Federal Trade Commission Chairman William E. Kovacic and Commissioners Pamela
Jones Harbour, Jon Leibowitz, and J. Thomas Rosch today presented FTC testimony
before the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation,
highlighting the agency’s accomplishments since the last FTC reauthorization
hearing in September, and providing comments on the proposed “Federal Trade
Commission Reauthorization Act of 2008.”
“The FTC is the only federal agency
with both consumer protection and competition jurisdiction in broad sectors of
the economy,” the testimony stated. “The agency enforces laws that prohibit
anticompetitive mergers and acquisitions and business practices that are harmful
to consumers because they are anticompetitive, deceptive, or unfair. The FTC
also promotes informed consumer choice and understanding of the competitive
process.”
The testimony recalled some FTC law enforcement actions since September, when
the Commission last provided reauthorization testimony. Matters in the antitrust
arena include:
- The FTC charged drug manufacturer Cephalon with unlawfully attempting to
prevent competition for its branded drug, Provigil, by paying competing firms
not to sell generic versions of the drug until 2012.
- Equitable Resources’ acquisition of the Peoples Natural Gas Company, a
subsidiary of Dominion Resources, was abandoned as an FTC challenge to the deal
was on appeal. The testimony noted that the Commission is continuing to examine
and address a wide range of issues in the energy markets, including its new
authority regarding manipulation of wholesale crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum
distillate markets.
- The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit upheld a 2005 Commission
order requiring Chicago Bridge & Iron Co., N.V. and its CB&I subsidiary
to divest assets acquired in 2001 from Pitt-Des Moines, Inc. used in the
business of designing, engineering, and building field-erected cryogenic storage
tanks. The court endorsed the Commission’s findings that the merged firms
controlled over 70 percent of the market, and that entry into the market was
unlikely given the high entry barriers based on the incumbents’ reputation and
control of skilled crews.
- Consumer protection matters include:
- In November 2007, the FTC announced six settlements and a federal court
action against companies that violated the Do Not Call provisions of the
Telemarketing Sales Rule, resulting in millions of dollars in civil penalties
for rule violations.
- In addressing data security issues, the agency initiated five cases;
released a new online, interactive tutorial to educate businesses on sound data
security practices; and hosted workshops on the private sector use of Social
Security numbers and behavioral advertising. Following the workshop on
behavioral advertising, the Commission staff released a proposed set of
principles to guide the development of self-regulation in this area and is
seeking comment on these principles.
- The Commission sent more than 200 warning letters to mortgage advertisers
and the media outlets that carried their ads, regarding ads that may be
deceptive in violation of the FTC Act or may violate the Truth In Lending Act.
The FTC is investigating several mortgage advertisers and will continue to
monitor claims made in mortgage advertising.
- The FTC announced three cases targeting mortgage foreclosure rescue scams,
and three settlements against “payday lenders” who failed to provide consumers
with annual percentage rate information, as required by law.
- In reviewing its environmental marketing guidelines, the Commission is
holding public workshops on emerging green marketing topics, including a recent
workshop on carbon offsets and renewable energy certificates and an upcoming
workshop on green packaging.
- Last fall the agency used its US SAFE WEB Act authority to cooperate with
foreign partners to combat a Canadian-based bogus lottery and prize-promotion
scam, and an international spam enterprise.
Regarding the proposed “Federal Trade Commission Reauthorization Act of
2008,” the testimony described Commission support for efforts to increase the
agency’s resources to meet its anticipated needs.
The proposed legislation would give the FTC authority to seek civil penalties
for knowing violations of Section 5 of the FTC Act. In addressing this
provision, the Commission reiterated its support for new authority to seek civil
penalties in areas where its existing remedies are insufficient to achieve the
law enforcement goal of deterrence. These areas include spyware, data security,
and telephone records pretexting.
The proposed legislation would eliminate the requirement that the FTC refer
civil penalty cases to the Department of Justice and would, instead, allow the
FTC to file its own civil penalty cases in its own name. The Commission supports
giving the FTC the authority to litigate its own civil penalty cases. The
Commission also supports the portion of the proposed legislation that would
allow the FTC to represent itself before the Supreme Court in the appeal of any
litigation to which the FTC was a party.
The testimony also mentioned that the Commission generally supports
provisions in the bill that would repeal the FTC Act's exemption for certain
non-profit entities. In some instances, the Commission's inability to reach
conduct of various non-profit entities has prevented the Commission from taking
action against potentially anticompetitive conduct of non-profits engaged in
business. And although the FTC has been successful in asserting jurisdiction
against "sham" nonprofits, the testimony explained, the proposed legislation
would help avoid protracted factual inquiries and litigation battles to
establish jurisdiction over such entities.
The testimony noted that the telecommunications common carrier exemption bars
the agency from reaching certain conduct by telecommunications companies. The
Commission has testified in favor of the repeal of the exemption on several
occasions and continues to endorse its repeal.
In addition, the testimony addressed a proposal in the bill that would give
the FTC the ability to challenge practices that aid or abet violations of the
FTC Act. Effective law enforcement often requires reaching not only the direct
participants in unfair or deceptive practices, but also those who support and
enable the direct participants to violate the law, the testimony explained. The
need for this authority has become particularly clear in the Internet era, many
new business models on the Internet involve numerous actors with murky and
varying roles in complicated channels of distribution.
The proposed legislation provides mechanisms for the FTC to use streamlined
procedures for rulemaking on consumer protection issues generally, and in
particular for subprime mortgage lending and nontraditional mortgage loans. The
testimony makes two main points on this issue. First, it states that, on many
occasions in recent years, Congress has identified specific consumer protection
issues requiring legislative and regulatory action, and has given the FTC the
opportunity to issue rules on such issues using simpler rulemaking procedures.
The Commission has supported this approach. Second, it states that the
Commission has previously supported proposals to allow the FTC to use simplified
rulemaking procedures to promulgate rules whenever federal financial regulators
commence their own rulemaking under the FTC Act. This will help avoid
application of inconsistent standards among regulated entities, improve
interagency coordination, and ensure that any FTC rulemaking does not lag years
behind that of other financial regulators.
The Commission vote authorizing the presentation of the testimony and its
inclusion in the formal record was 4-0.
Copies of the
testimony are available from the FTC’s Web site at http://www.ftc.gov and from the FTC’s Consumer Response Center,
Room 130, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580. The FTC works
for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair business practices
in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop, and
avoid them. To file a complaint in English or Spanish (bilingual counselors are
available to take complaints), or to get free information on any of 150 consumer
topics, call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357), or use the complaint
form at http://www.ftc.gov. The FTC enters Internet,
telemarketing, identity theft, and other fraud-related complaints into Consumer
Sentinel, a secure, online database available to hundreds of civil and criminal
law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.