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- From cmoore@arl.mil Thu Nov 2 09:56:56 1995
- Return-Path: <cmoore@arl.mil>
- Received: from WUMPUS.ARL.MIL by massis.lcs.mit.edu (4.1/NSCS-1.0S)
- id AA09602; Thu, 2 Nov 95 09:56:44 EST
- Date: Thu, 2 Nov 95 9:55:49 EST
- From: cmoore@arl.mil
- Subject: history.of.area.splits
- To: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu, telecom-recent@lcs.mit.edu
- Message-Id: <9511020955.aa29723@WUMPUS.ARL.MIL>
- Status: RO
-
- Last updated: 1 Nov 1995 by Carl Moore <cmoore@arl.mil>
- Thanks to various readers of TELECOM digest for their help,
- especially to:
- Mark J. Cuccia for sending me various notes and charts to fill out
- gaps in the early history of area codes.
- Steve Grandi for maintaining notes on new area codes in 1995.
-
- North American telephone numbers in country code 1 are of the
- form +1 AAA BBB BBBB, where
- AAA is the area code
- BBB BBBB is the local telephone number (first three digits are
- the prefix)
-
- The following area codes were used in the United States (just the 48
- states and DC) and Canada, according to a map in "Nationwide Numbering
- Plan" article by W. H. Nunn (Bell System Technical Journal, Sept. 1952).
- Off the map are Alaska (now using 907), Hawaii (now using 808), and Puerto
- Rico and the Virgin Islands (now part of 809); Alaska and Hawaii were not
- states. Page 856 of the same reference notes that area codes of form N1X
- were in states or provinces with more than one area code each, and area
- codes of form N0X were in states or provinces with only one area code each.
- The area codes are listed by state and province; since 1947 is the earliest
- year for area codes, a special note is made of area codes not existing then.
- Alabama: 205
- Arizona: 602
- Arkansas: 501
- California: 213,415,714,916 (714 did not exist in 1947)
- Colorado: 303
- Connecticut: 203
- Delaware: 302
- District of Columbia: 202
- Florida: 305
- Georgia: 404
- Idaho: 208
- Illinois: 217,312,618,815
- Indiana: 219,317,812 (219 did not exist in 1947)
- Iowa: 319,515,712
- Kansas: 316,913
- Kentucky: 502
- Louisiana: 504
- Maine: 207
- Maryland: 301
- Massachusetts: 413,617
- Michigan: 313,517,616
- Minnesota: 218,612
- Mississippi: 601
- Missouri: 314,417,816 (417 did not exist in 1947)
- Montana: 406
- Nebraska: 402
- Nevada: 702
- New Hampshire: 603
- New Jersey: 201
- New Mexico: 505
- New York: 212,315,516,518,716,914 (516 did not exist in 1947)
- North Carolina: 704
- North Dakota: 701
- Ohio: 216,419,513,614
- Oklahoma: 405
- Oregon: 503
- Pennsylvania: 215,412,717,814
- Rhode Island: 401
- South Carolina: 803
- South Dakota: 605
- Tennessee: 901
- Texas: 214,512,713,915
- Utah: 801
- Vermont: 802
- Virginia: 703
- Washington state: 206
- West Virginia: 304
- Wisconsin: 414,715
- Wyoming: 307
- Same source has these area codes for Canada
- (Newfoundland joined this federation late):
- Alberta: 403
- British Columbia: 604
- Manitoba: 204
- New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island,
- Newfoundland/Labrador: 902 (only New Brunswick is on map)
- Ontario: 416,613
- Quebec: 418,514
- Saskatchewan: 306
- Yukon and Northwest Territories are off the map.
-
- In tabular form (separate tables for N0X and N1X), the original
- area codes are arranged like this:
-
- N0X Form (States/Provinces with only ONE code assigned)
- (40 codes assigned)
- 201 NJ 301 MD 401 RI 501 AR 601 MS 701 ND 801 UT 901 TN
- 202 DC 302 DE 402 NE 502 KY 602 AZ 702 NV 802 VT 902 mrtm.prv.
