensation rule to the Internet-saturated consumer market, however, raises interesting and complex issues that quickly belie any sense of legal, technological, or economic simplicity: If the computer user [consumer] uses one local telephone carrier and the ISP uses a different local telephone carrier, then one must determine if the call is subject to reciprocal compensation. If the call is considered from the computer user to the ISP (i.e., originating and terminating in the local area), then the call would be local and could be subject to reciprocal compensation. If the call is considered on an end to end basis (i.e., an e-mail from the computer user, via the ISP, to a Mend across the country) then the call would not terminate in the local area and would not be subject to reciprocal compensation. To further complicate matters, a call could be from a computer user, via the ISP, to a neighbor down the street. This traffic obviously originates and terminates in the local area. The characterization of ISP-bound traffic determines how much money some carriers receive and how much other carriers pay. Internet calls tend to be longer than average local calls and ISPs do not “call back” at the same volume, if at all. The difference in the calling pattern of regular telephone users and Internet telephone users creates an imbalance that disrupts a basic assumption behind reciprocal compensation: that the carriers’ interconnection use will be roughly balanced. In other words, if ISP-bound traffic is local, some incumbent local exchange carriers are forced to compensate competing carriers with ISP clients, without very much ■ likelihood that a similar payment will inure to the incumbent’s benefit. “Internet usage has distorted the traditional assumptions [about interconnection] because traffic to an ISP flows exclusively in one direction, creating an opportunity for regulatory arbitrage and leading to uneconomical results.” Put another way, because ISP-bound calls are “not quite local” and “not quite long-distance,” they do not fit neatly within the reciprocal compensation paradigm. Not surprisingly then, CLECs and ILECs tend to see calls to ISPs as fitting the category that best fits their own economic interests. Global NAPs I, 226 F.Supp.2d at 284-87 (citations omitted). Generally, CLECs tend to have a mixture of customers that is more heavily composed of ISPs than ILECs do. Thus, if calls to ISPs are considered local traffic that is subject to reciprocal compensation, ILECs are likely to have to pay CLECs a large amount of money because the ILEC’s customers are making a large number of lengthy calls to the CLEC’s ISP customers and there is no comparable volume of calls going in the other direction. If calls to ISPs are not considered local traffic that is subject to reciprocal compensation, CLECs are likely to have to complete a large number of lengthy calls from the ILEC’s customers for which the CLEC will receive no compensation from the person placing the call. The uncertainty surrounding whether ISP Traffic is subject to reciprocal compensation has spurred a large amount of activity before the FCC, before state regulatory agencies, and before the courts. It has also resulted in some creative drafting of ICAs between ILECs and CLECs. This case involves the intersection of several regulatory proceedings before the FCC, the DTE, and the RIPUC as well as an interconnection agreement between Global NAPs and Verizon. A. THE RHODE ISLAND AGREEMENT Global NAPs and Verizon first began doing business with each other in Massachusetts in April 1997. R. at 307. The interconnection agreement which first governed the relationship of the two companies was addressed in Global NAPs I . This case relates to a different Massachusetts interconnection agreement, entered into on July 24, 2000, which will be described in more detail. In July 1998, Global NAPs and Verizon negotiated interconnection agreements to govern their relationships in several other states. R. at 307. One of these states was Rhode Island. Id. On October 1, 1998, the RIPUC approved the interconnection agreement for Rhode Island (the “Rhode Island Agreement”) pursuant to its duties under 47 U.S.C. § 252(e). Id. Section 5.7.2.3 of the Rhode Island Agreement reads as follows: The Parties stipulate that they disagree as to whether traffic that originates on one Party’s network and is transmitted to an Internet Service Provider (“ISP”) connected to the other Party’s network (“ISP Traffic”) constitutes Local Traffic as defined herein, and the charges to be assessed in connection with such traffic. The issue of whether such traffic constitutes Local Traffic on which reciprocal compensation mus[t] be paid pursuant to the 1996 Act is presently before the FCC in CCB/CPD 97-30 and may be before a court of competent jurisdiction. The Parties agree that the decision of the FCC in that proceeding, or [of] such court, shall determine whether such traffic is Local Traffic (as defined herein) and the charges to be assessed in connection with ISP Traffic. If the FCC or such court determines