Full opinion text
HANSEN, Circuit Judge. When Alexander Graham Bell, after spilling sulfuric acid on himself, first transmitted the words, “Mr. Watson, come here; I want you,” across a rudimentary phone line in 1876, he could not have possibly imagined that his invention would explode into the current technologically-advanced, multi-bil-lion dollar telecommunications industry. Nor could he have foreseen the amount of legislation, regulation, and litigation that his invention would generate. I. Background One hundred twenty years after Bell’s discovery, Congress passed the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (the Act), which was designed, in part, to erode the monopolistic nature of the local telephone service industry by obligating the current providers of local phone service (known as “incumbent local exchange carriers” or “incumbent LECs”) to facilitate the entry of competing companies into local telephone service markets across the country. Specifically, the Act forces an incumbent LEC (1) to permit a requesting new entrant in the incumbent LEC’s local market to interconnect with the incumbent LEC’s existing local network and thereby use the incumbent LEC’s network to compete with the incumbent LEC in providing telephone services (interconnection); (2) to provide its competing telecommunications carriers with access to individual elements of the incumbent LEC’s own network on an unbundled basis (unbundled access); and (3) to sell to its competing telecommunications carriers, at wholesale rates, any telecommunications service that the incumbent LEC provides to its customers at retail rates, in order to allow the competing carriers to resell the services (resale). 47 U.S.C.A. § 251(c)(2)-(4) (West Supp.1997). A company seeking to enter the local telephone service market may request an incumbent LEC to provide it with any one or any combination of these three services. Through these three duties, and the Act in general, Congress sought “to promote competition and reduce regulation in order to secure lower prices and higher quality services for American telecommunications consumers and encourage the rapid deployment of new telecommunications technologies.” Telecommunications Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-104, purpose statement, 110 Stat. 56, 56 (1996). The Act also establishes a system of negotiations and arbitrations in order to facilitate voluntary agreements between incumbent LECs and competing carriers to implement the Act’s substantive requirements. When a competing carrier asks an incumbent LEC to provide interconnection, unbundled access, or resale, both the incumbent LEC and the competing carrier have a duty to negotiate in good faith the terms and conditions of an agreement that accomplishes the Act’s goals. 47 U.S.C.A. §§ 251(c)(1), 252(a)(1). If the parties fail to reach an agreement through voluntary negotiation, either party may petition the respective state utility commission to arbitrate and resolve any open issues. Id. § 252(b). The final agreement, whether accomplished through negotiation or arbitration, must be approved by the state commission. Id. § 252(e)(1). Several sections of the Act also direct the FCC to participate in the Act’s implementation. See, e.g., id. §§ 251(b)(2), (d)(1), (e), 252(e)(5). On August 8, 1996, the FCC issued its First Report and Order. This document contains the Agency’s findings and rules pertaining to the local competition provisions of the Act. Soon after the FCC released its First Report and Order, many petitioners, consisting largely of incumbent LECs and state utility commissions from across the country, filed motions to stay the First Report and Order in whole or in part. Although most of the petitioners requested the court to stay the entire First Report and Order, their specific attacks focused primarily on the FCC’s rules regarding the prices that the incumbent LECs could charge their new competitors for interconnection, unbundled access, and resale, as well as on the rules regarding the prices for the transport and termination of local telecommunications traffic. The petitioners argued that the FCC exceeded its jurisdiction in establishing prices for what is essentially local intrastate telecommunications service and that the pricing rules violate the terms of the Act. After the cases were consolidated in this circuit, we decided to stay temporarily, pending our final review, the operation and effect of the pricing provisions and the “pick and choose” rule found in the First Report and Order. Iowa Utilities Bd. v. FCC, 109 F.3d 418 (8th Cir.), motion to vacate stay denied, — U.S. -, 117 S.Ct. 429, 136 L.Ed.2d 328 (1996); see id. at 423 (explaining “pick and choose” rule in greater detail). In their main briefs and oral arguments, the petitioners now renew and refine their attacks against the Agency’s pricing rules, and they also widen the scope of their challenge to the First Report and Order and assail additional FCC rules, particularly the agency’s non-price regulations pertaining to the incumbent LECs’ unbundling obligations. Our review of the extensive arguments in this case has confirmed our initial belief that the FCC exceeded its jurisdiction in promulgating the pricing rules regarding local telephone service. We also remain convinced that the FCC’s “pick and choose” rule would frustrate the Act’s design to make privately negotiated agreements the preferred route to local telephone competition. Our conclusions regarding the additional challenged policies and rules in the FCC’s First Report and Order are contained throughout the remainder of this opinion. II. Analysis United States Courts of Appeals have been granted exclusive statutory jurisdiction to review the FCC’s final orders pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2342(1) (1994) and 47 U.S.C. § 402(a) (1994). We must defer to administrative agency interpretations only if they are consistent with the plain meaning of a statute or are reasonable constructions of ambiguous statutes. See Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842-45, 104 S.Ct. 2778, 2781-83, 81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984). Thus, we are empowered to overturn an agency interpretation when the interpretation conflicts with the plain meaning of a statute, see id. at 842-43,104 S.Ct. at 2781-83, when the interpretation is an unreasonable construction of an ambiguous statute, see id. at 844-45, 104 S.Ct. at 2782-83, or when an agency acted arbitrarily or capriciously in adopting its interpretation. See 5 U.S.C. § 706 (1994); Chevron, 467 U.S. at 844, 104 S.Ct. at 2782. In this ease, we emphasize at the beginning that our review does not encompass any determination regarding the wisdom or prudence of the policies Congress set forth in the Act, those considerations being the Constitutionally-assigned prerogatives of the Legislative Branch of our national government. A. The FCC’s Pricing Rules All of the petitioners vehemently challenge the FCC’s pricing rules. Their primary target is the FCC’s mandate that state commissions employ the “total element long-run incremental cost” (TELRIC) method to calculate the costs that an incumbent LEC incurs in making its facilities available to competitors. