From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu  Thu Aug 28 09:21:22 1997
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Date: Thu, 28 Aug 1997 09:21:22 -0400 (EDT)
From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor)
Message-Id: <199708281321.JAA14220@massis.lcs.mit.edu>
To: editor@telecom-digest.org
Subject: US/UN Pacific Islands - Telecom Profile


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Here is another special report from
Mark Cuccia who, rumor has it, ran up an AT&T long distance bill
of over $800 last month while preparing this article. Thanks very
much Mark!     PAT]

  Date: Thu, 21 Aug 1997 15:46:53 -0500
  From: "Mark J. Cuccia" <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
  Subject: US/UN Pacific Islands - Telecom Profile


In 1957, Tony Bennett was at the top of the charts with his hit "In
the Middle of an Island, in the Middle of the Ocean ...".

In 1958, the movie version of "South Pacific" was released (the
Broadway version came out in 1948, along with Perry Como's hit "Bali
Hai").

Also in the late 1950's, Hawaiian singer Don Ho was rising in music
popularity, Arthur Godfrey frequently originated many of his CBS Radio
and Television Network broadcasts from Hawaii, and the popular
detective drama "Hawaiian Eye" aired over the ABC Television Network.

Four decades later, Hawaii has been customer dialable from most all of
the NANP (since the early 1970's) and dialable as well from most parts
of the world, most all of the Pacific Ocean islands are dialable from
most of the world as well, "Vertical Services" (Custom-Calling and
"CLASS") are widely available in the Pacific Ocean area, Guam and the
Northern Mariana Islands have become a part of the NANP and from the
US are now billed as 'domestic'. Also, Internet and email
access/connectivity is available throughout these islands.

And in 1997, attached here is my report/submission to TELECOM Digest:

US (and former US/UN) PACIFIC ISLANDS -- TELECOM PROFILE

With the recent incorporation of Guam (+671) and the Northern Mariana
Islands (+670) into the North American Numbering Plan (+1) as NPAs 671
and 670 respectively, including dialing procedures _and_ at least from
the US also being incorporated into domestic billing, I have done some
research into the other US Pacific area possessions (+684 American
Samoa), as well as the three former UN Pacific Trust Territories which
were administered by the US (+692 Marshall Islands, +691 Micronesia,
+680 Palau). These latter three Pacific Island countries have become
independent, but they continue to maintain an economic relationship
with the US, under "Compacts of Free Association".

At this point in time, American Samoa has no 'formal' plans to join
the NANP, although there is always a _possibility_ that they could
become an NANP member by 2000. The US State Department, US Interior
Department, and other US government agencies have desired that
American Samoa become incorporated into the NANP (as Guam and the
Northern Mariana Islands have), including becoming domestically
rated/billed for calls with the US part of the NANP ... OR at least
becoming domestically rated/billed for calls with the US, even if
they don't become an actual part of the NANP.

At this point in time, the three former US/UN Trust Territories have
_no_ desire to join the NANP, as they are independent countries, and
they are quite content with their cultural and political identity,
including their own telephone country codes. However, _all_ of the
above mentioned current and former US Pacific territories _are_ still
part of the US Postal "Zipcode" format and two-letter 'state'
abbreviation, and their _telephone_ numbering/dialing/switching/etc
is also _VERY_ much patterned upon NANP-standards.

One of the reasons that the former US/UN Pacific Trust Territory
island nations are not (presently) desiring to join the NANP is that
there is a concern about being incorporated into the US-domestic rate
schedules. Although Guam and CNMI have become domestically rated with
the mainland US, those two locations _are_ US possessions. Also, not
everything within the NANP is (US) domestic-rated. There are some
twenty individual sovereign nations/countries/entities within the NANP
along with many different rate-schedules between these locations.
_IF_ the three former US/UN Pacific Trust Territories were to
'officially' join the NANP, they don't _necessarily_ need to follow
Guam/CNMI's (domestic) rates, but could retain a more _international_
rate-structure with the rest of the NANP, similar to the (non-US)
NANP-Caribbean's situation with the rest of the NANP:

While (most) every call between US NANP locations (the 48-states/DC,
Alaska/Hawaii which are _actual_states_ of the US, Puerto-Rico/USVI in
the NANP-Caribbean, and now Guam/CNMI in the Pacific) are domestically
rated/billed with each other - and calls between the (continental)
US and Canada are rated 'similar' to US-domestic rates (i.e. V&H
co-ordinate distance-based, and not as expensive as 'international or
overseas' pricings) ... calls between Canada and certain _other_
US locations which are _not_ of the 48-states/DC are rated as
_international_, such as from Canada to Guam/CNMI and from Canada to
Puerto Rico / US Virgin Islands. There are also some specific rate
schedules for calls between parts of Canada and Alaska/Hawaii, which
are different than for calls between Canada and the lower-48/DC.

Also, on calls from the US to the non-US NANP Caribbean [both the
former 'British' locations (Cable & Wireless) and the Dominican
Republic (GTE and ITT's All-America Cables and Radio)], as well as
calls from Canada (via Teleglobe) to _ALL_ of the NANP-Caribbean
[including the Dominican Republic, the C&W-served former 'British'
islands _and_ (also via ITT's AACR) US-jurisdiction PR/USVI] ...
all such calls are _internationally_ rated.

And, the changes in the _numbering_ of the NANP-Caribbean (under old
NPA 809) is _NOT_ that those Caribbean locations are leaving the
NANP (+1), but rather they _ARE_remaining_ in country-code +1, only
that they are leaving +1's 809 _area_ code (NPA), and instead rather
splitting into their _own_individual_ area codes (NPAs) still within
the NANP (+1).

Since American Samoa is actually a US territory, various US Federal
Government departments (such as the State Department, the Interior
Department, and others) have desired that American Samoa become
'domestic' billed for calls with other (NANP-based) US locations.
Even American Samoa has recently become interested in becoming
incorporated into the domestic rate structure. However, to avoid
customer dialing confusion when calls are placed from the mainland US
to American Samoa, it appears that American Samoa _might_ need to
become incorporated into the actual North American Numbering _and_
Dialing Plan.

However, if American Samoa _does_ become an actual part of the NANP,
there is a concern regarding the billing and rating of calls _between_
American Samoa and other WZ-6 countries in the South Pacific. American
Samoa is completely surrounded geographically by other WZ-6 countries
in the South Pacific and maintains a close community-of-interest with
these countries. American Samoa is _south_ of the Equator (due south
of Hawaii) while the other US territories and former UN Pacific Trust
Territories are all _north_ of the Equator (and west of Hawaii, also
_west_ of the International-Date-Line).

I don't know for certain, but I would think that the other WZ-6
countries do have special rate schedules for calling to Hawaii, Guam
and CNMI, which are _different_ than the billing/rating for calls to
the (continental) US. I think that Hawaii and Alaska (and Puerto Rico
and the US Virgin Islands) have their own unique rate-schedules for
calls to _other_ non-NANP countries, different than the rates from the
mainland US to such countries, due to the differences in overall
distance, as well as the different communities-of-interest. _IF_ such
is the case, then American Samoa _could_ become a part of the NANP,
without any increase in the rates for calls between American Samoa
and other nearby WZ-6 countries.

The following report is a profile on each (US and former UN) Pacific
island area's telephone network aspects. Some of the information came
from various websites (URLs are indicated for the local telcos), and I
also made some telephone calls to the individual telcos for further
details. I am on AT&T's "one-rate-international" plan, which gives me
a reasonable _discounted_ per-minute rate off of the 'basic' tariffed
rate. Each country's AT&T discounted "one-rate" is in effect 24-hours,
7-days.

Each of my calls to these Pacific island regions were routed over a
satellite-hop, and while the acoustic audio quality was good, there
_was_ a _noticeable_ satellite 'echo' and delay. However, on the call
to Micronesia, while the satellite echo/delay was there, it wasn't as
'awkward' as on my calls to the other locations. On the call I made to
Palau, again there was the satellite echo/delay, but this one was the
_least_ 'awkward', and the acoustic audio quality was the _best_.

Also, just prior to being connected to each called number, I heard a
_VERY_FAINT_ string of 'MF-tones' into the called telco's switch. The
ringing-indication tone and cadence/pace was that of "NANP ESS-type"
(i.e. precise-tone) ringing.

When the called-end answered the phone, I heard a distinct '2400-Hz'
supervisory 'chirp' followed by a low-pitched grinding 'hum'. When the
called end hung-up, I heard a distinct '2600-Hz' disconnect 'chirp',
again followed by a low-pitched grinding 'hum'. A few seconds after
that, I timed-out to a re-order.

