Telstra takes ACCC to High Court

update Telstra has signalled it will challenge regulatory constrictions enforced by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) in Australia's highest court.

"The ACCC has set wholesale broadband prices at record new lows that are far beneath the company's actual costs, meaning the subsidies funded by Telstra's shareholders will have to rise yet again," Telstra's group managing director of Public Policy & Communications Dr Phil Burgess said in a statement issued to the Australian Stock Exchange this morning.

"Telstra has a legal and ethical duty to challenge this in the High Court, because the Australian Constitution guarantees every citizen the right to fair compensation when their property is compulsorily acquired, as is happening in this case," he continued.

Telstra is challenging the ACCC under clause 51 (xxxi) of the Constitution, which deals with such just compensation. The telco claims costs of selling wholesale broadband services (such as copper wire, fuel, labour and vehicles) have increased, but the ACCC has not modified its stance on wholesale pricing accordingly.

The lawsuit will also touch on the telecommunnications access provisions of the federal Trade Practices Act.

In the statement, Burgess took particular aim at an ACCC decision announced just before Christmas last year.

"The most recent decision of the ACCC ... allows Telstra's competitors to buy broadband infrastructure for just AU$3.20 a month and then re-sell it for around ten times that amount, forcing our shareholders to pay money from their back pockets to fund largely foreign-owned competitors," the Telstra executive wrote.

The statement said Telstra had written to its wholesale customers to inform them that existing pricing arrangements would remain in place while the High Court case proceeds.

In a press briefing held after the statement was issued, Telstra's group general counsel Will Irving said Telstra's situation was comparable to the ACCC forcing a private citizen to rent out a room in their house -- and then setting the price at AU$17.70 a month.

Burgess claimed it was "impossible" for Telstra to achieve "a fair result" under the current framework set by the ACCC.

Irving said the legal case was likely to drag on until at least the end of 2007. Telstra would invest a little more than a million Australian dollars in the proceedings, he said.

The general counsel added any question of potential compensation for Telstra's claim was some time away from being addressed.

Burgess also addressed the issue of who Telstra's network truly belonged to.

"It's a furphy, put about by Telstra's competitors, that Telstra's shareholders received the gift of the network from the taxpayers of Australia," he said.

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"The fact is, the taxpayers of Australia have been repaid billions of dollars, over AU$70 billion dollars, for the network that was once owned by the government."

"The assets of Telstra are now fully in the hands of shareholders. And they must have access to their constitutional rights of fair compensation."

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Talkback 11 comments

  1. When is Telstra going to tell the true. Michael Saunders - Managing Director TSN Internet.com.au -- 24/01/07

    I am a Telstra Wholesale customer. That articles says they have written to me. I don't have a letter saying charges are continuing as is. Telstra complains about the cost of the fuel and the technicians. Though we are not allowed to log a fault on an SSS service. How could they use their technicians. They wont accept faults

  2. Telstra Need to lose Tom -- 24/01/07

    As Telstra becomes more privatised they will play hardball to secure their monopoly in Australia. Telstra need to lose, it's the only thing which will keep competition healthy. I tired of paying telstra good money for 2nd rate service when there are potentially great alteratives.

  3. Telstra Need to lose Tom -- 24/01/07

    As Telstra becomes more privatised they will play hardball to secure their monopoly in Australia. Telstra need to lose, it's the only thing which will keep competition healthy. I tired of paying telstra good money for 2nd rate service when there are potentially great alteratives.

  4. Why? Anonymous -- 24/01/07

    Telstra is now a private Company.
    If one does not like dealing with a company, don't, stay away, do it yourself or whatever.
    Competition?
    Sucking on someone else is not competition, it is leeching.
    And why would Australian shareholders subsidise foreign owned Companies?

  5. What did they think would happen? Anonymous -- 24/01/07

    The government is solely to blame for this debacle. Selling Telstra as a whole and not taking ownership of, or selling the infrastructure seperately, was a very shortsighted and unwise move. We will now be locked into Telstra's high prices and poor service forevermore.

    Thankyou Mr Howard, thankyou very much :sarcasm:

  6. Another $Million wasted Keith Styles -- 24/01/07

    As pointed out by Michael Saunders MD of TSN, Telstra spends nothing on SSS maintenance and they were given it for peanuts in the first place by a government which hasn't got a clue.