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 51.503, 51.505 (1996). After applying the TELRIC method and arriving at a cost figure, the state commissions, according to the FCC’s rules, must then determine the price that an incumbent LEC may charge its competitors, based on the TELRIC-driven cost figure. The petitioners also challenge the FCC’s proxy rates, which, under the provisions of the First Report and Order, are to be used by the state commissions if they do not use the TELRIC method to calculate costs. See id. §§ 51.503(b)(2), 51.513, 51.705(a)(2), 51.707. The incumbent LECs assert that these proxy rates also do not accurately reflect their costs and are artificially low. The petitioners also challenge several other FCC regulations pertaining to the prices that the incumbent LECs are permitted to charge for fulfilling their new duties under the Act. See id. §§ 51.601-51.611, 51.701-51.717. The petitioners’ first line of attack against the FCC’s pricing rules is their claim that the FCC has no jurisdiction to promulgate these rules. They argue that the Act plainly directs state commissions, not the FCC, to set the prices that an incumbent LEC may charge an incoming competitor for interconnection, unbundled access, and resale, and also to determine the prices for the transport and termination of calls, when the state commissions conduct arbitrations under the Act. The petitioners also assert that section 2(b) of the Communications Act of 1934,47 U.S.C. § 152(b) (1994), denies the FCC jurisdiction to determine these rates because the rates involve local intrastate communications service. The FCC and its supporting interve-nors, however, contend that the Act clearly grants the FCC the power to issue pricing rules regarding local telephone service and that section 2(b) does not prevent the Commission from having jurisdiction to issue the pricing rules at issue here. They do not claim that the FCC’s pricing authority is exclusive; instead, they argue that the Act establishes shared or parallel jurisdiction between the states and the FCC under which the FCC is to issue general rules governing the rate-making procedures, while the state commissions are left to establish the actual prices by applying the FCC’s mandates. After carefully reading the language of the Act and fully considering and reviewing all of the arguments, we conclude that the FCC exceeded its jurisdiction in promulgating the pricing rules. 1. The Plain Language of Sections 251 and 252 The petitioners point to the language contained in subsections 252(c)(2) and 252(d) to support their claim that the Act directly grants the state commissions the authority to determine the rates involved in implementing the local competition provisions of the Act. Indeed, subsection 252(c)(2) requires a state commission to “establish any rates for interconnection, services, or network elements according to subsection (d) of this section.” Meanwhile, subsection 252(d), entitled “Pricing standards,” lists the requirements that the state commissions must meet in making their determinations of the appropriate rates for interconnection, unbundled access, resale, and transport and termination of traffic. 47 U.S.C.A. § 252(d)(l)-(3). These statutory provisions undeniably authorize the state commissions to determine the prices an incumbent LEC may charge for fulfilling its duties under the Act. The FCC and its supporters do not contest the fact that state commissions have the responsibility to set prices under the Act. Instead, they claim that subsection 251(d)(1) gives the FCC parallel authority to issue regulations governing the rate-making methods by which state commissions establish the prices that incumbent LECs may charge their new competitors for connecting with and piggy-backing on the LECs’ networks. They claim that subsection 252(c)(1) requires the state commissions to follow these FCC mandates when they determine the actual prices. The FCC also believes that several general rulemaking provisions of the Communications Act of 1934, namely subsections 154(i), 201(b), and 303(r), provide it with additional authority to promulgate its pricing rules. See 47 U.S.C. §§ 154(1), 201(b), 303(r) (1994). Despite the FCC’s contentions, we are not convinced that these provisions supply the FCC with the authority to issue regulations governing the pricing of the local intrastate telecommunication services that the incumbent LECs are now legally obligated to provide to their new competitors. Subsection 251(d)(1) provides that “[wjithin 6 months after February 8, 1996, the Commission shall complete all actions necessary to establish regulations to implement the requirements of this section.” 47 U.S.C.A. § 251(d)(1). The FCC believes this provision supplies the Agency with overarching plenary authority to regulate all aspects of section 251 and reasons that because subsection 251(c) requires rates for interconnection, unbundled access, and collocation to be “just, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory,” id. § 251(c)(2)(d), (c)(3), (c)(6), the FCC has the power to regulate these rates and any other rates mentioned in section 251.. We are not persuaded by the FCC’s interpretation. We believe that subsection 251(d)(1) operates primarily as a time constraint, directing the Commission to complete expeditiously its rulemaking regarding only the areas in section 251 where Congress expressly called for the FCC’s involvement. Nowhere in section 251 is the FCC authorized specifically to issue rules governing the rates for interconnection, unbundled access, and resale, and the transport and termination of telecommunications traffic. The Commission’s rebanee on general rule-making provisions that predate the Telecommunications Act of 1996 also fares no better. While subsection 201(b) does grant the FCC jurisdiction over charges regarding communications services, those services are expressly limited to interstate or foreign communications services by subsection 201(a). See 47 U.S.C. § 201. Consequently, subsection 201(b) does not provide the Commission with the authority to regulate the rates of local intrastate phone service and neither do subsections 154(i) or 303(r). Both of these subsections merely supply the FCC with ancillary authority to issue regulations that may be necessary to fulfill its primary directives contained elsewhere in the statute. Neither subsection confers additional substantive authority on the FCC. See id. §§ 154(i), 303(r); see also California v. FCC, 905 F.2d 1217, 1241 n. 35 (9th Cir.1990) (explaining that Title I of the Communications Act of 1934, in which section 154(i) is contained, confers only ancillary authority to the FCC). Thus, we conclude that none of the statutory provisions relied on by the FCC supply it with jurisdiction over the pricing of local telephone service. The absence of any direct FCC pricing authority over local telephone service is fatal to the Agency’s theory that the Act requires the state commissions to share such local pricing authority with the FCC. While subsection 252(c)(1) does require the state commissions to ensure that their resolutions of arbitrated disputes comply with both section 251 and with the FCC’s regulations made pursuant to section 251, as explained above, no provision in section 251 authorizes the FCC to regulate the rates of local phone service. Moreover, the absence of any reference whatsoever to the FCC in the sections of the Act that directly authorize the state commissions to estabbsh prices confirms to us that Congress did not envision the FCC’s participation in determining the prices that the incumbent LECs will be able to charge for opening their networks to new entrants. Subsection 252(c)(2) commands state commissions to “estabbsh any rates for interconnection, services, or network elements” and it requires them to fobow only the standards in subsection (d). 