that ISP Traffic is Local Traffic, as defined herein, or otherwise determines that ISP Traffic is subject to reciprocal compensation, it shall be compensated as Local Traffic under this Agreement unless another compensation scheme is required under such FCC or court determination. Until resolution of this issue, [Verizon] agrees to pay GNAPS Reciprocal Compensation for ISP traffic (without conceding that ISP Traffic constitutes Local Traffic or precluding [Verizon]’s ability to seek appropriate court review of this issue) pursuant to the [New York Public Service] Commission’s Order in Case 97-C-1275, dated March 19, 1998, as such Order may be modified, changed or reversed. R. at 356-57 (emphasis added). At the time the parties first negotiated the Rhode Island Agreement, the New York Public Service Commission had issued an Order declaring that ISP traffic is subject to reciprocal compensation. The FCC had not yet ruled on this issue, but was considering it in a particular proceeding, CCB/CPD 97-30. The Massachusetts DTE had also not yet addressed the issue. However, on October 21, 1998, the DTE ruled that ISP traffic is subject to reciprocal compensation (the “October 1998 Order”). R. at 307. B. THE INTERNET TRAFFIC ORDER AND ITS AFTERMATH By early 1999, the FCC had consolidated Docket No. CCB/CPD 97-30 into a different docket, No. 96-98. On February 26, 1999, the FCC issued an Order in Docket 96-98, ruling that the Act did not require that ISP-bound Traffic be subject to reciprocal compensation. See R. at 308, 368. This Order is sometimes referred to as the “Internet Traffic Order” or “ITO”. Among other things, the FCC stated in the ITO that: 1.[W]e conclude that ISP-bound traffic is jurisdietionally mixed and appears to be largely interstate. This conclusion, however, does not in itself determine whether reciprocal compensation is due in any particular instance. As explained below, parties may have agreed to reciprocal compensation for ISP-bound traffic, or a state commission, in the exercise of its authority to arbitrate interconnection disputes under section 252 of the Act, may have imposed reciprocal compensation obligations for this traffic. In the absence, to, date, of a federal rule regarding the appropriate inter-carrier compensation for this traffic, we therefore conclude that parties should be bound by their existing interconnection agreements, as interpreted by state commissions. :¡; * sj< ‡ ^ # 21. We find no reason to interfere with state commission findings as to whether reciprocal compensation provisions of interconnection agreements apply to ISP-bound traffic, pending adoption of a rule establishing an appropriate interstate compensation mechanism. We seek comment on such a rule in Section IV, below. 22. Currently, the Commission has no rule governing inter-carrier compensation for ISP-bound traffic. In the absence of such a rule, parties may voluntarily include this traffic within the scope of their interconnection agreements under sections 251 and 252 of the Act, even if these statutory provisions do not apply as a matter of law. Where parties have agreed to include this traffic within their section 251 and 252 interconnection agreements, they are bound by those agreements, as interpreted and enforced by the state commissions. tli * * * * * 27. State commissions considering what effect, if any, this Declaratory Ruling has on their decisions as to whether reciprocal compensation provisions of interconnection agreements apply to ISP-bound traffic might conclude, depending on the bases of those decisions, that it is not necessary to re-visit those determinations. We recognize that our conclusion that ISP-bound traffic is largely interstate might cause some state commissions to re-examiné their conclusion that reciprocal compensation is due to the extent that those conclusions are based on a finding that this traffic terminates at an ISP server, but nothing in this Declaratory Ruling precludes state commissions from determining, pursuant to contractual principles or other legal or equitable considerations, that reciprocal compensation is an appropriate interim inter-carrier compensation rule pending completion of the rulemak-ing we initiate below. In the Matter of Implementation of the Local Competition Provisions in the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Intercarrier Compensation for ISP-Bound Traffic, 14 FCC Red 3689 ¶¶ 1, 21-22, 27 (1999) (emphasis added). Therefore, although it concluded that the Act did not mandate that ISP Traffic be subject to reciprocal compensation, the FCC acknowledged the possibility that state commissions might still require reciprocal compensation as a matter of state law or policy. Among other things, state commissions could enforce agreements, either implicit or explicit, that required companies to provide reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic. As explained in Global NAPs I: Notably, although the FCC concluded for purposes of its own rules and regulations on reciprocal compensation that “calls to ISPs constitute jurisdictionally