I do understand that SS7-interconnectivity is soon going to replace
the current (old) CCITT #5 and #6 type signalling systems for these
areas. I wonder if Caller-ID will show up on analog non-ISDN lines,
for calls between each 'pseudo'-NANP area, or for calls between an
'actual' NANP number and 'pseudo'-NANP line -- i.e. will numbers be
displayed as 680-nxx-xxxx, 684-nxx-xxxx, 691-nxx-xxxx, 692-nxx-xxxx,
'as-if-it-were' an actual ten-digit NANP-number(!) -- or will an
"out-of-area" (or "number unavailable") message be displayed?

At this time, access to each Pacific island country's directory
operator from _outside_ of each country still _must_ be placed through
the toll or international assistance operator of the originating
country. AT&T's rates from the US for directory assistance in these
Pacific islands runs approximately $8.00! Use of 555-1212 does _NOT_
(yet?) work for +680, +684, +691, +692.

However, customer direct dialing to directory assistance for Guam/CNMI
(at least from the US), and for Hawaii can be dialed and reached as:

+(1)-670-555-1212 - CNMI
+(1)-671-555-1212 - Guam
  +1-808-555-1212 - Hawaii

Much of the detail in this report regarding Hawaii and the Philippines
comes from two Bell System (AT&T Long-Lines) informational booklets--
the 1975 edition of "Calling the World" which profiled the telephone
network development of various countries and territories, and the
chronology "Events in Telephone (Telecommunications) History".

  ---------------------

HAWAII (+1-808)

Hawaii is the United States' fiftieth (and last) state to join the
Union. It has been associated with the United States since the 1890's,
first as a possession, and then attained statehood, which 'formally'
took effect on the 4th-of-July, 1960 (President Eisenhower signed the
document effecting statehood on 21-August-1959).

Hawaii's local telephone development was competitive in the early
decades of the 20th Century, as were _many_ places in North America
(as well as other locations in the world) having such competitive and
_NON_ connecting local telephone companies and networks. Some parts of
Hawaii also had automated _dial_ (SxS) local telephone service early
in this century. By 1929, the competitive local telcos throughout the
Hawaiian Islands were consolidated into the (already existing) larger
entity, the Mutual Telephone Company of Hawaii. Much of its automated
dial equipment was Step, manufactured by (GTE) Automatic Electric.

Beginning around 1930, the Mutual Telephone Company first offered
telephone service between the individual islands of Hawaii, using RCA
radiotelephone circuits and facilities. RCA, AT&T and Mutual Telephone
opened up the first (radiotelephone) connections between Hawaii and
the mainland US, in 1931. And in 1935, the Hawaiian island of Molokai
was connected with the rest of Hawaii, via Oahu, thus allowing full
telephone connections throughout all of the Hawaiian islands. All of
these connections were manual operator-handled, and all via radio.

Just prior to and during WW-II, Honolulu's local telephone numbering
began expanding to 6-digit numbers, all fully numerical -- i.e., no
'dialable' letters nor names for their exchanges. Hawaii never did use
letters/names for their exchanges (although some towns in Alaska did
use named (manual) exchanges prior to the 1960's).

In June 1950, AT&T's Pacific-Telephone operators (in the San Francisco
and Oakland area) and the Mutual Telephone Company's operators (in
Honolulu) were able to use "Operator Toll Dialing" between Hawaii and
the SF/Oakland-Bay area on the mainland, on a 'straightforward' basis:
i.e., the originating-end operator would take up a direct trunk to the
far-end city's tandem-switch, and was able to key-in the requested
local number in only that far-end location (San-Francisco/Oakland-Bay
area or Honolulu).

The Mutual Telephone Company of Hawaii changed its name to the
Hawaiian Telephone Company (HTC) in 1954. In 1957, AT&T 'reserved'
NPAs 808 for Hawaii, and 907 for Alaska, as there were movements to
make them states (Alaska became the 49th state in 1959). Also, in
September 1957, an undersea cable was completed connecting Hawaii with
the mainland US (California). By 1960, AT&T (Bell System) operators
and HTC operators were able to "operator-toll-dial" between _more_ of
Hawaii, and _most_ of the mainland US. Also that year, HTC expanded
the (monthly-flat-rate) local calling/dialing areas on each (major)
Hawaiian island, to include _all_ of each/any single island.

In 1963, Cable & Wireless opened up a new undersea cable connecting
Canada with Australia and New Zealand (via Hawaii). One year later, in
1964, a second undersea cable connected Hawaii with the mainland US,
and this cable also continued westward to Japan (via Midway, Wake and
Guam), this cable provided by AT&T, RCA, KDD (Japan), and HTC.

Around 1966/67, satellite communications with Hawaii started. Also in
that timeframe, General Telephone and Electronics (GT&E) took over the
Hawaiian Telephone Company, although the 'Hawaiian' name has continued
to be used. Between 1966 and 1970, Hawaii's local numbering changed
from 6-digits (and some 5-digits) to the NANP/DDD 7-digit standard,
in preparation for customer DDD from the US (and Canada) _to_ the
state, which began on 20-September-1970. On 16-January-1972 customer
DDD began in the opposite direction, _from_ Honolulu (Oahu) _to_ the
mainland US (and Canada); also on that date, DDD from the mainland US
to Alaska began. Outward customer DDD from the other islands of Hawaii
was introduced throughout 1972/73, along with 0+ dialing.

Electronic switching also began to be introduced in the state in the
early 1970's (which was most likely GTE-AE's EAX equipment). And since
Hawaii is a GTE telco, the first _digital_ switches were GTD-5's.
However _new_ digital switching plant is most likely Nortel-DMS.

Hawaii and Alaska _were_ rated/billed as _international/overseas_ with
the mainland US until about the early 1980's. By 1981 Alaska was rated
as a domestic V&H distance-based call with the mainland, and a year or
two later, the same began to apply to Hawaii's calls with the mainland
US. (Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands as well were rated/billed
as international/overseas with the mainland for the longest, but by
the time of the 1984 divestiture, they were V&H-based distance-rated
with the mainland US, but not necessarily for PR/USVI's traffic with
Alaska and Hawaii).

With the divestiture of the Bell System (AT&T) in 1984, the state of
Hawaii became its own non-Bell (independent) LATA, with all inTRA-
state calls being handled by GTE-Hawaii. Calls between Hawaii and the
other 48-states (and DC) on the mainland as well as calls between
Hawaii and Alaska became strictly inTER-LATA calls handled by AT&T and
the other competitive carriers (MCI, Sprint, etc).

However, calls from Hawaii to _international/overseas_ points,
_including_ calls to _other_ NANP points _not_ the 48-states/DC/Alaska
such as to Canada, and _all_ of the NANP-Caribbean (including both the
non-US NANP Caribbean _AND_ Puerto-Rico / US-Virgin-Islands), as well
as to non-NANP (011+) locations could _also_ be handled by GTE-Hawaii,
in competition against the long-distance (interexchange) carriers.

Some of this was obviously a resale of the (mainland) US-based IXCs,
such as for calls to the Caribbean, but to _other_ Pacific area
countries, GTE-Hawaii has (jointly) owned the undersea cables and
satellite/radio circuits and facilities with AT&T, RCA, and other
countries' telecom entities, as mentioned earlier.

GTE-Hawaii's fg.D CIC is 101-0015, which can be used to place such
international/overseas calls through GTE-Hawaii facilities or billing,
particularly if one's primary inTER-LATA toll carrier is not
GTE-Hawaii. As for inTRA-LATA/State calls in Hawaii, it _might_ now be
possible to use fg.D CIC-codes or at least 800/888 or 950-xxxx (free)
access numbers to use facilities/billing of a carrier _other_ than
GTE's Hawaiian Telephone Company.

    --------------------

GUAM (+671 => +1-671)

Located west-southwest of Hawaii, northeast of Palau, south of the
Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI), north of Micronesia, northwest of the
Marshall Islands. Also west of the International-Date-Line.

Guam has been a US possession since being acquired from Spain in the
late 1890's, following the Spanish-American War.

Local telco is the government's Guam Telephone Authority (GTA)
located in Agana, GU 96910.     http://www.guam.net/gov/gta

Long Distance Carrier services are provided to/from Guam by AT&T, MCI,
Sprint, GTE-Hawaii, etc.

All numbering/dialing has been on a mandatory 7-digit basis (NNX-xxxx)
for many years. All calls within Guam are _local_. There are three
Nortel DMS-100 digital host switches (with fifteen digital remotes)
for wireline service. GTA has a Nortel-DMS-200 (TOPS) for local
operator services. The different long-distance companies have their
own various toll and international gateway switches, and Guam now has
Equal-Access using fg.D interfacing with 101-XXXX+ Carrier Codes.