47 U.S.C.A. § 252(c)(2). In turn, subsection 252(d) refers exclusively to the determinations by state commissions of the just and reasonable rates, and it provides statutory standards for the state commissions to fobow when setting the rates, thus negating any need for additional FCC-mandated rate-making standards or guidehnes. See id. § 252(d). Additionally, the FCC’s reference to the Cable Act as an example of a system of parabel federal and state jurisdiction over an industry’s rates only bolsters our view that no such shared scheme regarding the power to set prices was intended by the Congress in the Telecommunications Act of 1996. In sharp contrast to the Telecommunications Act, several provisions of the Cable Act ex-pbcitly grant the Commission the authority to regulate the rates of cable companies and explicitly require state authorities to fobow the Commission’s rate-making rules. See 47 U.S.C. § 543(a)(2)-(3), (b) (1994). The Cable Act simply and forcefuby demonstrates that the Congress is capable of clearly expressing its desire to grant the FCC authority over local rates when it wishes to do so. The Telecommunications Act contains no such articulation with respect to the local competition provisions. Consequently, we conclude that the Act plainly grants the state commissions, not the FCC, the authority to determine the rates involved in the implementation of the local competition provisions of the Act. 2. Section 2(b) and the Impossibility Exception Any ambiguity regarding the FCC’s vacuum of authority over local telecommunications pricing under the Act is resolved by the operation of section 2(b) of the Communications Act of 1934, 47 U.S.C. § 152(b). Section 2(b) provides that “nothing in this chapter shall be construed to apply or to give the [FCC] jurisdiction with respect to ... charges, classifications, practices, services, facilities, or regulations for or in connection with intrastate communications service.” Id. We believe that the prices that incumbent local exchange carriers may charge their new competitors for interconnection, unbundled access, and resale — the services and facilities that will enable the competitors to provide competing local telecommunications service — as well as the rates for the transport and termination of telecommunication traffic qualify as “charges ... for or in connection with intrastate communications service.” Id. In Louisiana Pub. Serv. Comm’n v. FCC, 476 U.S. 355, 370, 106 S.Ct. 1890, 1899, 90 L.Ed.2d 369 (1986), the Supreme Court explained that section 2(b) “fences off’ intrastate matters from FCC regulation. The FCC and its supporting intervenors attempt to slip through the fence by arguing that this case qualifies as an exception to the operation of section 2(b). The Supreme Court emphasized that section 2(b) constitutes an explicit congressional denial of power to the FCC and suggested that Congress could override section 2(b)’s command only by unambiguously granting the FCC authority over intrastate telecommunications matters or by directly modifying section 2(b). Louisiana, 476 U.S. at 377, 106 S.Ct. at 1903. The only other gate through the 2(b) fence is the “impossibility” exception, which has evolved out of the Court’s opinion in Louisiana. This quite narrow exception provides that the FCC may preempt state regulation of intrastate telecommunications matters only when (1) it is impossible to separate the interstate and intrastate components of the FCC regulation and (2) the state regulation would negate the FCC’s lawful authority over interstate communication. See, e.g., id. at 375-76 n. 4, 106 S.Ct. at 1902 n. 4; California v. FCC, 39 F.3d 919, 931 (9th Cir.1994), cert. denied, 514 U.S. 1050, 115 S.Ct. 1427, 131 L.Ed.2d 309 (1995); NARUC v. FCC, 880 F.2d 422, 429 (D.C.Cir.1989). The FCC and its supporting intervenors assert that the terms of the Act supply the Commission with a direct grant of intrastate pricing authority sufficient to overcome the operation of section 2(b). Alternatively, they argue that the impossibility exception removes section 2(b) as a barrier to the FCC’s pricing rules. We are not convinced by the respondents’ arguments here, and we believe that the 1996 Act, when coupled with section 2(b), mandates that the states have the exclusive authority to establish the prices regarding the local competition provisions of the Act. As explained earlier, the FCC argues that Congress unambiguously granted it intrastate pricing authority through the relationship between subsections 251(d)(1) (directing the Commission to establish regulations to implement the requirements of section 251 by August 8, 1996) and 251(c) (periodically mentioning that the incumbent LECs’ rates must be just and reasonable). We have now rejected this interpretation as being inconsistent with the plain meaning of the Act, and we have concluded exactly the opposite — that the Act directly and straightforwardly assigns to the states the authority to set the prices regarding the local competition provisions of the Act in subsections 252(c)(2) and 252(d). Consequently, the FCC’s interpretation of the Act does not demonstrate an unambiguous grant of intrastate authority to the FCC required either to jump over or pass through section 2(b)’s fence. See Louisiana, 476 U.S. at 376-77 n. 5, 106 S.Ct. at 1903 n. 5 (explaining that section 2(b) also operates as a rule of statutory construction, commanding that nothing in the Act be construed to extend FCC jurisdiction to intrastate telecommunications). Congress is fully capable of opening the gate in the 2(b) fence in order to grant the FCC intrastate rate-making authority when it wishes to do so. Once again, provisions of the Cable Act illustrate this point. One such provision reads, “The Commission shall, by regulation, ensure that the rates for the basic service tier are reasonable.” 47 U.S.C. § 543(b)(1). Moreover, section 276 of the Telecommunications Act itself directly requires the FCC to establish a compensation plan regarding both intrastate and interstate pay phone calls. 47 U.S.C.A. § 276(b); Illinois Pub. Telecomm. Ass’n v. FCC, 117 F.3d 555, 561-62 (D.C. Cir. 1997). The FCC’s roundabout construction in its effort to claim intrastate pricing authority under section 251 of the Telecommunications Act is notably strained in stark comparison to the direct grant of such authority contained in both the Cable Act and in section 276 of the Telecommunications Act, thus providing more indications that Congress intended to reserve for the states the retained authority to set the prices regarding the local competition provisions contained in section 251 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Additionally, certain nonpricing provisions of the Telecommunications Act provide the FCC with much more direct and unambiguous grants of intrastate authority than the FCC’s strained reading of subsections 251(d) and 251(c). For instance, subsection 251(b)(2) burdens LECs with “[t]he duty to provide ... number portability in accordance with requirements prescribed by the Commission.” 