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Feature group

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Term used in telephony
"950 numbers" redirects here. For the number 950, see950 (number).

Afeature group, in North American telephone industry jargon, is most commonly used to designate various standard means of access by callers to competitivelong-distance services. They defined switching arrangements fromlocal exchange carriers central offices tointerexchange carriers. These arrangements were described in Tariff No. 5 of theNational Exchange Carrier Association, filed on 25 October, 1991 with theFederal Communications Commission (FCC).[1]

Feature groups

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While there are other feature groups for local access,[2] the four common feature groups exist for access from the local subscriber to competitivelong-distance carriers.

Feature Group A

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The original implementation, in which a user has to dial the localtelephone number of a provider's gateway, followed by (usually) a password, then the desired long-distance number. There is a different local access number in each local calling area. This requires no special capability at the local telephone company office as competing long-distance providers connected using standard local lines, which may or may not supportcaller ID. If a carrier has no local presence, aforeign exchange line is used to reach its nearest point of presence.[3] Once the standard means of accessing alternate long-distance carriers, local access numbers are now used primarily for low-cost prepaid calling cards as the calls may be made from any phone, at flat or local rates.

Feature Group B

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Associated with 950-XXXX calling; instead of a local telephone number the user enters 950 and 4 additional digits which identify the long-distance carrier. Operation is similar to the local access numbers (feature group A) except that the 950-XXXX access number is the same in every community,NANP-wide.[4] Some exchanges sendthe caller's number automatically; where this service is not provided or not desired (calling card applications), the 950-XXXX number must be followed by a calling card number and the long-distance destination number. If ANI is provided, calls from the one subscribed line may be made as 950-XXXX and the long-distance destination. Largely deprecated by feature group D, but the 950 prefix and a list of carrier codes[5] remain reserved in all North American area codes, even in Canada where most providers went from feature group A directly to 1+ default carrier dialling and feature group D (101xxxx + destination) calling without ever using 950-XXXX as a primary means to access alternate long-distance carriers from home land lines.

Feature Group C

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Rare, originally used by AT&T for operator-assisted coin phones since they allow the operator to keep control of the caller's telephone line until the transaction is completed.[6] As coin-handling for trunk calls is now automated within the phone (like aCOCOT, the current generation of coin phones operates self-contained without the central exchange providing coin-call support functions), group 'C' is largely obsolete.

Feature Group D

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The current standard, requires the local switch support equal access by competing carriers at the trunk level; highest quality connection, and allows pre-selection of theinterexchange carrier by the end-user. This feature group permits two types of calls. If a user dials 1 +area code + seven-digit number, the long-distance call is handled by a default carrier chosen by the user. Alternatively, a user dials 101 + four-digit carrier code + area code + seven-digit number, and the call is handled by the carrier specified by the carrier code.[7] The original batch of carrier codes were three-digit, and began with dialing 10; when eventual exhaust became apparent, the instructions changed to represent it as "dial-around" 1010-xxx service; after an extended permissive period, 10+xxx ceased to function, and now functions as 101+xxxx, with the second zero migrated to turn the original three-digit codes into four-digit codes starting with zero; new codes were assigned with other numbers as the first of four digits. NANPA maintains separate lists of carrier codes for feature groups 'B' and 'D'[8] as not all long-distance providers support both standards.

These alternative groups allowed the LEC's end users to makelong-distance calls using the interexchange carrier's network, when non-stored program-controlled exchanges could not be modified to provide equal access. By the mid 1990s, Equal Access features in exchange software had rendered Feature Group D universally available in modern landline exchanges; the others are either used for calling card applications or are obsolete.

External links

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  1. ^"National Exchange Carrier Association, Inc. (NECA) Tariff F.C.C. No. 5".FCC.gov. Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved7 February 2026.
  2. ^Complete List of NECA standard Feature Codes
  3. ^Feature group 'A'Archived 2012-07-22 at theWayback Machine, AT&T/SBC
  4. ^Feature group 'B'Archived 2012-07-22 at theWayback Machine, AT&T/SBC
  5. ^NANPA list of feature group 'B' carrier codes
  6. ^Telephone World - AT&T Automated Coin Toll System
  7. ^Feature group 'D'Archived 2012-07-22 at theWayback Machine, AT&T/SBC
  8. ^NANPA list of feature group 'D' carrier codes
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