Philippine Daily Inquirer

RJ’s draft cell tower sharing rules hit

- By Miguel R. Camus

@miguelrcam­usINQ The head of the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) assailed a proposed set of rules that would pave the way for cell tower sharing as illegal and anticompet­itive.

DICT acting Secretary Eliseo Rio Jr said via his Facebook page on Wednesday that the draft common tower policy of presidenti­al adviser Ramon “RJ” Jacin- to would “surely be challenged” in court and that it contained provisions that ran “counter to the principle in our Constituti­on that prevents monopolies.”

The developmen­t signals a deepening rift between the DICT, which will implement the common tower policy, and the office of Jacinto, which is strongly pushing for its version of the rules.

It also comes as Malacañang prepares to replace Rio as the head of the DICT.

The views of his successor, Sen. Gregoria Honasan II, on how shared cell tower sharing should be implemente­d are not known to the public.

In his social media post, Rio questioned the provisions in the draft rules that would ban telco service providers from building their own cell sites. Under the rules, this would be assigned to independen­t companies, which would cooperate with the telcos in selecting the sites.

Officials from PLDT Inc. and Globe Telecom earlier said they would challenge the provisions if these were implemente­d.

Also questioned was the plan to limit the common tower builders to just two operators in the first four years.

Jacinto earlier said that the provisions would help nurture the common tower companies.

He added that telco providers PLDT and Globe had lost the “moral ascendancy” to continue building sites, citing the slow rollout.

Rio said more players would speed up the rollout of cell sites, the lack of which has been cited as a reason for poor mobile services in certain areas.

The common tower policy, which was first announced in early 2018, would pave the way for cell tower sharing among the telcos, including the newmajor player that was chosen in November last year.

To avoid legal complicati­ons, the DICT last Dec. 20 signed an agreement with ISOC Infrastruc­tures, which earlier proposed to build 25,000 cell towers in seven years.

Rio said this was the first of several potential deals with the private sector.

He said three other common tower providers, which were not named, were eyeing similar agreements with the DICT.

“DICT recognizes that the country is in dire need of more towers at the soonest to improve our ICTindustr­y. Any delay would not be acceptable,” Rio said on his Facebook post.

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