- 203 CT 303 CO 403 AB 503 OR 603 NH 703 VA 803 SC
- 204 MB 304 WV 404 GA 504 LA 604 BC 704 NC
- 205 AL 305 FL 405 OK 505 NM 605 SD
- 206 WA 306 SK 406 MT
- 207 ME 307 WY
- 208 ID
-
- N1X Form (States/Provinces with several codes assigned)
- (46 codes assigned)
- 212 NY 312 IL 412 PA 512 TX 612 MN 712 IA 812 IN
- 213 CA 313 MI 413 MA 513 OH 613 ON 713 TX 913 KS
- 214 TX 314 MO 414 WI 514 PQ 614 OH 814 PA 914 NY
- 215 PA 315 NY 415 CA 515 IA 715 WI 815 IL 915 TX
- 216 OH 316 KS 416 ON 616 MI 716 NY 816 MO 916 CA
- 217 IL 317 IN 517 MI 617 MA 717 PA
- 218 MN 418 PQ 518 NY 618 IL
- 319 IA 419 OH
-
- Until 1973, area codes were only of N0X/N1X form and prefixes
- were only of NNX form. Both later generalized to NXX form. In
- July 1973, area code 213, the first to do so, began allowing
- N0X/N1X prefixes. Then area codes began running short, so NNX
- area codes began to appear in January 1995 (specific codes began
- to be announced in July 1993).
-
- The above-mentioned generalizing of prefixes was an alternative
- to splitting an area immediately, and as a result, long distance
- dialing instructions for the affected area usually became:
-
- 7D (if not already in use), or 1 + NPA + 7D, within area
- (no longer 1 + 7D);
- 1 + NPA + 7D (if not already in use) to other areas
- (no longer NPA + 7D);
- for 0+ calls, try 0 + NPA + 7D (no longer 0 + 7D within
- area).
- Otherwise, some calls would require timeout to complete.
-
- Except for 0 timing out and calling the local operator, I know of
- only two cases where published instructions led to some timeout
- situations. They were: the continued publishing of 0+7D within
- area 213 in California; and the non-removal of 1+7D and 0+7D at
- Denver and Adamstown (Pa.) when those places were in area 215.
- (These cases are noted elsewhere in this file.)
-
- The new dialing instructions (for areas having N0X/N1X prefixes)
- are set up so that the leading 1 (or 0) means that what follows
- is an area code. These same instructions accommodate the NXX area
- codes, and thus became universal by the deadline (1 Jan 1995) for
- switches to be able to handle NXX area codes. Such deadline was
- previously 1 July 1995.
-
- It was thought that the first batch of NNX area codes would be of NN0
- form, so that some areas could keep 1 + 7D for intra-NPA long distance
- by disallowing prefixes of NN0 form. This would have been affected by
- use of area codes 52x (x not 0) for Mexico, and was affected anyway by
- the first announcement of an NNX area code on 22 July 1993 (334, to be
- formed in 1995 by splitting 205, which had served all of Alabama).
-
- It is unclear how generalizing area codes to NXX would affect the
- policy of not using N0X/N1X prefixes until NNX starts running short.
-
- I found an exception to the above dialing instructions in February
- 1992 for 215-267 (Denver) and 215-484 (Adamstown) in Pennsylvania.
- These exchanges, served by Denver & Ephrata Telephone & Telegraph
- (also serving Ephrata in 717 area), were still using the old
- instructions (1 + 7D and 0 + 7D within area code), even though
- this necessitated timeout resolution for some calls. Elsewhere
- in this file, it is noted that these prefixes later moved to 717,
- with Denver having to use 717-336.
-
- The suggestion (at least from Bellcore) has been seen that ideally,
- all calls should be makeable as 1+NPA+7D (this does not necessarily
- forbid shorter forms).
-
- These areas prepared for N0X/N1X prefixes before it became necessary
- to prepare for NNX area codes:
- 213 California, July 1973
- (7D on all calls within it)
- (now 213/310/818, to become 213/310/818/562)
- (but for some time, this area continued to publish 0+7D instruction
- for within-NPA 0+ calls)
- 212 New York, some days after 24 Nov 1980
- (7D on all calls within it)
- (now 212/917/718)
- 312 Illinois, Oct 1982--but got 1st N0X/N1X spring 1983?