mixed, largely interstate traffic,” the FCC’s decision lacked comprehensive definitiveness by propagating a “hands-off’ approach toward state commissions and by refusing to interfere in their decisions on whether reciprocal compensation provisions should be applied to interconnection agreements. Thus, the [Internet Traffic Order] expressly permitted state commissions to continue to decide whether reciprocal compensation was due to a carrier for ISP-bound traffic, particularly in cases where there was explicit or implicit provision to that effect in any interconnection agreement previously entered by the parties. Global NAPs I, 226 F.Supp.2d at 288 (citations omitted). In the wake of the Internet Traffic Order, Verizon stopped paying reciprocal compensation to Global NAPs under the Rhode Island Agreement. Global NAPs filed a complaint with the RIPUC, arguing that “the Internet Traffic Order expressly left to state commissions the authority to determine whether reciprocal compensation was due under an interconnection agreement.” Global NAPs’ Br. at 3. The complaint was assigned to docket number 2967. R. at 313. The parties submitted papers to the RIPUC and agreed that no hearing was necessary. R. at 314. On November 16, 1999, the RIPUC issued its decision. The RIPUC “agree[d] with Global NAPs that the issue of whether ISP Traffic constitutes ‘local traffic’ for which reciprocal compensation must be paid under the [Rhode Island Agreement] was not resolved by the FCC’s ITO” and ordered Verizon to pay reciprocal compensation pending the outcome of Docket Number 2967. R. at 313-18. The RIPUC reasoned that the FCC had not resolved the issue within the meaning of the agreement because the FCC left open the possibility that a state commission could require reciprocal compensation and that the RI-PUC had the authority to resolve those disputes -in Rhode Island. R. at 316. The RIPUC further concluded that there was a presumption that if Global NAPs filed a good-faith complaint against Verizon seeking reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic, then the issue of whether reciprocal compensation was due was not resolved. R. at 316-17. Verizon did not rebut this presumption. R. at 317. At the request of Verizon, the DTE reevaluated its October 1998 Order declaring ISP Traffic subject to reciprocal compensation in light of the Internet Traffic Order. R. at 241-42. In May 1999, while not interpreting the contract provision at issue here, the DTE held that, as of February 26, 1999, the date of the Internet Traffic Order, companies in Massachusetts were no longer required to pay reciprocal compensation for ISP-bound traffic. R. at 242 (citing the DTE’s “May 1999 Order”). The Department described the Internet Traffic Order as “liberating” in that it “gives us the discretion to do what we would have liked to have been able to do back in October-namely, to get the parties to the interconnection agreement to set rationally based, economic bounds on reciprocal compensation payments for ISP-bound traffic.” R. at 243. The Department believed that treating ISP Traffic as Local Traffic created an opportunity for regulatory arbitrage of which CLECs were taking advantage to the detriment of ILECs and the marketplace as a whole. However, before the FCC issued the Internet Traffic Order, the Department felt bound by FCC precedent to treat ISP Traffic as local traffic subject to reciprocal compensation. It is this May 1999 Order, among others, that was found to be infirm in Global NAPs I, 226 F.Supp.2d at 280. In any event, the DTE’s May 1999 Order did not address the implications of the Internet Traffic Order for Section 5.7.2.3. The November 16, 1999 RIPUC decision was the first decision to do so. C. THE MERGER While the various battles over reciprocal compensation were being fought, Verizon’s predecessor companies were pursuing the merger that would result in the new company called Verizon. On October 2, 1998 — the day after the RIPUC approved the Rhode Island Agreement — Bell Atlantic and GTE filed an application with the FCC for approval of a proposed merger to become Verizon . R. at 309. This application was later supplemented by a set of voluntary conditions for approval and, on June 16, 2000, the FCC approved the merger in what the parties refer to as the “Merger Order.” The Merger Order incorporated the voluntary conditions submitted by Verizon. One such provision, Paragraph 32, reads, in pertinent part: 32. In-Region Pre-Merger Agreements: Subject to the Conditions specified in this Paragraph, [Verizon] shall make available: (1) in the Bell Atlantic Service Area to any requesting telecommunications carrier any interconnection arrangement, UNE, or provisions of an interconnection agreement (including an entire agreement) subject to 47 U.S.C. § 251(c) and Paragraph 39 of these Conditions that was voluntarily negotiated by a Bell Atlantic incumbent LEC with ■ a telecommunications carrier, pursuant to 47 U.S.C. § 252(a)(1), prior to the Merger Closing Date .... [Verizon] shall not be obligated to provide pursuant to this Paragraph any