47 U.S.C.A. § 251(b)(2) (West Supp.1997). In contrast, no provision of the Act unambiguously requires rates for the local competition provisions to comply with FCC-prescribed requirements, no provision unambiguously directs the FCC to issue such pricing regulations, and there is no straightforward and unambiguous modification of section 2(b) in the Act. Consequently, section 2(b) remains a barrier to the validity of these FCC pricing rules. Faced with the absence of such an unambiguous grant of intrastate pricing authority to the FCC, the Commission and its supporting intervenors resort to arguing that section 2(b) is easily overcome whenever a federal statute’s terms unambiguously apply to intrastate telecommunication matters, because they believe the FCC has plenary authority to implement all such federal statutory requirements. They believe that the Louisiana decision supports their proposition that section 2(b) prevents only the FCC’s ancillary jurisdiction from extending into intrastate areas, but that it does not limit the federal Commission’s primary jurisdiction, which, they argue, presumably extends as far as the reach of a federal communications statute. We do not believe that section 2(b) is limited in this manner, nor do we think the Supreme Court’s decision in Louisiana stands for such a far-reaching proposition. Although the Court’s decision in Louisiana focused on whether section 220(b) of the Communications Act of 1934 itself applied to intrastate telecommunication matters, it did so only because section 220 undeniably directed the FCC to administer the depreciation calculations required by the statute. See 47 U.S.C. § 220(b) (1994) (repeatedly referring to “the Commission”); see also Louisiana, 476 U.S. at 366-68, 106 S.Ct. at 1897-98. In other words, we believe that the Louisiana decision indicates that in order to qualify for the “unambiguous” exception to section 2(b), a statute must both unambiguously apply to intrastate telecommunication matters and unambiguously direct the FCC to implement its provisions. In Louisiana, section 220(b) clearly passed the second prong but failed to meet the first prong. In the present ease, we have the opposite situation: the pricing provisions of sections 251 and 252 clearly apply to intrastate telecommunication service, but they do not unambiguously call for the FCC’s participation in setting the rates. To the contrary, the Act specifically calls for the state commissions, not the FCC, to determine the rates for interconnection, unbundled access, resale, and transport and termination of traffic. See 47 U.S.C.A. § 252(c)(2), (d). Consequently, we reject the FCC’s contention that its rulemaking authority is coextensive with the reach of every provision of a federal statute involving telecommunications. Section 2(b) is not a limit on Congress’s ability to legislate in the area of intrastate telecommunications; it is, however, a limit on the FCC’s ability to regulate in the area of intrastate telecommunications. Thus, a federal statute’s mere application to intrastate telecommunication matters is insufficient to confer intrastate jurisdiction upon the FCC; the statute must also directly grant the FCC such intrastate authority in order to overcome the operation of section 2(b). The respondents’ last chance to breach the section 2(b) fence lies with the “impossibility” exception to section 2(b). As mentioned above, the impossibility exception allows an FCC regulation to preempt a state regulation when it is impossible to separate the interstate and intrastate components of the asserted FCC regulation and the state regulation would negate the FCC’s authority over interstate communication. See, e.g., Louisiana, 476 U.S. at 375-76 n. 4, 106 S.Ct. at 1902 n. 4; California v. FCC, 75 F.3d 1350, 1359 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, - U.S. -, 116 S.Ct. 1841, 134 L.Ed.2d 944 (1996); NARUC, 880 F.2d at 429. We believe that this exception does not apply to the circumstances of this case and thus does not give the FCC the authority to dictate pricing regulations governing the local competition provisions of the Act. First, telecommunication rate-making traditionally has been capable of being separated into its interstate and intrastate components. In fact, other statutory provisions predating the 1996 Act require such separation to occur and command a joint board of federal and state regulators to execute the separations process. 47 U.S.C. §§ 221(c), 410(c) (1994); see also NARUC, 880 F.2d at 425. Second, and more importantly, the FCC has not demonstrated that the states’ authority to establish the rates in connection with the local competition provisions of the Act would negate any valid authority the Commission has over interstate communications or impede any of its interstate regulatory goals. See California, 75 F.3d at 1359 (burden on FCC to demonstrate negation). The impossibility exception is premised on a preemption analysis, and “[t]he critical question in any pre-emption analysis is always whether Congress intended that federal regulation supersede state law.” Louisiana, 476 U.S. at 369, 106 S.Ct. at 1899. Consequently, our inquiry returns to the language of the Act. As illustrated above, the terms of the Act clearly indicate that Congress did not intend for the FCC to issue any pricing rules, let alone preempt state pricing rules regarding the local competition provisions of the Act. See 47 U.S.C.A. § 252(c)(2), (d). Because the Act clearly grants the states the authority to set the rates for interconnection, unbundled access, resale, and transport and termination of traffic, the FCC has no valid pricing authority over these areas of new localized competition for the states to negate. “An agency may not act at all, let alone preempt state authority, in an area where Congress has explicitly denied it jurisdiction.” NAJRUC, 880 F.2d at 428. The fact that there are specific statutory provisions that expressly indicate that the states have the authority to determine the rates for these local telecommunications services distinguishes this case from all of the cases that invoke the impossibility exception to allow the FCC to preempt state regulations. See, e.g., California v. FCC, 39 F.3d 919 (9th Cir.1994); California v. FCC, 4 F.3d 1505 (9th Cir. 1993); Public Utility Com/m’n of Texas v. FCC, 886 F.2d 1325 (D.C.Cir.1989). Because none of the courts invoking the impossibility exception had the assistance of a federal statute that specifically determined who had jurisdiction over the telecommunications area at issue, those courts had to resort to analyzing the interstate/intrastate character of the telecommunications services, as required by sections 151 and 152 of the Communications Act, in order to make such a determination. Here, however, subsections 252(c)(2) and 252(d) clearly assign jurisdiction over the rates for the local competition provisions of the Act to the state commissions, thus avoiding the need to analyze the interstate/intrastate character of these services. Even a traditional analysis of the interstate/intrastate quality of the local competition provisions of the Act reveals that these functions (i.e., interconnection, unbundled access, resale, and transport and termination of traffic) are fundamentally intrastate in character; thus the FCC’s traditional jurisdiction over interstate communications will not be negated by the states’ regulation of the rates for these services. The Act primarily focuses on facilitating competition in local telephone service markets by imposing several new duties (interconnection, unbundled access, and resale — the local competition provisions) on incumbent local exchange carriers. 