    The ACCC has been more than generous by allowing them to charge $3.20 for doing nothing.

    Burgess keeps telling us how the share holders are being ripped off. Unfortunately, he like many share holders are not Australian citizens, so the profits don't get reinvested in Australia. They go off shore. He's no better than those he complains about!

    Get over it. Stop winging & get on with competing like the rest of the ISP's & others who have also invested significantly in our country.

    If push comes to shove, the Government have much deeper pockets to fight this nonsense, than Telstra. Trouble is, do they know how or why?

    Does the ACCC have enought guts to fight back?

    1. Telstra and Truth. Sydney Lawrence -- 24/01/07

      I imagine most of the posts on ZDNet who are critical of Telstra are in fact opponents who dearly wish to hold onto the unfair anti-competitive regulations imposed by the ACCC. The only result of these destructive ACCC rules will be to force a mish-mash of second class services for the Australian public. Our competitive system should ensure that the weak inefficient companies should fall by the wayside and the best prosper.

    2. Wake up to yourself... Anonymous -- 24/01/07

      Sydney, Sydney, Sydney...

      What you say would be correct if only the playing field was level from the start. Bottom line is what the facts say:

      FACT: Telstra made one of the largest profits in Aust's corporate history, and continues to make enough that they should have the BEST service of all.

      FACT: Telstra simply don't compere with other Tier 1 hosting providers (just to focus on one aspect of their business) when it comes to service. I can get a service request attended to in person within half an hour at most Tier-1 providers, yet requests to make urgent network changes sometimes take up to 4 days to reply to with Telstra.

      FACT: Our forebears paid for these networks via the tax system and the money Telstra has made since then has more than paid for any new technologies they've rolled out since. If they only had the guts to publish how they come value their services, you'd find they build in many questionable expenses that either shouldn't be there, or have been or are covered by other means.

      FACT: Telstra is currently run by ex-American CEO's of very dubious character. Why anyone would think Telstra will be run better by people with these slanted US telco ethics is beyond me.

      FACT: It is impossible to avoid Telstra completely if you wish to use telecom services within Aust. They own so much of the network even the other ISP's have to pay in the end. I *wish* it were that easy to avoid them, then I would.

    3. Wake up to yourself... Anonymous -- 24/01/07

      Sydney, Sydney, Sydney...

      What you say would be correct if only the playing field was level from the start. Bottom line is what the facts say:

      FACT: Telstra made one of the largest profits in Aust's corporate history, and continues to make enough that they should have the BEST service of all.

      FACT: Telstra simply don't compere with other Tier 1 hosting providers (just to focus on one aspect of their business) when it comes to service. I can get a service request attended to in person within half an hour at most Tier-1 providers, yet requests to make urgent network changes sometimes take up to 4 days to reply to with Telstra.

      FACT: Our forebears paid for these networks via the tax system and the money Telstra has made since then has more than paid for any new technologies they've rolled out since. If they only had the guts to publish how they come value their services, you'd find they build in many questionable expenses that either shouldn't be there, or have been or are covered by other means.

      FACT: Telstra is currently run by ex-American CEO's of very dubious character. Why anyone would think Telstra will be run better by people with these slanted US telco ethics is beyond me.

      FACT: It is impossible to avoid Telstra completely if you wish to use telecom services within Aust. They own so much of the network even the other ISP's have to pay in the end. I *wish* it were that easy to avoid them, then I would.

    4. And there is the problem Anonymous -- 27/01/07

      The fact that Telstra MUST give other companies access to THEIR Infrastructure, and they get paid $3.20 a month, maybe this has something to do with WHY they sit around and do nothing?

  7. Facts that High Court should consider Buzz Throckman -- 24/01/07

    I have been a customer of Telsta Wholesale for 10 years. Their wholesale price to our company has always been higher than BigPond retail pricing to make sure that we cannot compete.

    Now Telstra claims their broadband prices at record new lows that are far beneath the company's actual costs.

    That means that BigPond pricing is way way way way below their actual costs.

    Yet they still make money ? HMMM

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