The current NNX prefix profile is as follows:

333, 339, 343, 344, 349, 355, 362, 368
(Dept. of Defense, served by the Agana switch)

471, 472, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479  Agana switch (and its remotes)

482 (GTA Cellular - B-side, served from the Tumon switch)

486 (GTA Voicemail, served from the Agana switch)

555  DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE OPERATOR

562, 563, 564, 565  Agana switch (and its remotes)

632, 633, 634, 635, 637, 638  Dededo switch (and its remotes)

642, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649  Tumon switch (and its remotes)

653, 654  Dededo switch (and its remotes)

687, 688 (Guam Cellular - A-side, served from the Tumon switch)

734, 735, 789, 828  Agana switch (and its remotes)

864 (TNI Cellular, TelePacific Network Inc, resale of GTA B-side
Cellular, served from the Tumon switch)

There _was_ an 888 local prefix prior to incorporation into the NANP,
however to avoid customer dialing confusion with NANP's toll-free
SAC-NPA 888, GTA cut all local numbers 888-xxxx over to (new) 471-xxxx
numbers.

The remotes out of the Dededo switch are in:
Astumbo, Anderson AFB, Yigo

The remotes out of the Tumon switch are in:
LBJ, Gibson, Airport, Tiyan

The remotes out of the Agana switch are in:
Piti/Asan, Orote, Agat, Merizo, Inarajan, Talofofo, Ordot, Mangilao

There doesn't seem to be any correlation between the remotes and the
NNX prefix codes, however, the -xxxx line number ranges or thousands/
hundreds blocks _within_ particular NNX codes might correspond to
specific remotes and/or host-switches.

Service Codes and Access Prefixes are NANP-standard:

411 - Directory
611 - Repair
911 - Emergencies
'0' - local assistance operator

The Business Office is a 7-digit local number.

Station-billed toll to other NANP points is dialed as 1+ten-digits.
Special-billed calling to all NANP points is dialed as 0+ten-digits.

Station-billed toll to non-NANP points is dialed as:
011+ country-code + full-national-number

Special-billed toll to non-NANP points is dialed as:
01+  country-code + full-national-number

"Home-Country-Direct" numbers seem to have been both NANP-standard
fg.B-like 950-xxxx numbers (Sprint's had been 950-1366), probably some
"POTS-like" fg.A numbers, and some 'special access prefixes'. Prior to
1-July-1997 (when Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands 'officially'
were incorporated into the NANP), AT&T's "USA Direct" access number
from Guam for placing calling-card, collect, 3rd-party billing of
calls back to the mainland US (and possibly other international points
as well) was 018-872 (i.e. 018-USA). It is now the NANP/AT&T standard
1-800-CALL-ATT access number. 

There might have been other carriers or called home-countries using
these 018-XXX or 01X- form codes. Prior to July, if GTA 'itself' was
offering direct dialing to other countries and points outside of Guam,
for such 'special-billing', it was 010 + country-code + national-nmbr.
But since Guam is now part of the NANP, 010+ has been replaced by the
actual NANP-standard of 01+. 01X-XXX codes have been eliminated, and
replaced by fg.B (950-xxxx) and regular NANP-based 800/888 numbers for
toll-free access to "Home-Country-Direct" or alternate carrier routing
(although I assume fg.D access, 101-xxxx+0/01+ would work as well).

Many _regular_ NANP-based 800/888 numbers already are toll-free
dialable from Guam (_if_ the 800/888 customer on the mainland chooses
to purchase originating toll-free access from Guam, or has purchased
the largest geographic territory of the US for originating toll-free
access).

The local coin-rate is 25-cents for 15-minute-intervals. Public
pay/coin telephones, for the most part, are central-office controlled
'dumb' payphones, dialtone-first (loop-start), manufactured by GTE/AE.
Also, there are now some new Nortel Millenium 'smart' payphones.

In addition to the above mentioned GTA public/pay/coin telephones,
there are some privately owned COCOT payphones, which are mostly those
'oversized-500-set' desktop COCOT payphones.

Those Vertical Services which are available/provided use the NANP
dialing standards of *XX and NX(#). I assume that 11-XX can be dialed
in lieu of the *XX codes, such as from a rotary/pulse-dial telephone.

Guam is a US territory, and as such, it is a part of the US Postal
Zipcode format. The two-letter 'state' abbreviation for Guam is 'GU'.
The zipcodes range from 96910 through 96931.

   ------------------

(COMMONWEALTH OF THE) NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS, CNMI (+670 => +1-670)

Located north of Guam, northeast of Palau, west of Hawaii, northwest
of Marshall Islands; also located west of the International-Date-Line.

Following WW-II, the Northern Mariana Islands became a UN Pacific
Trust Territory administered by the US (along with Marshall Islands,
Micronesia, Palau - those three also previously known as the Caroline
Islands). In the 1970's, the Northern Mariana Islands chose to become
more directly associated with the US (while the other three former UN
Trust Territories chose eventual independence, but still maintain
their economic relationship with the US under "Compacts of Free
Association" including being affiliated with the US Postal Service,
and using US currency). And by the mid 1980's, the Northern Mariana
Islands became an actual US Commonwealth.

Local telco is (GTE's) Micronesia Telecommunications Corp. (MTC)
located in Susupe (town), Saipan (island), MP 96950
http://www.mtccnmi.com/community/MTC/

Long Distance Carrier services to/from CNMI is provided by AT&T, MCI,
Sprint, GTE-Hawaii, etc, in association with the local telco.

All numbering/dialing is on a mandatory seven-digit basis, NNX-xxxx.

The current switch and NNX prefix info for CNMI is:

233 Gualo Rai          SAIPAN ISLAND (remote off of Susupe)
234 Susupe             SAIPAN ISLAND (Susupe host Nortel-DMS-100)
235 Susupe             SAIPAN ISLAND (Susupe host Nortel-DMS-100)
236 (paging services)                (Susupe host Nortel-DMS-100)
256 Kagman             SAIPAN ISLAND (remote off of Susupe)
287 (MTC Cellular, B-side)           (cellular MTSO)
288 Airport            SAIPAN ISLAND (remote off of Susupe)
321 Capital Hill       SAIPAN ISLAND (remote off of Susupe)
322 Capital Hill       SAIPAN ISLAND (remote off of Susupe)
323 Capital Hill       SAIPAN ISLAND (remote off of Susupe)
433 Song-Song & Sinapalu ROTA ISLAND (remote off of Susupe)
483 (Pacificom Cellular, A-side)     (cellular MTSO)
532 San Juan           TINIAN ISLAND
555 DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE OPERATOR
664 CNMI Government Centranet        (served by Susupe switch)
682 MTC Centranet                    (served by Susupe switch)

There is a new 788 prefix, assigned to Susupe, but I don't know if it
is a (POTS) wireline service, or for something 'special' (i.e.,
cellular, paging, centrex/PBX, etc).

The Susupe switch is a Nortel-DMS-100; the other localities are served
by small digital remote switches.

MTC uses "DOTS" (Digital Operator Telephone Service), supported by a
Nortel-DMS-200 toll and access-tandem switch. MTC also owns the
international gateway switch, a Nortel-DMS-250/300.

Service Codes and Access Prefixes are NANP-standard:

411 - Directory
611 - Repair
911 - Emergencies
'0' - local/toll assistance operator

The Business Office is a 7-digit number.

Within CNMI, there is 'toll' on calls between the three major islands
of Saipan, Rota, Tinian. Such intra-CNMI toll calls are dialed as:

1+670-seven-digits (station)
0+670-seven-digits (special billing)

Calling to points outside of the NANP (and to points within the NANP
permissively as country-code +1, until 30-June-1998) is dialed as:

011+ country-code + full-national-number (Station)
010+ country-code + full-national-number (Special-billing)

There are several "Home-Country-Direct" numbers from the CNMI. Some of
them are 950-xxxx fg.B-like numbers, while others are POTS-like fg.A
numbers which can be programmed free into payphone internal chips:

AT&T:   235-2872 (2USA)
MCI:    950-1022
Sprint: 235-0333
Guam:   950-6710 (671 is the country-code-now-NPA for Guam) [via MCI]
GTE:    235-2482 (2HTC) [GTE's Hawaiian Telephone Company]
PLDT:   233-7445 (PHIL) [Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company]
HKT:    233-2458 (2HKT) [Hong Kong Telecom]
KDD:    235-2533 (2KDD) [Japan's Kokusai Denshin Denwa]
KTA:    233-2582 (2KTA) [Korea Telecom)

Feature-Group-D Equal Access (101-XXXX+) is being phased in, and with
the incorporation into the NANP (including dialing and billing), many
800/888 NANP-based toll-free numbers are now dialable for free from
the Northern Mariana Islands. Some of the "Home-Country-Direct"
numbers could probably be changing to standard 800/888 form, or at
least fg.B 950-xxxx numbers, rather than POTS-like fg.A numbers.