interconnection arrangement or UNE unless it is feasible to provide given the technical, network and OSS attributes and limitations in, and is consistent with the laws and regulatory requirements of, the state for the request is made. Thus, as a condition of the merger, CLECs were given the right to “opt in” to any interconnection agreement Verizon had negotiated, subject to certain restrictions. D. THE D.C. CIRCUIT VACATES THE INTERNET TRAFFIC ORDER Neither CLECs nor ILECs were completely satisfied with the Internet Traffic Order and both camps filed appeals. On March 24, 2000, the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit vacated the Internet Traffic Order for want of reasoned decision-making and remanded the case to the FCC. See Bell Atl. Tel. Cos. v. FCC, 206 F.3d 1 (D.C.Cir.2000). Based on the D.C. Circuit’s decision, Global NAPs returned to the DTE and asked it to reconsider its May 1999 Order and reinstate the scheme of reciprocal compensation under the October 1998 Order. On July 11, 2000, the DTE refused, “essentially stating that the ongoing evolution of controlling law was too nebulous a body upon which to make decisions, and that the most ‘prudent course’ was to await further FCC rulings.” Global NAPs I, 226 F.Supp.2d at 291. It took the- FCC several months to respond to the D.C. Circuit’s decision. On April 27, 2001, the FCC issued its Order on Remand. The Order on Remand treats ISP-bound traffic as interstate traffic subject to FCC regulation and not subject to reciprocal compensation. The FCC also delineated a compensation scheme to govern compensation for ISP-bound traffic from June 14, 2001 forward. This compensation scheme included an interim measure to reduce any shock to the market resulting from the shift from reciprocal compensation regimes to the FCC’s new compensation scheme, which does not provide for reciprocal compensation and instead arranges for LECs to “bill [their subscribers for ISP-bound Traffic] and keep [those revenues].” The Order on Remand was appealed and, on May 3, 2002, the D.C. Circuit “remanded, but did not vacate, the FCC’s Order on Remand for further consideration by the FCC.” Verizon’s Br. at 8 (citing WorldCom, Inc. v. FCC, 288 F.3d 429 (D.C.Cir.2002), cert, denied, 538 U.S. 1012, 123 S.Ct. 1927, 155 L.Ed.2d 848 (2003)). The FCC has confirmed that, since the D.C. Circuit remanded but did not vacate the Order on Remand, the Order on Remand remains in effect. Id. After the Order on Remand, Verizon once again ceased paying reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic in Rhode Island. R. at 192-93. Verizon took the position that the FCC’s Order on Remand resolved the issue of whether ISP Traffic was subject to reciprocal compensation under the Act, thus terminating its interim obligation to pay. R. at 193. Global NAPs took the position that the issue was not resolved because the parties had not yet had an opportunity to fully appeal the Order on Remand. Id. On January 29, 2002, the RIPUC decided that the Order on Remand resolved the question of whether ISP traffic is subject to reciprocal compensation, thus terminating Verizon’s obligation to pay under Section 5.7.2.3. R. at 199. The RIPUC distinguished its earlier decision that the Internet Traffic Order “was not disposi-tive of the reciprocal compensation issue because: (1) the FCC did not definitively resolve whether ISP-bound traffic was subject to reciprocal compensation, (2) the FCC left jurisdiction with the state commissions to determine whether reciprocal compensation payments were due for ISP-bound traffic, and (3) the FCC had not established a recovery mechanism or interim recovery mechanism for ISP-bound traffic, but rather, had indicated the parties should be bound by their ICAs.” R. at 198 (emphasis in original). The RIPUC rejected Global NAPs’ argument that the issue was not resolved because the parties had not yet had an opportunity to appeal the Order on Remand. Id. E. ADOPTION OF THE RHODE ISLAND AGREEMENT IN MASSACHUSETTS The original interconnection agreement for Massachusetts between Global NAPs and Verizon expired on May 8, 2000. Shortly after the DTE denied Global NAPs’ request to return to a scheme of reciprocal compensation in Massachusetts and shortly before the FCC approved the merger, on July 24, 2000, Global NAPs notified Verizon that it wished to adopt the Rhode Island Agreement in Massachusetts. R. at 10. Global NAPs’ position was that, under Paragraph 32 of the Merger Order, it was entitled to adopt the entire Rhode Island Agreement in Massachusetts, subject to the approval of the DTE. Verizon initially agreed that, generally, Global NAPs was entitled to adopt the Rhode Island Agreement in Massachusetts, effective July 24, 2000, but disputed whether Section 5.7.2.3 could be adopted. The parties negotiated for about nine months. After they failed to reach an agreement, Global NAPs filed a complaint against Verizon with the FCC, asking the FCC to enforce the Merger Order by instructing Verizon to permit it to adopt the Rhode Island Agreement in its entirety and, in