47 U.S.C.A. § 251(c). Allowing competing telecommunications carriers to have direct access to an incumbent local exchange carrier’s established network in order to enable the new carrier to provide competing general local telephone services is an intrastate activity even though the local network thus invaded is sometimes used to originate or complete interstate calls. Contrary to the respondents’ contentions, section 2(b) does not prevent the FCC from having jurisdiction only over matters that are purely intrastate. The Supreme Court rejected such a position in its decision in Louisiana: [W]e cannot accept respondents’ argument that § 152(b) does not control because the plant involved in this case is used interchangeably to provide both interstate and intrastate service, and that even if § 152(b) does reserve to the state commissions some authority over “certain aspects” of intrastate communication, it should be “confined to intrastate matters which are ‘separable from and do not substantially affect’ interstate communication.” 476 U.S. at 373, 106 S.Ct. at 1901 (citation omitted). Moreover, we reiterate that the text of section 2(b) itself indicates that the FCC does not have jurisdiction over matters “in connection with” intrastate service. 47 U.S.C. § 152(b). Consequently, the fact that the local competition provisions of the Act may have a tangential impact on interstate services is not sufficient to overcome the operation of section 2(b) and does not alter the fundamentally intrastate nature of the Act’s local competition provisions. We note that the Act’s clear grant of rate-making authority to the state commissions is entirely consistent with the states’ historical role in telecommunications regulation, given the intrastate quality of the local competition provisions of the Act. Because the impossibility exception does not apply in this case, section 2(b) remains a Louisiana built fence that is hog tight, horse high, and bull strong, preventing the FCC from intruding on the states’ intrastate turf. Having concluded that the FCC lacks jurisdiction to issue the pricing rules, we vacate the FCC’s pricing rules on that ground alone and choose not to review these rules on their merits. B. The FCC’s “Pick and Choose” Rule The petitioners next assert that the FCC’s so-called “pick and choose” rule, 47 C.F.R. § 51.809, is an unreasonable interpretation of subsection 252(i). Subsection 252(i) provides: A local exchange carrier shall make available any interconnection, service, or network element provided under an agreement approved under this section to which it is a party to any other requesting telecommunications carrier upon the same terms and conditions as those provided in the agreement. 47 U.S.C.A. § 252(i). With its “pick and choose” rule, the FCC interpreted this section of the Act to allow requesting carriers to “pick and choose” among individual provisions of other interconnection agreements that have previously been negotiated between an incumbent LEC and other requesting carriers without being required to accept the terms and conditions of the agreements in their entirety. The petitioners argue that such a rule is unduly burdensome on incumbent LECs and that it will thwart negotiations because it allows a later entrant to select the favorable terms of a prior approved agreement without being bound by the corresponding tradeoffs that were made in exchange for the favorable provisions sought by the new entrant. The petitioners assert that subsection 252(i) allows requesting carriers the option to select the terms and conditions of prior agreements only as a whole, not in a piecemeal fashion. Contrary to the FCC’s belief that subsection 252(i) plainly mandates its approach, we think that the language of subsection 252(i) in isolation does not clearly reveal Congress’s intent on this issue. Consequently, we “must look to the structure and language of the statute as a whole” to determine if the FCC’s interpretation of this ambiguous provision is a reasonable one. National R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Boston & Maine Corp., 503 U.S. 407, 417, 112 S.Ct. 1394, 1401, 118 L.Ed.2d 52 (1992). Our analysis leads us to conclude that the FCC’s rule conflicts with the Act’s design to promote negotiated binding agreements. The structure of the Aet reveals the Congress’s preference for voluntarily negotiated interconnection agreements between incumbent LECs and their competitors over arbitrated agreements. Voluntary negotiation is the first method listed under section 252, and the Act indicates that the parties may begin negotiations as soon as an entrant submits a request to an incumbent LEC. 47 U.S.C.A. § 252(a)(1). Meanwhile, the parties’ ability to request the arbitration of an agreement is confined to the period from the 135th to the 160th day after the requesting carrier submits its request to the incumbent LEC. Id. § 252(b)(1). These provisions reveal that the Act establishes a preference for incumbent LECs and requesting carriers to reach agreements independently and that the Aet establishes state-run arbitrations to act as a backstop or impasse-resolving mechanism for failed negotiations. The FCC’s “pick and choose” rule, however, would thwart the negotiation process and preclude the attainment of binding negotiated agreements. During a negotiation, an incumbent LEC would be very reluctant to make a concession on one term in exchange for a benefit on another term when faced with the prospect that a subsequent competing carrier will be able to receive the concession without having to grant the incumbent the corresponding benefit. In this manner, the FCC’s rule would discourage the give- and-take process that is essential to successful negotiations. Moreover, negotiated agreements will, in reality, not be binding, because, according to the FCC, an entrant who is an original party to an agreement may unilaterally incorporate more advantageous provisions contained in subsequent agreements negotiated by other carriers. See First Report and Order, ¶ 1316. This result conflicts with the Act’s requirement that agreements be “binding,” 47 U.S.C.A. § 252(a)(1), and is an additional impediment to subsequent negotiations, because an incumbent LEC will be even more hesitant to make concessions in subsequent negotiations when it knows that such concessions would be available to all of the competing carriers with which it previously had agreements. In response to these arguments, the FCC points to the waiver provision of the “pick and choose” rule, First Report and Order, § 51.809(b), and asserts that incumbent LECs will not be so deterred from making concessions because the waiver provision prevents an entrant from adopting the provisions of a previous agreement when an incumbent LEC can persuade a state commission that such adoption would be economically burdensome or technically infeasible. We do not believe, however, that the incumbent LECs can take solace in the waiver provision. With the burden of proof placed on the incumbent LECs, receiving an actual waiver would be an uphill battle that would likely be a rare occurrence. We remain convinced that even in light of the possibility that an exemption could be granted, the incumbent LECs’ ability and willingness to negotiate would be severely stifled by the FCC’s “pick and choose” rule. We also find little merit to the Commission’s assertion that the alternative interpretation of subsection 252(i), requiring entrants to accept the terms and conditions of prior agreements in their