The local coin-rate from payphones is 25-cents, untimed/flat. Telco
provided payphone service does use "cocot-like" chips, made by Protel. 

Those Vertical Services which are available/provided use the NANP
dialing standards of *XX and NX(#). I assume that 11-XX can be dialed
in lieu of the *XX codes, such as from a rotary/pulse-dial telephone.

There are over a dozen islands associated with the Northern Marianas.
Starting just north of Guam, from south to north, the more important
ones are Rota, Aguijan (served from the Tinian switch), Tinian, and
Saipan. Just north of Saipan are the remaining islands, mostly
uninhabited, but those which are populated do not (presently) have
'regular' telephone service. HF-Radio might be used for communications
with the more remote islands.

The US Postal two-letter 'state' abbreviation for CNMI is 'MP',
however in Bellcore-TRA Rating/Routing documents, the Northern Mariana
Islands is identified as 'NN'.

The US Postal Zipcodes for CNMI ('MP') are as follows:
96950 Saipan; 96951 Rota; 96952 Tinian

  -------------------

AMERICAN SAMOA (+684)

Located south of Hawaii, and _south_ of the Equator; also on the
Hawaiian side of the International-Date-Line

The US was internationally recognized as having legal claim over the
eastern Samoa islands, with Germany having claim over the western
Samoa islands (known as German Samoa until 1917, when those islands
became known as Western Samoa). This took place under the Treaty of
Berlin, signed on 2-December-1899, ratified on 16-February-1900.

Local telco is the government's Office of Communications located in
Pago-Pago (town), Tu'tuila (island), AS 96799
http://www.samoanet.com/asg/asgtelecom97.html

Samoa Technologies _is_ a carrier, according to the FCC, as it _does_
own the two satellite Earth Stations, however they are _NOT_ a long-
distance switching provider. SamoaTech also owns an FM radio station
in American Samoa, and they provide internet/email services.
http://www.samoanet.com

Long Distance Carrier Services with American Samoa is provided by:
AT&T, MCI, Sprint, GTE-Hawaii, etc, in association with local telco.

All numbering/dialing has been on a mandatory 7-digit basis (NNX-xxxx)
for over ten years now. All calls within American Samoa are _local_.
Wireline service is provided by seven digital switches, with each
switch serving a dedicated NNX prefix code, and Cellular service is
provided by its own switch and NNX code.

Back in the 1970's, local calls could be dialed as either 7-digits, or
just the last five-digits, for intra and inter switch calls. At that
time, the switches were all step, Stromberg-SXY. Note that the NNX
codes do follow a pattern. In the old step system, the first digit '6'
would be 'absorbed', the second digit would also be 'absorbed', while
the third digit 'trunked'. But today, all seven digits must be dialed
for local calls.

The current switch and NNX prefix info for American Samoa is:

622 Fagaitua   TU'TUILA ISLAND Stromberg-DCO (remote off of 644)
633 Pago-Pago  TU'TUILA ISLAND Nortel-DMS-100
644 Satala     TU'TUILA ISLAND Stromberg-DCO (host to 622)
655 Ofu (town) OFU ISLAND      Redcom-MDX
677 Tau (town) TAU ISLAND      Redcom-MDX
688 Leone      TU'TUILA ISLAND Stromberg-DCO (remote off of 699)
699 Tafuna     TU'TUILA ISLAND Stromberg-DCO (host to 688)
733 CELLULAR   (all locations) Motorola-EMX-100-plus

[655 at Ofu (town) for all of Ofu Island also serves nearby
Olosega Island. The islands of Tau, Ofu and Olosega comprise
the Manu'a Islands, about 75-miles east of Tu'tuila Island.]

Note the absence of '666'. Of course, that is "the devil's number",
but also, back in the SXY days, such a prefix with identical digits
for the absorbed '6' _and_ trunking digit (the third digit '6') would
not have allowed any permissive 5-digit local dialing, in parallel
with full 7-digit dialing. But even in today's digital switching
environment with mandatory 7-digit local dialing, the 'stigma' of 666
prevents its use, so when the cellular prefix was to be added, it is
733, and not 666.

Operator Services are provided by a "DOTS" (Digital Operator Telephone
Service). A Stromberg-DCO International-Gateway switch is also used.

Local Service Codes are based on NANP dialing standards:

411 - Directory
611 - Repair
911 - Emergencies
'0' - local/toll/international assistance Operator

However, the Business Office (and time-of-day) are 7-digit numbers.

Station International (there is no domestic toll) is dialed as:
1+ country-code + national-number

Therefore, all calls to the 'actual' NANP area is dialed as:
1+1-'NPA'-NXX-xxxx.

The payphones have "cocot-like" rate-chips made by Elcotel. Certain
local 7-digit numbers are programmed in the rate-chips as free calls.
Local coin-rate is presently 10-cents flat per call (untimed), however
the rate may soon become timed, as 10-cents for 3-to-5 minute
intervals, the exact timed interval period has yet to be decided upon.

Special Billing international Toll (i.e. billed to card, collect,
3rd-Party, person, etc) is not yet automated. International toll (and
local) calls which require such special-type billing must still be
placed through the '0' operator, with all information (called number,
billing instructions) verbally quoted to the operator.

However, there _is_ "home-country-direct" service, using (free) local
7-digit numbers, and are programmed as free in payphone rate-chips:

AT&T:   633-2872 (2USA)
MCI:    633-2624 (2MCI)
Sprint: 633-1000
GTE:    633-2482 (2HTC) [GTE's Hawaiian Telephone Company]

Presently, there is no "home-country-direct" number for calling (back
to) Canada (Stentor and Teleglobe), but MCI (and I _assume_ AT&T as
well) do accept Canadian Stentor-LEC-issued calling cards.

_Certain_ NANP-based 800/888 numbers are dialable (toll-free) from
American Samoa, as 1-1+800/888-nxx-xxxx. Also, where activated for
external access, "Caller-Pays" to NANP 800/888 numbers are dialable
by using the 'replace' codes 880 (for 800) and 881 (for 888) as:
1+1-880/881-nxx-xxxx.

American Samoa has opened-up originating access to reach NANP SAC NPAs
500 and 900, dialed as 1-1-500-NXX-xxxx and 1-1-900-NXX-xxxx, but
_external_ access to these numbers might not yet be allowed by each
particular NANP domestic carrier/entity, or even the called-end
customer (the 500/900 "number-holder").

Those Vertical Services which are available/provided use the NANP
dialing standards of *XX and NX(#). However, 11-XX can _NOT_ be used
in lieu of *XX, since (international) calling to the 'actual' NANP is
dialed as 1-1+ prior to dialing the NANP ten-digit number.

There is also Swain's Island, a small island associated with American
Samoa, located several hundred miles north-northwest of Tu'tuila. This
small island is sparsely populated, and has no 'regular' telephone
service, but uses simplex (push-to-talk) HF-Radio for communications.

Also, please remember that there is also an independent island nation
of Western Samoa (country-code +685), just to the west of American
Samoa. Western Samoa has its _own_ numbering/dialling plan, switching/
routing arrangements, and equipment/signalling systems, which are not
'directly' associated with that of American Samoa, nor similar to that
of the NANP, but rather follow ITU international numbering/dialling
standards and non-NANP-type switching equipment. However, there are
direct trunks between American Samoa and Western Samoa, as well as a
specific "community-of-interest" billing-rate.

American Samoa _is_ a US Territory, and is part of the US Postal
Zipcode format (96799). Its two-letter 'state' abbreviation is 'AS'.

  ----------------

MARSHALL ISLANDS (+692)

Located west-southwest of Hawaii, east of the Federated States of
Micronesia, and south of Wake Island; also on the _west_ side of the
International-Date-Line

Local telco: Marshall Isl. National Telecommunications Authority (NTA)
P.O.Box 1169, Majuro (town), Majuro (island), MH 96960
http://www.clark.net/pub/rmiemb/nta.html
http://www.ntamar.com

International Long Distance Carrier Services for the Marshall Islands
is provided by AT&T, MCI, Sprint, GTE-Hawaii, etc, in association with
the Marshall Islands NTA.

All numbering/dialing is now on a mandatory 7-digit basis (NNX-xxxx).
There are local intra-island calls, as well as 'domestic' Marshall Is.
inter-island toll calls. Not too many years ago, the local numbering
was _less_ than seven-digits. Even the 'full' domestic number was also
less than seven-digits, but everything is now mandatory full 7-digits.

The current NNX prefix and switch profile is as follows:

247 Airport       MAJURO ISLAND (remote off of 625)
329 Ebeye       KWAJALEIN ATOLL Nortel-DMS-100/200
528 Laura-Village MAJURO ISLAND (remote off of 625)
625 Majuro-Town   MAJURO ISLAND Nortel-DMS-100/200 (host to 247, 528)

The DMS-200 part of the Ebeye and (host) Majuro switches provide toll
and TOPS operator services. There is a separate DMS-300 in Majuro
which provides the international gateway.