addition, award Global NAPs damages in excess of $26 million for ISP-bound traffic that it had terminated for Verizon customers in Massachusetts and Virginia during the nine month negotiation. The FCC agreed with Global NAPs, holding that Paragraph 32 of the Merger Order requires Verizon to permit Global NAPs to enter into the entire Rhode Island Agreement in Massachusetts. However, the FCC: note[d] that paragraph 32 specifically states that interconnection terms adopted across state lines must be “consistent with the laws and regulatory requirements of the state for which the request is made.” Thus, [the FCC] conclude[s] that although the [FCC] may determine whether an agreement is eligible for adoption pursuant to paragraph 32, only the relevant state commission may ultimately decide whether particular terms of the agreement should be adopted in that state, and if so, what those terms mean. R. at 14. With respect to Global NAPs’ request for damages, the FCC ruled that the request was premature because “[o]nly if and when the state commissions approve the interconnection agreements, pursuant to section 252(e)(2) of the Act,, will the issue of Global NAPs’ entitlement to damages under those agreements be ripe for the appropriate regulatory agency to adjudicate.” R. at 15. F. THE DTE’S ORDER In March 2002, about a month after the FCC ruled that Verizon must offer Global NAPs the entire Rhode Island Agreement in Massachusetts, Verizon submitted the Rhode Island Agreement to the DTE for approval pursuant to 47'U.S.C. § 252(e). However, Verizon asked the DTE to rule, as part of its approval of the Rhode Island Agreement, that it was not hable to Global NAPs for reciprocal compensation under Section 5.7.2.3 for ISP-bound traffic in Massachusetts. The parties agree that their obligations after June 14, 2001 are governed by the FCC’s Order on Remand. Their dispute is over their obligations for the effective period of the Rhode Island Agreement in Massachusetts before that date. This period begins on July 24, 2000, the day Global NAPs notified Verizon it intended to opt in to the Rhode Island Agreement in Massachusetts. 1. The Parties’ Contentions Essentially, Verizon argued that the DTE recognized in its May 1999 Order that the FCC had determined, in its Internet Traffic Order, that ISP Traffic was not subject to reciprocal compensation under the Act, and, therefore, the FCC had made the determination required by Section 5.7.2.3 and Verizon’s obligation to provide reciprocal compensation pending the issue’s resolution was complete as of February.26, 1999. R. at 359. Global NAPs argued that the Department should approve the agreement because it is analogous to other negotiated agreements between Verizon and CLECs approved by the DTE that provide for compensation for ISP Traffic. R. at 361-62. According to Global NAPs, despite the Department’s general opposition to reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic expressed in its May 1999 Order, the Department has always approved agreements negotiated between Verizon and CLECs even if they provide for reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic. R. at 362. Furthermore, Global NAPs argued that since the RIPUC already decided this issue in a proceeding involving the same two parties, Verizon was estopped from relit-igating the question of whether the Internet Traffic Order relieved it from its obligations under Section 5.7.2.3. R. at 363. A contrary decision, according to Global NAPS, would violate the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the Constitution and defeat the purpose of the Merger Order by permitting Verizon to escape contract terms in Massachusetts that it was obligated to offer under the conditions of the Merger Order. Id. Even if Verizon were permitted to reliti-gate the issue, Global NAPs argued that since the Internet Traffic Order had been vacated by the time the parties agreed to adopt the Rhode Island Agreement in Massachusetts, neither the FCC nor a court had resolved the issue. Id. Finally, Global NAPs suggested that the Department need not even resolve the issue at this point, but should instead approve the agreement and then let the parties resolve the dispute over its implications. R. at 363-64. Verizon responded that, for purposes of a Massachusetts agreement, the FCC had decided that this issue was not controlled by the RIPUC’s decision. Verizon argued that, in ruling on the dispute regarding whether Paragraph 32 of the Merger Order mandated that Verizon offer Global NAPs the entire Rhode Island Agreement in other states, the FCC “made clear ... that the Rhode Island Agreement would be subject to a de novo review by the Department.” R. at 360. Verizon attempted to distinguish ICAs between Verizon and other CLECs that set special reciprocal compensation rates for ISP Traffic from the Rhode Island Agreement because the other ICAs were negotiated after the DTE’s May 1999 Order declaring ISP Traffic was not local traffic and treated ISP Traffic as a special category of traffic rather than as local traffic. Id. Verizon also argued that “if the Department were to determine that Section 5.7.2.3 would otherwise entitle Global NAPs to receive reciprocal compensation for ISP-bound traffic after May 19, 1999 [the date when the DTE issued its Order determining that ISP-bound traffic was not subject to reciprocal compensation], the Department should deny the approval of the Rhode Island Agreement if it includes Section 5.7.2.3, because such compensation would be unreasonable, uneconomic, and contrary to public policy and the public interest.” Id. Global NAPs responded that the agreement meets the standard for approval under the Act even with Section 5.7.2.3 and other states have approved identical provisions. R. at 361. 