entirety, would cause incumbent LECs to include unrelated onerous terms in their agreements in order to discourage subsequent entrants from adopting those agreements. We believe that the incumbent LECs have as much interest in avoiding the costs of prolonged negotiations or arbitrations as do the requesting carriers, which gives the incumbent LECs an incentive to negotiate initial agreements that would be acceptable to a wide range of later requesting carriers. We conclude that the FCC’s interpretation conflicts with the Act’s design to promote negotiated agreements. Thus, we find the FCC’s “pick and choose” rule to be an unreasonable construction of the Act and vacate it for the foregoing reasons. C. Rural Exemptions-Rule 51.405 A few petitioners take issue with the Commission’s rule that establishes additional standards that the state commissions are to follow in determining whether rural and small LECs are entitled to exemptions from or suspensions or modifications of the duties imposed on incumbent LECs generally under the Act. The Commission’s rule, 47 C.F.R. § 51.405, purports to implement subsection 251(f), which governs exemptions, suspensions, and modifications. The rule allocates the burden of proof to the small or rural LECs seeking exemptions or modifications and embellishes the standard of proof to require the small or rural LECs to demonstrate that their compliance with the Act’s local competition provisions would cause them to suffer an “undue economic burden beyond the economic burden that is typically associated with efficient competitive entry.” 47 C.F.R. § 51.405(c). The petitioners attack the FCC’s rule on both jurisdictional and substantive grounds. After carefully reviewing all of the pertinent arguments, we conclude that the FCC exceeded its jurisdiction in promulgating rule 51.405. The plain meaning of subsections 251(f)(1) (governing exemptions) and 251(f)(2) (governing suspensions and modifications) indicates that the state commissions have the exclusive authority to make these determinations, and nothing in either of these provisions, or in the Act generally, provides the FCC with the power to prescribe the governing standards for such determinations. Subsection 251(f)(1)(B) explicitly provides, “The State commission shall conduct an inquiry for the purpose of determining whether to terminate the exemption under subparagraph (A).” Repeated and exclusive references to such state commission determinations are contained throughout subsection 251(f). In contrast, there is no indication that state commissions must follow FCC standards in conducting these inquiries. The only reference to the Commission is contained in subsection 251(f)(1)(B) which provides, “Upon termination of the exemption, a State commission shall establish an implementation schedule for compliance with the request that is consistent in time and manner with Commission regulations.” The FCC asserts that this sentence supplies it with the authority to promulgate rule 51.405. By its very terms, however, this sentence requires the implementation schedule to comply with the FCC’s regulations only after a state commission has independently determined to terminate a rural LEC’s exemption. This reference does not empower the FCC to establish standards that states must follow in determining in the first place whether an exemption should continue or end; it merely indicates that after a state commission decides to terminate an exemption, the rural carrier must comply with the regulations that the Commission is specifically authorized to promulgate under section 251. The FCC responds by once again arguing that subsection 251(d)(1) of the Act authorizes it to promulgate regulations implementing all of the requirements contained in section 251 generally and that its broad rule-making powers contained in subsections 154(i), 201(b), and 303(r) also provide it with the authority to issue rule 51.405. For the same reasons that we previously found these provisions to be insufficient to supply the FCC with jurisdiction to issue the pricing rules, we find them to be insufficient to empower the Commission to promulgate standards governing state commission determinations of exemptions and modifications. Moreover, the legislative history reveals that the Congress rejected both a Senate bill and a House bill that gave the FCC concurrent jurisdiction with state commissions to administer the exemption and waiver provisions. See S.Rep. No. 104-23, 1995 WL 142161 at *206-07 (§ 251(i)(3)) (1995); H.R. 1555, 104th Cong. § 242(e) (1995). It would be unreasonable to infer from subsection 251(d) or the other general rulemaking provisions cited by the FCC that Congress intended to put the Commission — the agency it decided to exclude from the exemption process — in a position to dictate the substantive standards governing the exemption process. Finally, we believe that section 2(b) bars the FCC from having jurisdiction to issue rule 51.405 as well. The FCC’s rule regulates the procedures involved in determining exemptions from and modifications of the small and rural LECs’ duties to implement the local competition provisions of the Act contained in subsections 251(b) and 251(e). As explained earlier, these duties (e.g., interconnection, unbundled access, and resale) fundamentally involve local intrastate telecommunications services. We believe that determinations of whether small or rural LECs should receive exemptions, modifications, or suspensions of such duties also qualify as practices or regulations “for or in connection with intrastate communication service” that are outside of the FCC’s jurisdiction by the operation of section 2(b). 47 U.S.C. § 152(b). Furthermore, we find no straightforward or unambiguous grant of authority to the FCC with respect to these determinations that would be sufficient to overcome the section 2(b) fence. Therefore, we vacate rule 51.405 on the ground that the FCC exceeded its jurisdiction in promulgating this rule, and we decline to address the arguments attacking it on substantive grounds. D. FCC Authority Under Section 208 In the discussion section of its First Report and Order, the FCC claims that its general authority to hear complaints under 47 U.S.C. § 208 empowers it to review agreements approved by state commissions under the Act and to enforce the terms of such agreements as well as the actual provisions contained in sections 251 and 252. See First Report and Order, ¶¶ 121-128. The Commission’s perception of its authority under section 208 is untenable, however, in light of the language and structure of the Act and by the operation of section 2(b). As an initial matter, the FCC argues that the issue of its complaint authority under section 208 is not ripe for review, because it did not promulgate an actual rule regarding this subject and it would be difficult to determine the actual boundaries of state and federal authority in an abstract setting. Despite the FCC’s contentions, we believe that the issue is ripe for review. Congress has granted the courts of appeals jurisdiction to review all final orders of the FCC under 28 U.S.C. § 2342(1) and 47 U.S.C. § 402(a). The fact that the FCC asserts its section 208 authority in the commentary section of its First Report and Order as opposed to stating its position as a rule is immaterial to our determination of ripeness. See Office of Communication of United Church of Christ v. FCC, 826 F.2d 101, 105 (D.C.Cir.1987) (concluding that “whether an agency