Note that 247=AIR, 329=EBY, 528=LAU, 625=MAJ

Cellular services include both regular mobile phones, as well as
"fixed" wireless subscriber loop. Cellular for all of Majuro Island
is switched from the wireline 'host' DMS switch, and all numbered with
the 625 'host' wireline prefix. Cellular for Ebeye is switched out of
its wireline DMS switch and numbered with the 329 wireline prefix.

Service Codes and Access Prefixes are based on NANP dialing standards:

411 - Directory
611 - Repair
911 - Emergencies
'0' - local/toll/international assistance Operator

However, the Business Office is a 7-digit local number.

Station domestic-toll calling between Majuro Island and Ebeye is
dialed as 1+seven-digits.

Station-international-toll is dialed as 011+, the NANP standard.

Special-billing international (card, collect, etc) is automated and
uses the prefix, 010+. This permits dialing the actual NANP (+1) as an
international call, as both station-billing _and_ special-billing,
without any code-conflicts or customer-confusion or dialing-ambiguity.

However, there is no 'domestic' special billing dialing
(i.e., there is _no_ 0+ domestic).

The payphones have "cocot-like" rate-chips made by Protel. The local
coin rate is 25-cents for 15-minutes.

_Certain_ NANP-based 800/888 numbers are dialable (toll-free) from
Marshall Islands, as 1+800/888-etc. I _assume_ that "caller-pays
replace" codes 880/881 are also available.

"Home-Country-Direct" service numbers from Marshall Islands:

AT&T: 1+800-225-5288 (CALL-ATT)
MCI:  1+800-888-8000

There doesn't yet seem to be one for Sprint;
I don't know if there is yet a number for GTE-Hawaii.

These are the same toll-free numbers used by AT&T and MCI for access
from within the US and Canada (NANP).

Those Vertical Services which are available/provided use the NANP
dialing standards of *XX and NX(#). I assume that 11-XX can be dialed
in lieu of the *XX codes, such as from a rotary/pulse-dial telephone.

There are _NUMEROUS_ other miscellaneous islands associated with the
Marshall Islands (over 1150 individual islands/atolls/reefs in two
defined 'chains' -- the eastern "Ratak Group" which includes Majruo,
and the western "Ralik Group" which includes Ebeye and Kwajalein).
Some of these smaller islands are uninhabited, but those which have
residents are only sparsely populated. There is no 'regular' telephone
service for these islands, although simplex (push-to-talk) HF-Radio is
used by many of these residents.

There might be NNX codes already reserved for when some of these
smaller islands have regular telephone service in the future.

Marshall Islands is part of the US Postal Zipcode format:
96960 for Majuro Island ; 96970 for Ebeye
The two-letter 'state' abbreviation is 'MH'.

  -----------------

(FEDERATED STATES OF) MICRONESIA (+691)
Llocated west of the Marshall Islands, east of Palau, and southeast of
Guam and Saipan (Mariana Islands); also on the west side of the
International-Date-Line.

There are four island/states divisions of Micronesia. From east to
west, they are Kosrae, Pohnpei (formerly known as Panape), Chuuk
(formerly known as Truk) and Yap.

Local telco is FSM Telecommunications Corp,
P.O.Box 1210, Kolonia (town), Pohnpei (island) FM 96941
http://fsmgov.org/info/com.html
http://www.telecom.fm

International Long Distance Carrier Services for the Federated States
of Micronesia is provided by AT&T, MCI, Sprint, GTE-Hawaii, etc, in
association with FSM Telecommunications.

All numbering/dialing is now on a mandatory 7-digit basis (NNX-xxxx).
There are both local calls (within a particular island/state) and
domestic-toll calls (inter-island/state, but within the Fed. States of
Micronesia). Not that long ago, local calls were dialable as just the
last four-digits, but not anymore.

The current NNX prefix and switch profile is as follows:

320 Kolonia POHNPEI ISLAND/STATE Nortel-DMS-100/200 (and two remotes)
330 Weno      CHUUK ISLAND/STATE Nortel-DMS-10
350 Colonia     YAP ISLAND/STATE Nortel-DMS-10
370 Tofol    KOSRAE ISLAND/STATE Nortel-DMS-10

The DMS-200 part of the Kolonia (POHNPEI) switch provides toll access
and TOPS operator services. There is a separate DMS-300 as well, which
provides the international gateway.

There is presently _NO_ cellular service in Micronesia.

Service Codes and Access Prefixes are based on NANP dialing standards:

411 - Directory
611 - Repair
'0' - local/toll/international assistance Operator

However, the Business Office is a 7-digit local number.

The 911 Emergency number is presently only available on Kosrae Island,
and is only a 'call-forward' dialing arrangement to their local police
station. It is _not_ presently an E-911 database-lookup system.

Station domestic-toll between specific island/states is dialed as
1+seven-digits.

Station-international-toll is dialed as 011+, the NANP standard.

Presently, automated "Special Billing" (card, collect, third-party,
person, etc) access for domestic-toll and IDDD is not yet offered to
subscribers, but the capability is now in loaded in the switches.
When the service will soon be promoted, the dialing procedures are
supposed to be NANP-like:

0+   seven-digits (domestic-toll)
010+ country-code + national-number (international)

Most pay/coin telephones in Micronesia work 'a-la-the-old-GTE/AE'
payphone operation method. You do get dialtone (and sidetone) when
first going offhook, but you cannot 'break' dialtone, neither by the
payphone's DTMF-keypad or rotary dial, nor with an acoustic DTMF
tone-generator, nor by dialpulsing by flashing the switch-hook.
You can _only_ 'break' dialtone by dialing if you have first deposited
the local coin-rate. 25-cents (flat/untimed) is Micronesia's local
coin-rate.

There are local 'debit' type prepay calling-cards; also offered are
NANP-like account-number-based calling-cards.

There is also "home-country-direct" service from Micronesia:

AT&T:   dial 288 (i.e., "ATT")
MCI:    dial 624 (i.e., "MCI")
Sprint: dial 555
GTE:    dial 482 (i.e., "HTC" for Hawaiian Telephone Company)

NANP-based 800/888 numbers _can_ be dialed from Micronesia, but at
international charges. These are dialed as international calls (011+),
then country-code '1', and then the _800/888_. (Micronesia does _NOT_
use the 'replace' SAC codes 880/881). Of course, _some_ NANP-based
800/888 numbers are blocked from originating access from overseas,
since even though the calling party would be paying for the
international portion of the call, the NANP-based 800/888 customer
still pays for the inbound rate for the domestic portion of the call,
and might not be interested in receiving originating calls from
overseas locations where they don't have any business interests.

Those Vertical Services which are available/provided use the NANP
dialing standards of *XX and NX(#). I assume that 11-XX can be dialed
in lieu of the *XX codes, such as from a rotary/pulse-dial telephone.

There are _NUMEROUS_ other miscellaneous islands associated with the
Federated States of Micronesia (over 600 islands/atolls/reefs). Some
of them are uninhabited, but those which have residents are only
sparsely populated. There is no 'regular' telephone service for such
islands, although simplex (push-to-talk) HF-Radio is used by many of
these residents.

There are some NNX codes already reserved for when some of these
smaller islands have regular telephone service in the future. Note
that in the current NNX list for Micronesia, both 340 and 370 are
'skipped over', as if they are 'reserved' for the future.

The Federated States of Micronesia is also a part of the US Postal
Zipcode format. The two-letter 'state' abbreviation is 'FM', and the
zipcodes for each state or island-group are:

96941 Pohnpei; 96942 Chuuk; 96943 Yap; 96944 Kosrae

  ---------------------

PALAU (+680)

Located west of the Federated States of Micronesia, southwest of Guam
and Saipan (CNMI), and southeast of the Philippine Islands; also west
of the International-Date-Line.

Local telco is Palau National Communications Corp. (PNCC),
P.O.Box 99, Koror (town), Koror (island), PW 96940
http://www.palaunet.com/

International Long Distance Carrier Services for Palau is provided by
AT&T, MCI, Sprint, GTE-Hawaii, etc, in association with PNCC.

All numbering/dialing is now on a mandatory 7-digit basis (NNX-xxxx).
Up until about two years ago, there was some intra-Palau toll dialing
dialed as 1+seven-digits, but all intra-Palau calling is now 'local'.

In June 1997, the single Nortel-DMS-10 switch was replaced by a new
single Lucent (formerly AT&T/WECO) #5ESS switch. All NNX prefixes for
Palau have been switched out of the single local wirecenter switch,
but there have been several NNX prefix codes, due to the old domestic
toll billing, as each prefix defined a distinct billing ratecenter.
A second Lucent #5ESS has been installed for the international-gateway
which replaced a Redcom "I-Gate" switch. Operator services are still
being served from a separate Redcom "Toll-Gate" switch.