2. The DTE’s Decision On June 24, 2002, the DTE agreed with Verizon and approved the Rhode Island Agreement with the understanding that Section 5.7.2.3 did not require Verizon to pay reciprocal compensation for ISP Traffic during the time period the Agreement was effective. R. at 371. One Commissioner dissented. R. at 374. The DTE’s decision recites the arguments of the parties and sets forth the standard it must apply under the Act. The DTE “may only reject negotiated portions of an agreement if it finds that: (1) the agreement discriminates against a telecommunications carrier not a party to the agreement, or (2) the implementation of such agreement is not consistent with the public interest, convenience, and necessity.” R. at 364 (citing 47 U.S.C. § 252(e)(2)(A)). As an initial matter, the DTE rejected Global NAPs’ suggestion that it approve the agreement first and only later decide what Section 5.7.2.3 means. R. at 364-65. The DTE found that it had a responsibility to determine what the Section means so that it could properly determine if the Rhode Island Agreement should be approved. R. at 365. The DTE also rejected Global NAPs’ arguments relying on collateral estoppel and the Full Faith and Credit Clause. The Department reasoned: Paragraph 32 of Appendix D of the [ ] Merger Order, pursuant to which Global NAPs seeks to adopt the Rhode Island Agreement in Massachusetts, states that “[Verizon] shall not be obligated to provide pursuant to this Paragraph any interconnection arrangement ... unless it is ... consistent with the laws and regulatory requirements of [] the state for which the request is made .... ” In addition, 47 U.S.C. § 252(e)(3) states, “[S]ubjeet to section 253, nothing in this section shall prohibit a State commission from establishing or enforcing other requirements of State law in its review of an agreement ...While the RI PUC’s interpretation of Verizon’s obligations under Section 5.7.2.3 may be useful, it is not dispositive here. We do not read the [] Merger Order as requiring our binding adoption of another PUC’s view of its own state’s law concerning a negotiated agreement. That reservation is particular strong where, as here, the adopting state has fully litigated the contested issue. Therefore, we must conduct a review of Section 5.7.2.3 of the Rhode Island Agreement by looking at the situation in Massachusetts, not Rhode Island; and our review is controlled by the prior decisions rendered by the Department (and, ultimately, the courts that review these decisions), not, with all respect to a sister agency, the RI PUC. R. at 365-66. The DTE then turned to the text of the agreement. The DTE describes the agreement as (1) acknowledging a dispute over whether ISP-bound Traffic constitutes local traffic; (2) agreeing that the decision of the FCC in CCB/CPD 97-30 or a court of competent jurisdiction would resolve this issue; and (3) placing an obligation on Verizon to pay reciprocal compensation until the issue was resolved. R. at 367-68. The Department described its “precedent [as] staffing] that the issue of whether ISP-bound traffic is local traffic and, thus, subject to payment of reciprocal compensation, was resolved in Massachusetts with the issuance of the FCC’s Internet Traffic Order in February 1999.” R. at 368. Thus, the Department concluded “[b]y seeking-to implement an interconnection agreement in Massachusetts, Verizon and Global NAPs are bound by our interpretation and application of the Internet Traffic Order in Massachusetts.” R. at 369. The DTE rejected Global NAPs’ argument that the status of ISP-bound traffic was, at any time, indeterminable in Massachusetts. Id. Having construed Section 5.7.2.3 to mean that Verizon did not have to pay reciprocal compensation, the DTE did not need to address Verizon’s arguments that it should not approve the Rhode Island Agreement because Section 5.7.2.3, as Global NAPs reads it, is contrary to Massachusetts public policy. G. THE APPEAL AND REQUEST FOR RECONSIDERATION Global NAPs filed this case on July 24, 2002 seeking review of the DTE’s Order under the 1996 Act. See 47 U.S.C. § 252(e)(6). On August 27, 2002, Judge Lindsay adopted in large part Magistrate Judge Alexander’s Report and Recommendation in Global NAPs I. This decision effectively overturned the DTE’s May 1999 Order as the court concluded that it was issued contrary to federal law and