decision is labelled a ‘Rule’ or a ‘Policy Statement’ is of no consequence to the ripeness of the decision for review”). Instead, we focus on whether the agency’s action is final, which requires us to determine if “the agency has completed its decisionmaking process.” Franklin v. Massachusetts, 505 U.S. 788, 797, 112 S.Ct. 2767, 2773, 120 L.Ed.2d 636 (1992). In paragraphs 127 and 128, the FCC definitively states that its authority to hear complaints under section 208 extends to disputes over the implementation of the requirements of sections 251 and 252. This statement and the contrary conclusions of several of the petitioners present us with conflicting interpretations of the statutory scheme’s allocation of jurisdiction. This is a legal question that is ripe for our review. The language and design of the Act indicate that the FCC’s authority under section 208 does not enable the Commission to review state commission determinations or to enforce the terms of interconnection agreements under the Act. Instead, subsection 252(e)(6) directly provides for federal district court review of state commission determinations when parties wish to challenge such determinations. 47 U.S.C.A. § 252(e)(6). The FCC responds by arguing that federal district court review under subsection 252(e)(6) is not the exclusive remedy for a party aggrieved by state commission decisions under the Act and that such a party has the option of also filing a section 208 complaint with the FCC. Although the terms of subsection 252(e)(6) do not explicitly state that federal district court review is a party’s “exclusive” remedy, courts traditionally presume that such special statutory review procedures are intended to be the exclusive means of review. See Defenders of Wildlife v. Administrator, EPA, 882 F.2d 1294, 1299 (8th Cir.1989); City of Rochester v. Bond, 603 F.2d 927, 931 (D.C.Cir.1979). We afford subsection 252(e)(6) our traditional presumption and conclude that it is the exclusive means to attain review of state commission determinations under the Act. Additionally, the complete absence of any reference to section 208 in the Act bolsters our conclusion that Congress did not intend to allow the FCC to review the decisions of state commissions. We also believe that state commissions retain the primary authority to enforce the substantive terms of the agreements made pursuant to sections 251 and 252. Subsection 252(e)(1) of the Act explicitly requires all agreements under the Act to be submitted for state commission approval. 47 U.S.C.A. § 252(e)(1) (West Supp.1997). We believe that the state commissions’ plenary authority to accept or reject these agreements necessarily carries with it the authority to enforce the provisions of agreements that the state commissions have approved. Moreover, the state commissions’ enforcement power extends to ensuring that parties comply with the regulations that the FCC is specifically authorized to issue under the Act, because the Act empowers state commissions to reject arbitrated agreements on the basis that they violate the FCC’s regulations. See id. at § 252(e)(2)(B). Again, we believe that the power to approve or reject these agreements based on the FCC’s requirements includes the power to enforce those requirements. Significantly, nothing in the Act even suggests that the FCC has the authority to enforce the terms of negotiated or arbitrated agreements or the general provisions of sections 251 and 252. The only grant of any review or enforcement authority to the FCC is contained in subsection 252(e)(5), and this provision authorizes the FCC to act only if a state commission fails to fulfill its duties under the Act. The FCC’s expansive view of its authority under section 208 is thus contradicted by the language, structure, and design of the Act. The FCC’s interpretation of its authority under section 208 also cannot survive the operation of section 2(b). As explained earlier, the obligations imposed by sections 251 and 252 fundamentally involve local intrastate telecommunications matters. Consequently, the state commission determinations that the FCC seeks to review and the agreements that it seeks to enforce also fundamentally deal with intrastate telecommunications matters. To reiterate, section 2(b) prevents the FCC from having jurisdiction over “charges, classifications, practices, services, facilities, or regulations for or in connection with intrastate communication service.... ” 47 U.S.C. § 152(b). Allowing the FCC either to review state commission determinations regarding agreements implementing sections 251 and 252 or to enforce the terms of such agreements effectively would provide the FCC with jurisdiction over intrastate communication services in contravention of section 2(b). More specifically, such review or enforcement authority would enable the FCC to review and redetermine state commission determinations of the just and reasonable rates that incumbent LECs can charge their competitors for interconnection, unbundled access, and resale — rates that we previously decided were off limits to the FCC. We refuse to undermine our earlier decisions by interpreting the Act and section 208 as authorizing the FCC to review state commission determinations and to enforce state-approved agreements. We conclude that the language and structure of the Act combined with the operation of section 2(b) indicate that the provision of federal district court review contained in subsection 252(e)(6) is the exclusive means of obtaining review of state commission determinations under the Act and that state commissions are vested with the power to enforce the terms of the agreements they approve. E. Rule 51.303-Review of Preexisting Agreements Some petitioners challenge the FCC’s conclusion that subsection 252(a)(1) requires preexisting interconnection agreements that were negotiated before the enactment of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, including agreements between neighboring noncompeting LECs, to be submitted for state commission approval. See First Report and Order, ¶¶ 165, 166, 169; 47 C.F.R. § 51.303 (stating FCC’s interpretation of subsection 252(a)(1)). While clearly requiring new agreements negotiated under the terms of the Act to be submitted for state commission approval, the last sentence of subsection 252(a)(1) reads, “The agreement, including any interconnection agreement negotiated before February 8, 1996, shall be submitted to the State commission under subsection (e) of this section.” 