The local payphone coin-rate is 25-cents untimed/flat. There are
'smart' public phones, and there are prepaid 'debit' telecards.

Presently, there are sixteen "POTS" wireline NNX prefix codes from the
old local vs. toll 'ratecenter' format, as well as four 'special
service/function' prefixes:

234 HATOBOHEI ISLAND/State
252 SONSOROL  ISLAND/State
277 ANGAUR    ISLAND/State
299 (Marine/Mobile Radiotelephone)
336 (Fixed Station Radiotelephone)
345 PELELIU ISLAND/State
464 (PNCC Cellular, B-side)
488 KOROR     ISLAND/State (and town)
 (also on 488 are certain specific -xxxx line-numbers and/or
  thousands-series for Belau Cellular, A-side)
535 Ngatpang     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
544 Aimeliik     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
587 Airai        (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
622 Ngchesar     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
654 Melekeok     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
679 Ngiwal       (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
733 Ngeremlengui (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
747 Ngerdmau     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
762 ("Internet Service" - Switched-56KBps-Data? ISDN?)
824 Ngaraard     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
855 Ngarchelong  (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
876 KAYANGEL  ISLAND/State

The (POTS/geographical) NNX prefix codes increase in numerical order
basically from the south to the north in Palau. Also, the spellings
indicated here for geographic areas of Palau are not the only way to
spell them, as I've come across various alternate spellings.

In the 1997 Palau telephone directory, I noticed _numerous_ 488-xxxx
(Koror) listings; also several 587-xxxx (Airai) listings (the Airport
is located in Airai). I did notice listings of local/state government
offices on Babelthaup Island - there was at least one listing in each
of the other Babelthaup NNX prefixes (535, 544, 622, 654, 679, 733,
747, 824, 855). I don't know if the other islands' (geographic/POTS)
NNX prefixes (234, 252, 277, 345, 876) have any active lines (maybe a
payphone) or if these are reserved for future use/growth. Of course,
the cellular and other special function NNX prefixes didn't have any
listings in the current directory.
 
Service Codes and Access Prefixes are based on NANP dialing standards:

411 - Directory
611 - Repair
911 - Emergencies
'0' - local/toll/international assistance Operator

However, the Business Office is a 7-digit local number.

Station-international-toll is dialed as 011+, the NANP standard.

Automated international (toll) special-billing (card, collect, etc.)
capability is available in the switch, but not yet provided to
subscribers. When it will be provided, the dialing will be _similar_
to NANP-standards as 010+ country-code + national-number. Domestic
local special billing (such as billed collect/3d-party, when calling
from payphones) is not yet automated, and must be placed through the
'dial-0' operator, with billing and called-number information verbally
quoted to the operator (similar to the present situation with
international toll special-billing). However, 00-909 access can be
used for PNCC Calling Cards.

"Home-country-direct" access numbers from Palau:
AT&T:   02-288 (i.e., 02-ATT)
Sprint: 02-222
(I don't know what the codes are for MCI, GTE-Hawaii, GTE-MTC, etc).

Those Vertical Services which are available/provided use the NANP
dialing standards of *XX and NX(#). I assume that 11-XX can be dialed
in lieu of the *XX codes, such as from a rotary/pulse-dial telephone.

There are numerous islands of Palau (over some 200), but only a
handful (about 8) are inhabited. Some of the communications with these
outer islands is by simplex (push-to-talk) HF Radio equipment.

With the new #5ESS switch for all of Palau, there is more digital
fiber (and digital microwave) being used as trunking for digital
subscriber-loop. And there are some NNX codes already reserved for
future growth.

Palau is part of the US Postal Zipcode format (96940). The two-letter
'state' abbreviation is 'PW'.

  --------------------

So, it does appear that these former and current US/UN Pacific regions
are using some of the most modern digital switches, manufactured by
North American equipment vendors, and for the most part, these regions
are 'pseudo' NANP in their numbering and dialing.

_IF_ any of these Pacific island regions do join the NANP, some of
them could carry-over the numericals of their country-code as their
+1 NANP area (NPA) code. But Micronesia (+691) and Marshall Islands
(+692) could _NOT_ continue with NPAs 691 and 692, as the NANP
industry forums (ATIS' INC) have decided that the N9X format of three
digit NPA codes are reserved for future expansion into a "_longer_
than ten-digit" format.

Bellcore's NANPA at this time _DOES_ have NPA digits 684 in 'reserve'
in case American Samoa does indeed decide to join the NANP. Also,
there is not yet any 'official' assignment of NPA 680 to any US or
Canadian location needing additional NPA relief codes, so _if_ Palau
decides to join the NANP at any time soon, it _could_ be possible that
they could have 680 reserved as their +1 NPA code.

For Micronesia and Marshall Islands, _if_ they decide to join the NANP
at any time soon, it would be convenient for them to have a
consecutive pair, 6N1 and 6N2. Of course, they can't 'carry-over' 691
and 692 as mentioned above. 621/622 (as a consecutive pair) would NOT
be possible due to the fact that 622 is reserved as a future "easy-to-
recognize" SAC-NPA code (the identical digit in the B and C position).
671/672 can't be possible since 671 is Guam's NPA code. And while
there might _presently_ be a "reserved for geographic relief" status
on some of these code numericals, it _might_ be possible to use
631/632, 641/642, 651/652, 661/662, and 681/682. IMO, _if_ Micronesia
and the Marshall Islands join the NANP, it also wouldn't be wise to
change their country-codes to NPA code-pair 681/682, as there could be
some customer confusion with _country_ codes +681 (Wallis and Futuna
Islands) and +682 (Cook Islands). 631/632 and 641/642 might also be a
bit problematic, due to the customer dialing confusion, since there is
a rather large volume of NANP-originated traffic to country codes +63
(Philippines) and +64 (New Zealand).

Even if a presently unassigned NPA code is listed as "reserved for
geographic relief" at this point in time, there already has been some
'shuffling' between Geographic-Relief and General-Purpose code
numericals for future NPAs.

Something that I _do_ like is that the International special-billing
access prefix from most of these locations is 010+, which means that
the access prefixes for both station and special-billing international
toll can be used for calling to the NANP (country-code +1), with _NO_
possibilities of code-conflict nor customer dialing-ambiguities. This
is unlike the 'actual' NANP, where you really couldn't allow using an
international access prefix to call 'within' the NANP-area, since even
though 011+1+ for station international-toll 'could' be allowed for
permissive intra-NANP dialing, the international 'special-billing'
prefix of 01+ could _NOT_ be used for dialing intra-NANP calls with
special-billing, as you would _really_ be dialing 01-1+nxx-... which
would be a _STATION_ sent-paid _international_ call to a point well
_outside_ of the NANP!

The use of 010+ as the 'special-billing' international prefix from
_all_ parts of the NANP would make dialing choices more flexible, and
the international dialing string would become 'symmetric' for the two
different billing-methods, station vs. 'special-billing'.

  ---------------------

In addition to the various above mentioned islands or island groups,
there are two more US Pacific Islands, those of Wake and Midway. As
far back as the 1970's, the AT&T-Long-Lines "Distance Dialing
Reference Guide" and other routing documents listed them as operator
handled connections, via the Honolulu HI inward (808+121) operator,
and each had a 'mark-sense' billing identification code under NPA 808,
as 808-998 for Wake and 808-999 for Midway. Even as late as 1990/91,
the Bellcore-TRA rating and routing products still listed them as
such, and under 'pseudo' LATA #836 (Wake and Midway). However, the 1994
Bellcore-TRA rating and routing products I purchased did not have
_anything_ for 808-998 nor 808-999, although they did list the
'pseudo' LATA #836 as "Wake and Midway". From what I understand, Wake
and Midway have been 'dialable' as 'FX' or 'tie-lines' within the
Pearl Harbor PBX or Centrex system, but only if you happen to know the
DID (Direct Inward Dialing) 'thousands' digit/series in Pearl Harbor's
PBX/Centrex 808-NNX-.

The postal information that I happened to find for Wake is 96898 for
the zipcode, and 'WK' for the two-letter 'state' abbreviation.
Bellcore's abbreviation for Wake also happened to be 'WK', with 'MY'
for Midway.

Midway is located right at the International-Date-Line, right near the
end of the chain of the Hawaiian Islands 'lesser' islands and atolls.
Wake Island is _west_ of the International-Date-Line, roughly due-west
of Hawaii, north of the Marshall Islands, and east of Guam/CNMI.