remanded the case to the DTE. Magistrate Judge Alexander wrote: The plain language of the FCC’s rulings expressly stated that the rulings were not intended to be used as a foundation for overturning prior decisions by state regulatory commissions. See, e.g., 14 FCCR. at 3689, ¶¶ 20-24, 27, 16 FCCR. at 9189, ¶ 82. Given that the [Internet Traffic Order] directly contravened the analysis relied upon by the DTE in deciding that reciprocal compensation was due to MCI in the 1999 DTE Order, the DTE may have acted properly in reconsidering in light of the FCC’s ruling. But the propriety of that reconsideration does not equate with the notion that the [Internet Traffic] Order compelled a vacatur of the [October] 1998 DTE Order, nor does it excuse the DTE from declining to consider whether the express contractual language in the interconnection agreements gives rise to reciprocal compensation. Indeed, one consistency in all of the FCC’s varied permutations on this issue has been the suggestion that states’ commissions are to consider that basis in formulating their orders. Id. Such a result is consistent with the cooperative federalism that underlies the Act, and the critical role that the states’ commissions are to play in effectuating the Act. Indeed, in that the Act is premised on the belief that free market competition rather than sovereign oversight is the better method of telecommunications regulation, it would be antithetical to the Act to simply ignore the fact that there is a contractual agreement between carriers that purportedly governs the issue of reciprocal compensation for calls to ISPs. Moreover, in the [Internet Traffic] Order upon which the DTE purportedly relied, the FCC expressly stated that carriers “should be bound by their existing interconnection agreements, as interpreted by state commissions.” Southwestern Bell, 208 F.3d at 488, citing [Internet Traffic] Order (emphasis furnished). DTE, citing its own 1999 DTE Order, recognizes “the FCC’s consoling notion that some states’ orders might stand on state ‘contractual principles or other legal or equitable’ considerations” but avers that its [October] 1998 DTE Order rested entirely on interpretation of federal law and regulatory guidance on whether a call to an ISP warrants reciprocal compensation. See DTE’s Memorandum of Law in Support of its Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment, at pp. 12-13. That is precisely the point: DTE has only looked to federal law as the source of reciprocal compensation; it has not looked to whether the interconnection agreements give rise to reciprocal compensation as a matter of Massachusetts contract law. Thus, although the DTE is not required to reach the same result it reached in the [October] 1998 DTE Order, federal law requires that the DTE consider the contractual language in the parties’ interconnection agreements to determine whether the parties contracted for reciprocal compensation. Global NAPs I, 226 F.Supp.2d at 294-95 (emphasis added). Based on the decision in Global NAPs I, Global NAPs petitioned the DTE to reconsider its Order in this case. Supplemental Record (“S.R.”) at 25. Verizon responded. S.R. at 16. The DTE denied the petition for reconsideration on February 12, 2003, citing (1) Global NAPs’ failure to file the motion within the 20-day limit established by the Code of Massachusetts Regulations and failure to address the issue of good cause for its late filing; and (2) the petition’s lack of merit because the decision in Global NAPs I dealt with a different set of issues and had no bearing on the “contract analysis” the DTE conducted when it issued the Order in this case. S.R. at 1-13. III. ANALYSIS Global NAPs asserts several claims in its complaint. It claims that: (1) the DTE’s decision violates the Full Faith and Credit Clause; (2) the DTE improperly relied on its own policy views rather than interpret the contract according to the intent of the parties; (3) the DTE’s conclusion that the vacated Internet Traffic Order “resolved the issue” within the meaning of Section 5.7.2.3 was clearly erroneous; (4) the DTE’s conclusion- that the vacated Internet Traffic Order “resolved the issue” within the meaning of Section 5.7.2.3 was arbitrary in light of the DTE’s acknowledgment that when the Internet Traffic Order was vacated the law was unsettled; and (5) the DTE acted arbitrarily by approving other contracts that provided for some compensation for ISP-bound Traffic but not interpreting this contract to provide for analogous compensation. Global NAPs also argues in its summary judgment papers that Verizon and the DTE are collaterally es-topped from claiming that the issue of whether ISP Traffic was local traffic was resolved because of the court’s ruling in Global NAPs I. Before addressing the merits of Global NAPs’ arguments, the court is presented with threshold questions about what law governs those claims and whether the court has jurisdiction to decide them. At least one of Global NAPs’ claims, the Full Faith and Credit. Clause claim, clearly arises under federal law. It is less