47 U.S.C.A. § 252(a)(1). The petitioners objecting to the FCC’s interpretation of this provision claim initially that the Commission does not have jurisdiction to determine which agreements must be submitted for approval under the Act; alternatively, they attack the Commission’s determination on its merits, arguing that the FCC’s rule violates the terms of the Act. Our review of the arguments leads us to conclude that the FCC exceeded its jurisdiction in promulgating rule 51.303. Once again, section 2(b), 47 U.S.C. § 152(b), prevents the FCC from issuing regulations involving telecommunication matters that are fundamentally intrastate in character. As we explained above, the duties imposed by sections 251 and 252 and the agreements fulfilling those duties almost exclusively involve local intrastate telecommunication services. Consequently, section 2(b) forecloses the ability of the Commission to determine which interconnection agreements must be submitted for state commission approval. Moreover, section 252 establishes the procedures and standards that state commissions must follow when approving and arbitrating agreements under the Act. Nothing in this section can be read to authorize the FCC to issue regulations regarding which interconnection agreements must be submitted for state approval. The FCC claims that subsection 252(d)(2)(B)(ii) implies that the Commission has the power to regulate generally under section 252 because this subsection “withdraws” authority from the FCC to regulate the costs associated with the transport and termination of calls; the FCC argues that there would be no need to withdraw this authority unless the FCC had such general authority to begin with. We are not persuaded that this subsection’s denial (not withdrawal) of power to the FCC to determine the costs of transporting and terminating calls implies that the Commission has the authority to determine which intrastate interconnection agreements must be submitted for state approval under subsection 252(a)(1). This grasp for some sort of statutorily-based jurisdiction over these interconnection agreements does not qualify as the straightforward grant of intrastate authority that is necessary to penetrate the section 2(b) fence. We also are not convinced by the FCC’s familiar refrain that its general rule-making authority under 47 U.S.C. §§ 201(b), 303(r), and 154(i) provides it with jurisdiction to regulate in this area. For the reasons explained above, these general rulemaking provisions do not grant the Commission rule-making authority beyond what is necessary to fulfill its obligations with regard to traditional interstate and foreign communications. Additionally, none of these provisions supply the FCC with a sufficiently unambiguous grant of intrastate authority to overcome the operation of section 2(b). Consequently, we vacate Rule 51.303 and its accompanying policy statements on the ground that the Commission did not have jurisdiction to issue this regulation. F. § 251(d)(3) and State Compliance With FCC Rules In the commentary portion of the First Report and Order, the FCC asserts that “the Commission’s regulations under section 251 are binding on the states, even with respect to intrastate matters.” First Report and Order, ¶ 101. With this statement, as well as several others, the FCC purports to preempt any state policy that conflicts with an FCC regulation promulgated pursuant to section 251. See id. at ¶¶ 101-103, 180. The petitioners argue that the FCC’s position is untenable in light of subsection 251(d)(3) and the structure of the Act. We agree. Subsection 251(d)(3), entitled “Preservation of State access regulations,” provides the following: In prescribing and enforcing regulations to implement the requirements of this section, the Commission shall not preclude the enforcement of any regulation, order, or policy of a State commission that— (A) establishes access and interconnection obligations of local exchange carriers; (B) is consistent with the requirements of this section; and (C) does not substantially prevent implementation of the requirements of this section and the purposes of this part. 47 U.S.C.A. § 251(d)(3). Initially, we note that the FCC’s authority to prescribe and enforce regulations to implement the requirements of section 251 is confined to the six areas in this section where Congress expressly called for the FCC’s participation. See supra note 10 and accompanying text. Subsection 251(d)(3) further constrains the FCC’s authority. Even when the FCC issues rules pursuant to its valid rulemaking authority under section 251, subsection 251(d)(3) prevents the FCC from preempting a state commission order that establishes access and interconnection obligations so long as the state commission order (i) is consistent with the requirements of section 251 and (ii) does not substantially prevent the implementation of the requirements of section 251 and the purposes of Part II, which consists of sections 251 through 261. This provision does not require all state commission orders to be consistent with all of the FCC’s regulations promulgated under section 251. The FCC attempts to read such a requirement into this subsection by asserting that a state policy that is inconsistent with an FCC regulation is necessarily also inconsistent with the terms of section 251 and substantially prevents the implementation of section 251. See First Report and Order, ¶¶ 102-103. The FCC’s conflation of the requirements of section 251 with its own regulations is unwarranted and illogical. It is entirely possible for a state interconnection or access regulation, order, or policy to vary from a specific FCC regulation and yet be consistent with the overarching terms of section 251 and not substantially prevent the implementation of section 251 or Part II. In this circumstance, subsection 251(d)(3) would prevent the FCC from preempting such a state rule, even though it differed from an FCC regulation. The FCC asserts that other provisions of the Act justify its belief that state interconnection and access rules must be consistent with the Commission’s regulations under section 251. The FCC claims that section 253 and subsections 252(c)(1) and 261(c) indicate that state commissions are bound by the FCC’s regulations. While subsection 253(d) does empower the Commission to preempt some state policies, those state policies are limited to those that violate the terms of subsections 253(a) or 253(b). 47 U.S.C.A. § 253(d). Neither subsection 253(a) nor 253(b) requires state policies to conform to any Commission regulations; 253(a) merely requires state policies not to prohibit “the ability of any entity to provide any interstate or intrastate telecommunications service,” and 253(b) allows states to impose additional telecommunications requirements as long as they are competitively neutral and consistent with the universal service obligations of section 254. Id. § 253(a), (b). Meanwhile, subsection 252(c)(1) does require state commissions to ensure that arbitrated agreements comply with the Commission’s regulations made pursuant to section 251, but by its very terms this provision confines the states only when they are fulfilling their roles as arbitrators of agreements pursuant to the federal Telecommunications Act of 1996. This provision does not apply to state statutes or regulations that are independent from the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Many states enacted legislation designed to open up local telephone markets to competition prior to the 1996 federal Act, see Iowa Utilities BcL, 109 F.3d at 427 n. 7, and subsection 251(d)(3) was designed to preserve such work of the states. Finally, the FCC claims that subsection 261(c) provides support for its conclusion that the state regulations must be consistent with the Commission’s rules on interconnection and access promulgated under section 251. While subsection 261(c) does require some state rules to be consistent with “the Commission’s regulations to implement this part,” we believe that this provision applies only to those additional state requirements that are not promulgated pursuant to section 251 or any other section in Part II of the Act. See 47 U.S.C.A. § 261(c). Because subsection 251(d)(3) specifically governs state rules that “establish[] access and interconnection obligations of local exchange carriers,” which is the heart of the subject matter of section 251, and subsection 261(b) governs state rules that