Also, there are some six additional US islands, north of the Equator,
and on the Hawaiian (east) side of the International-Date-Line. If any
of these islands have any human inhabitants, it is only government /
military / scientific personnel, and communications with these islands
are most likely on private/government radio channels. However, I do
remember that back in the 1970's, the local/toll Bell System operator
would state that these islands were reached via the Honolulu inward
(808+121) operator, and the list of additional NPA 808 locations in
the "Operating Rate and Route Guide" would include these locations,
although the "Distance Dialing Reference Guide" never had any 808-XXX
'mark-sense' billing identification codes for these places.

- Johnston Atoll
 (just west-southwest of Hawaii)

- Howland Island
- Baker Islands
 (southwest of Hawaii, just north of the Equator, and just east of the
  International-Date-Line)

- Kingman Reef
- Palmyra
 (south-southwest of Hawaii, somewhat north of the equator)

- Jarvis Island
 (roughly due-south of Hawaii, and right on the Equator--actually just
  slightly south)

  ---------------------------------

As for the Philippines (+63), once a US possession for about fifty
years (1898-1946), in the last few paragraphs of my recent posting in
TELECOM-Digest (v.17 #181, issue dated Tuesday 15-July-1997, article
titled "US-Pacific Islands - Caller-ID, Other Info"), I had stated
that the Philippine Islands became independent from the US on the 4th
of July, 1948. That year is in error, as the _actual_ date of their
independence was on the 4th of July, 1946.

The islands of the Philippines (as well as Cuba, Guam and Puerto Rico)
were territories that the US acquired from Spain, following the
Spanish-American War, some 100 years ago. In the early 1940's during
WW-II, many Americans thought that the Philippines would become the
49th state following "the war", however the Philippines received their
independence.

The Philippines is an island archipelago, and as such, various
_separate_ local telcos developed in each town/island/province. In
1928, the Philippine Long-Distance Telephone Company (PLDT) was formed
to take over the (larger) Philippine Telephone and Telegraph Corp.,
three telcos in the southern islands, and later, the Government
Telephone System. However, many local/provincial governments and other
private entities continued to own/operate various local telephone
networks.

World-War-II left its mark on the Philippines' telephone systems. And
for several years in the aftermath, rebuilding was difficult due to
government economic restrictions. It wasn't until about 1953 when
PLDT could claim that service levels were restored to what they had
been as of December, 1941.

When the economy recovered, the Philippine Congress granted franchises
to many other entities to provide telephone service in areas where
PLDT didn't have any. As it had been before "the war", many of these
systems were owned by local/provincial governments, as well as by
private companies.

In 1955, General Telephone (through its Anglo-Canadian subsidiary)
acquired PLDT (and also at that time, General acquired the British-
Columbia Telephone Company in BC/Canada, and the Dominican Republic's
CODETEL - both of which are still held by GTE). In 1967, GT&E acquired
the Hawaiian Telephone Company, but also in that year, GT&E sold its
interests in PLDT (probably due to US-government FCC/FTC/DOJ/etc
antitrust regulations).

All of the independently-owned (non-PLDT) local telephone systems are
now supposed to be fully interconnected with PLDT, but I understand
that there was a time when some of the various local telcos did _NOT_
interconnect with each other nor with the PLDT. These days, there is
now competition for long-distance carrier services. It appears that
many of these competitive toll and international carriers are based
on the Philippines competitive telex history.

Much of the original automated dialing and switching used (GTE)-AE SxS
equipment. Today, more modern digital offices provide service, and
various 'vertical-services' are available in parts of the Philippines.
However, while many of the old SxS offices in the Philippines have
used NANP-sounding AE-SxS 'tones' and ringing-cadence -- and many of
today's digital offices in the Philippines 'sound' like NANP ESS
'precise-tone' offices (with NANP-like ringing-cadence), the numbering
and dialing plans in the Philippines are _NOT_ similar to what is used
in the NANP (even though at one time the Philippines was a possession
of the US, and PLDT was part of GT&E). Telephone numbering and dialing
standards in the Philippines are like what other non-NANP countries
have been for decades- i.e., variable-digits (numbering-length) and
variable-digit number-parsing; along with other non-NANP-like formats
in their local service-codes, toll access prefixes, vertical-service
codes, etc. Additionally, the Philippines also does maintain a _close_
community-of-interest with other _Non_ NANP-like East Asian (WZ-8) and
South Pacific (WZ-6) countries.

PLDT's website- http://www.pldt.com.ph/
NTC (National Telecommunications Commission), Philippines' regualtory
has a website- http://max.ph.net/~ntc/

The Telex situation in the Philippines was quite competitive. There
have been at least five or six individual telex networks operating in
the country, and most have had an association with a US-based
International Record Carrier (IRC). At one time, to send a message
from a (US-based) WUTCO telex terminal to the Philippines, you had to
know in advance which network the Philippine terminal was on, as you
could _only_ use the (US-based) IRC with which that Philippine telex
network was associated with. Later on (in the 1980's), any IRC would
route traffic to any other IRC's domestic telex network in an overseas
location.

The six Philippine Telex networks that I have been able to identify:

ITU      US-based
Telex    IRC Telex
Country  Country
Code:    Code:         Philippine Telex Company/Network:

751  PS  732           Capitol Wireless Inc             (CAPWIRE) CWI
752  PH  722   (RCA)   Philippine Global Communications (PHILCOM) PGC
754  PM  742   (ITT)   Globe-McKay Cable and Radio                GMCR
756  PN  762 (WUI/MCI) Eastern Telecommunications Philippines Inc ETPI
757  PI  778           Philippines Radio Communications Inc.      PRCI
758  PU  712   (TRT)   Philippines Telephone and Telegraph        PT&T

There are _two_ columns of telex country-codes for each country or
network indicated above. Most countries in the world have adhered to
a standard assignment of telex country-codes, similar to the telephone
network country-code format. However, the US IRC's and WUTCO have used
their _own_ assignment listing of identification/dialing codes for
each telex country or network. The two-letter abbreviation is an ITU
assigned 'telex network identifier' code which is supposed to be used
in the automatically typed 'answerback' when a telex terminal answers
an incoming call.

  ---------------------------------

Finally, all of the Pacific Islands within the NANP (and those which
are using (pseudo) NANP dialing and numbering procedures) are located
_north_ of the Equator, and are either US possessions, or at one time
had been politically associated with the US. (Of course, +684 American
Samoa is _south_ of the Equator). Just about everything else in the
Pacific Ocean area (WZ-6) is mostly _south_ of the Equator, and their
telephone numbering/dialing/switching/etc. development seems to be
more British/Australian/NZ or French (or even Dutch), rather than
NANP-like, as these _South_ Pacific islands historically have been
politically associated with those parent countries. These islands and
countries are:

+60 Malaysia, +61 Australia, +62 Indonesia, +64 New Zealand,
+65 Singapore, +66 Thailand (in southeast Asia),
+672 Australian External Territories (including part of Antarctica),
+673 Brunei, +674 Nauru, +675 Papua New Guinea, +676 Tonga,
+677 Solomon Islands, +678 Vanuatu, +679 Fiji Islands,
+681 Wallis and Futuna Islands, +682 Cook Island, +683 Niue,
+685 Western Samoa, +686 Kiribati, +687 New Caledonia, +688 Tuvalu,
+689 French Polynesia (Tahiti), +690 Tokelau, and ...

Pitcairn - that tiny south Pacific island of some 50 residents,
the descendents of the mutineers from the HMS-Bounty who originally
settled this island in 1790. For further information on Pitcairn,
please see my article, "Telephone Service on Pitcairn Island", which
recently appeared in TELECOM-Digest, v.17 #195 (issue dated Tuesday
29 July 1997); and the Pitcairn Islands website:
http://www.wavefront.com/~pjlareau/pitc1.html

Also located in the (eastern) South Pacific is Easter Island, that
mysterious island of large stone face-statues. It is politically
and telephonically part of Chile, +56. From most parts of the world,
Easter Island is now (customer) dialable as: +56-32-100-xxx.

The East Asian countries (WZ-8 and some in WZ-9) are all _north_ of
the Equator, but are _NOT_ NANP-like in their numbering/dialing/etc.

+81 Japan, +82 Korea (South), +83X [none yet assigned], +84 Vietnam,
+850 North Korea, +852 Hong Kong, +853 Macao, +855 Cambodia,
+856 Laos, +86 mainland China, +880 Bangladesh, +886 Taiwan,
+95 Burma, +975 Bhutan, +976 Mongolia, +977 Nepal

   ----------------------------------

Attached here are two lists ...

The first is a numerical listing of US-Postal Zipcodes (or ranges)
for the US Pacific Ocean region, including US-Military APO/FPO's.

The second list is a recompilation (in numerical order) of the NNX
codes used in the Northern Mariana Is, Guam, Palau, American Samoa,
Marshall Is, Micronesia.