certain whether Global NAPs’ claims that the DTE misinterpreted Section 5.7.2.3 arise under federal law or state law. The resolution of this issue has potential implications for the scope of the court’s jurisdiction, the appropriate standard of review, and the merits of Global NAPs’ Full Faith and Credit Clause claim. The Supreme Court has not addressed “[wjhether the interpretation of a reciprocal-compensation provision in a privately negotiated interconnection agreement presents a federal issue” as opposed to a state law issue. Verizon Md., Inc. v. Pub. Svc. Comm’n, 535 U.S. 635, 650 n. 4, 122 S.Ct. 1753, 152 L.Ed.2d 871 (2002) (Souter, J., concurring). The courts and commentators are split on this issue. See, e.g., Verizon Md. Inc. v. RCN Telecom Svcs., Inc., 248 F.Supp.2d. 468, 477-78 (D.Md.2003) (concluding that claim that state commission misinterpreted terms of interconnection agreement arose under state rather than federal law), rev’d in part, ajfd in part and dismissed in part, Verizon Md., Inc. v. Global NAPs, Inc., 377 F.3d 355 (4th Cir.2004) (reversing district court and holding that claims arose under federal law); id. at 369-394 (Niemeyer, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (agreeing with district court); Peter W. Huber et al., Federal Telecommunications Law § 6.3 at 75-76 (2d ed. 2002 Supp.) (criticizing Seventh Circuit decision for adopting “without reflection” incorrect assumption that interpretation of interconnection agreement is a matter of state rather than federal law). Verizon takes the position that interconnection agreements are “federal regulatory documents” and their interpretation raises a question of federal law. Verizon’s Br. at 15. The DTE takes the position that the interpretation of interconnection agreements is “an issue informed by state contract law.” DTE’s Br. at 3. Global NAPs takes “the position that interpretation of an interconnection agreement is a question of state law.” Global NAPs’ Reply at 5. This court finds that the Maryland District Court’s decision and Judge Niemeyer’s dissent in the Fourth Circuit’s decision are persuasive. It concludes that privately negotiated interconnection agreements are state law contracts and a claim that an IGA has been violated or misinterpreted is a claim under state law. Interconnection agreements may well be “creations of federal law.” Int’l Ass’n of Machinists v. Cent Airlines, Inc., 372 U.S. 682, 692, 83 S.Ct. 956, 10 L.Ed.2d 67 (1963); see also Peter W. Huber et ah, Federal Telecommunications Law 76 (2d ed. Supp.2002)(so arguing). Only, however, if Congress also intended “that the rights and duties contained in [such] contracts be federal in nature,” do post-agreement disputes about the meaning of contractual terms raise federal questions. Jackson Transit Auth., 457 U.S. at 23, 102 S.Ct. 2202, 72 L.Ed.2d 639. In other words, “absent evidence of congressional intent to make contractual rights and duties ‘federal in nature,’ even causes of action based on an alleged breach of a federally-mandated contract provision present ‘only state-law claims.’ ” Nieto-Santos v. Fletcher Farms, 743 F.2d 638, 641 (9th Cir.l984)(quoting Jackson Transit Auth., 457 U.S. at 23, 102 S.Ct. 2202, 72 L.Ed.2d 639). Verizon Md., 248 F.Supp.2d. at 478; see also Verizon Md., 377 F.3d 355, 369-394 (Niemeyer, J., dissenting); accord Southwestern Bell Tel. Co. v. Pub. Util. Comm’n, 208 F.3d 475, 485 (5th Cir.2000) (“[W]e hold that the agreements themselves and state law principles govern the questions of interpretation of the contracts and enforcement of their provisions [and] therefore decline Southwestern Bell’s invitation to determine the contractual issues as a facet of federal law.”); Michigan Bell Tel. Co. v. MCIMetro Access Transmission Svcs., Inc., 323 F.3d 348, 355-56 (6th Cir.2003) (concluding that interpretation of interconnection agreement involved state law). The provisions of the Act indicate that there is a strong federal interest in companies reaching some kind of agreement to interconnect their networks. See 47 U.S.C. § 251(a)(1) (establishing duty to interconnect); 47 U.S.C. § 252 (defining procedures for reaching agreements regarding interconnection). However, an examination of the Act as a whole indicates that “[e]ven though interconnection agreements and reciprocal-compensation arrangements are important to fulfilling the federal interest in promoting local competition, the content of those arrangements is not.” Verizon Md., 377 F.3d at 391 n. 9 (Niemeyer, J., dissenting). In the spirit of deregulation, the Act adopts a federal policy that mandates interconnection, but leaves the content of ICAs to the industry and the states. In other words, so long as companies interconnect, Congress and the President have taken a hands-off approach to the terms on which the companies interconnect. This policy is evidenced by: § 252(a)(1), which allows companies to negotiate agreements “without regard to the standards set forth in subsections (b) and (c) of section 251 of this title;” § 252(e)(2)(A), which allows each state’s utility commission, r