962xx     APO/FPO (Korea)

963xx     APO/FPO (Japan- including Okinawa)

964xx     APO/FPO (Philippines; Diego Garcia Island)

965xx     APO/FPO (Alaska/AK, Antarctica, Australia, Canada:Masset-BC,
  Guam/GU, Hawaii/HI, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Marshall-Is/MH,
  Midway/MY, New Zealand, Singapore, Thailand, Wake/WK)

967xx     (individual towns in Hawaii/HI, except for Honolulu)

96798     (Wake/WK) ?
96799     Pago-Pago, AS

96800->50 Honolulu, HI

96853     Hickman AFB (Hawaii/HI)
96854     Wheeler Army Airfield (Hawaii/HI)
96861     Camp H.M.Smith (Honolulu HI)
96862     Barbers Point NAS (Hawaii/HI)
96863     MCBH (Hawaii/HI)

96898     Wake/WK

96910     Anderson AFB, GU
96911     Tamuning, GU
96912     Dededo, GU
96913->19 Agana, GU
96920     (Pago-Pago, AS) ?
96921->29 Agana, GU
96930     Talofofo, GU
96931     Agana, GU

96940     Koror, PW

96941     Kolonia/Pohnpei, FM
96942     Weno/Chuuk, FM
96943     Colonia/Yap, FM
96944     Tofol/Kosrae, FM

96950     Saipan, MP
96951     Rota, MP
96952     Tinian, MP

96960     Majuro, MH
96970     Ebeye, MH

   -----------------------------

Numerical Order Listing of 6NX-NNX codes used in the US/UN Pacific:

+1-670-233 Gualo Rai          SAIPAN ISL.(remote off of Susupe)
+1-670-234 Susupe             SAIPAN ISL.(Susupe host, DMS-100)
+1-670-235 Susupe             SAIPAN ISL.(Susupe host, DMS-100)
+1-670-236 (paging services)             (Susupe host, DMS-100)
+1-670-256 Kagman             SAIPAN ISL.(remote off of Susupe)
+1-670-287 (MTC Cellular, B-side)        (cellular MTSO)
+1-670-288 Airport            SAIPAN ISL.(remote off of Susupe)
+1-670-321 Capital Hill       SAIPAN ISL.(remote off of Susupe)
+1-670-322 Capital Hill       SAIPAN ISL.(remote off of Susupe)
+1-670-323 Capital Hill       SAIPAN ISL.(remote off of Susupe)
+1-670-433 Song-Song & Sinapalu ROTA ISL.(remote off of Susupe)
+1-670-483 (Pacificom Cellular, A-side)  (cellular MTSO)
+1-670-532 San Juan           TINIAN ISL.
+1-670-555 DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE OPERATOR - NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS
+1-670-664 CNMI Government Centranet     (served by Susupe switch)
+1-670-682 MTC Centranet                 (served by Susupe switch)
+1-670-788 Susupe             SAIPAN ISL.(Susupe host, DMS-100)

+1-671-333 (Dept. of Defense, served by the Agana DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-339 (Dept. of Defense, served by the Agana DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-343 (Dept. of Defense, served by the Agana DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-344 (Dept. of Defense, served by the Agana DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-349 (Dept. of Defense, served by the Agana DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-355 (Dept. of Defense, served by the Agana DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-362 (Dept. of Defense, served by the Agana DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-368 (Dept. of Defense, served by the Agana DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-471 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-472 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-474 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-475 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-476 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-477 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-478 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-479 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-482 (GTA Cellular, B-side, served from Tumon DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-486 (GTA Voicemail, served from the Agana DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-555 DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE OPERATOR - GUAM
+1-671-562 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-563 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-564 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-565 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-632 Dededo DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-633 Dededo DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-634 Dededo DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-635 Dededo DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-637 Dededo DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-638 Dededo DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-642 Tumon DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-644 Tumon DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-645 Tumon DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-646 Tumon DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-647 Tumon DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-648 Tumon DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-649 Tumon DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-653 Dededo DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-654 Dededo DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-687 (Guam Cellular, A-side, served from Tumon DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-688 (Guam Cellular, A-side, served from Tumon DMS-100 switch)
+1-671-734 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-735 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-789 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-828 Agana DMS-100 switch (and its remotes)
+1-671-864 (TNI Telepacific Network Inc Cellular, resale of B-side)

  +680-234 HATOBOHEI ISLAND/State
  +680-252 SONSOROL  ISLAND/State
  +680-277 ANGAUR    ISLAND/State
  +680-299 (Marine/Mobile Radiotelephone)
  +680-336 (Fixed Station Radiotelephone)
  +680-345 PELELIU ISLAND/State
  +680-464 (PNCC Cellular, B-side)
  +680-488 KOROR town/ISLAND/State [_single_ #5ESS for _all_ *PALAU*]
      (also on 488 are certain specific -xxxx line-numbers and/or
       thousands-series for Belau Cellular, A-side)
  +680-535 Ngatpang     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
  +680-544 Aimeliik     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
  +680-587 Airai        (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
  +680-622 Ngchesar     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
  +680-654 Melekeok     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
  +680-679 Ngiwal       (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
  +680-733 Ngeremlengui (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
  +680-747 Ngerdmau     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
  +680-762 ("Internet Service" - Switched-56KBps-Data? ISDN?)
  +680-824 Ngaraard     (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
  +680-855 Ngarchelong  (town/State)  BABELTHAUP ISLAND
  +680-876 KAYANGEL  ISLAND/State

  +684-622 Fagaitua   TU'TUILA ISL. Stromberg-DCO (remote off of 644)
  +684-633 Pago-Pago  TU'TUILA ISL. DMS-100   ****AMERICAN SAMOA****
  +684-644 Satala     TU'TUILA ISL. Stromberg-DCO (host to 622)
  +684-655 OFU town/ISL. (and Olosega Is) Redcom-MDX (MANU'A ISLANDS)
  +684-677 TAU town/ISL.                  Redcom-MDX (MANU'A ISLANDS)
  +684-688 Leone      TU'TUILA ISL. Stromberg-DCO (remote off of 699)
  +684-699 Tafuna     TU'TUILA ISL. Stromberg-DCO (host to 688)
  +684-733 CELLULAR   (all locations) Motorola-EMX-100-plus

  +691-320 Kolonia POHNPEI ISL.STATE DMS-100 (and two remotes) *FSM*
  +691-330 Weno      CHUUK ISL.STATE DMS-10
  +691-340 (reserved for future growth)
  +691-350 Colonia     YAP ISL.STATE DMS-10
  +691-360 (reserved for future growth)
  +691-370 Tofol    KOSRAE ISL.STATE DMS-10
  +691-380 (reserved for future growth)
  +691-390 (reserved for future growth)

  +692-247 Airport      MAJURO ISL.(remote off of 625)
  +692-329 Ebeye KWAJALEIN ATOLL DMS-100 (incl.cellular)
  +692-528 Laura-Villge MAJURO ISL.(remote off of 625)
  +692-625 Majuro (town/ISLAND)  DMS-100 (host;cellular) **MARSHALL**

  ----------------------------------

NWORLASKCG0 (BellSouth #1AESS Class-5 Local "Seabrook" 504-24x-)
NWORLAIYCM1 (BellSouth-Mobility Hughes-GMH-2000 Cellular-MTSO NOL)
NWORLAMA0GT (BellSouth DMS-100/200 fg-B/C/D Accss-Tandem "Main" 504+)
NWORLAMA20T (BellSouth DMS-200 TOPS:Opr-Srvcs-Tandem "Main" 504+053+)
NWORLAMA04T (AT&T #4ESS Class-2 Toll 060-T / 504-2T "Main" 504+)
JCSNMSPS06T (AT&T #5ESS OSPS:Operator-Services-Tandem 601-0T 601+121)

MARK_J._CUCCIA__PHONE/WRITE/WIRE/CABLE:__HOME:__(USA)__Tel:_CHestnut-1-2497
WORK:__mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu|4710-Wright-Road|__(+1-504-241-2497)
Tel:UNiversity-5-5954(+1-504-865-5954)|New-Orleans-28__|fwds-on-no-answr-to
Fax:UNiversity-5-5917(+1-504-865-5917)|Louisiana(70128)|cellular/voicemail-


[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Mark! Thank you very much for one of
the best articles presented here in many years. The amount of detail
is astounding, and made for very interesting reading.

Brought to you by you, TELECOM Digest is reader supported. Mark spent
a lot of time and money preparing the above report. Send your personal
comments directly to him, and follow up articles to the Digest. If
you are able to do so, please also let me hear from you this week with
suggestions and ideas, as well as your financial support. Your letters
at my post office box (PO Box 4621, Skokie, IL  60077) mean a great
deal and help insure the Digest will continue for another year.   PAT]