- (7D on all calls within it)
- (now 312/708/630, to become 312/773/708/630/847)
- 201 New Jersey
- (7D on all calls within it; also applies to 609)
- (now 201/908)
- 214 Texas, 1986 or 1987 (by July 1987)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls; also applies to 817,
- at least in Fort Worth area)
- (now 214/903, to become 214/972/903)
- 301/202/703 Maryland/DC/Virginia, 1987, due to DC area growth
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (301 now 301/410)
- (703 now 703/540)
- 415 California, Feb 1989?
- (7D on all calls within it)
- (now 415/510)
- 404 Georgia, Oct 1989?
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls; also applies to 912)
- (now 404/706, to become 404/770/706)
- 919 North Carolina, 2 Mar 1990
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls; also applies to 704)
- (now 919/910)
- 416 Ontario, 3 Mar 1990
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (now 416/905)
- 602 Arizona, 1 July 1990
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (now 602/520)
- 313 Michigan, 1990?
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (now 313/810)
- 512 Texas, 9 Sept 1990
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (now 512/210)
- 205 Alabama, Dec 1990
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (now 205/334)
- 215 Pennsylvania, 20 May 1991
- (7D on all calls within it; exception noted above for Denver and
- Adamstown, which later moved to 717, but the new instructions also
- applied to:
- 717-354,355 New Holland
- 717-656,661 Leola
- 717-768 Intercourse)
- On 25 September 1993, I noticed that, during permissive dialing
- during the 215-to-717 change for Denver and Adamstown, all long
- distance from there was to be dialed as 1+NPA+7D, with 0+NPA+7D
- for all 0+. After full cutover to 717, "1 717" was dropped, and
- by then the local calls between Reading (moved from 215 to 610)
- and Adamstown were 1+NPA+7D.
- (now 215/610)
- 206 Washington state, 12 Jan 1992
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (now 206/360)
- 713 Texas, 8 Mar 1992 (permissive dialing 8 Dec 1991)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (now 713/281)
- 714 California, 1992?
- (7D on all calls within it)
- (now 714/909)
- 503 Oregon, 10 July 1993
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (to become 503/541)
-
- No note about N0X/N1X prefixes (due to closeness to the time
- for area codes to generalize to NXX), but instructions changed
- to accommodate the generalized area codes:
- 305,407,813,904 Florida, 7 Mar 1992 (at least for 813)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 603 New Hampshire, 17 July 1993
- (This was to include all New England areas except Connecticut,
- with changeover to 7D on calls within area code to be done in
- 1993-1994, but this list now has separate entries for Massa-
- chusetts, Vermont, Rhode Island, and Maine.)
- (7D on all calls within area code; per-line option [for toll
- within area code] to block 7D and require 1+NPA+7D, but 1994
- Portsmouth directory merely said 7D or 1+NPA+7D for this)
- 413,508,617 Massachusetts (order by public utility commission in
- Oct 1993; in 413, mandatory 1 June 1994; eastern Massachusetts
- followed later in 1994; in 508, permissive 15 July 1994; in 508
- and 617, mandatory 15 Oct 1994)
- (Earlier, for 413 going to 7D on all calls within area code: Feb-
- June 1993; full cutover 21 Sept 1993; 1+NPA+7D for local calls to
- another area code permissive 1 Mar to 8 Apr 1993.)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 802 Vermont, permissive 18 Feb 1994, mandatory 18 May 1994
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 401 Rhode Island, announced Jan 1994 (but when to be implemented?)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 207 Maine, 15 July 1994
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 303,719 Colorado (27 Feb 1994); 612,507,218 Minnesota (late 1994);
- 319,515,712 Iowa; 701 North Dakota (19 June 1994, full cutover
- 3 Oct 1994; 605 South Dakota; 308,402 Nebraska (full cutover
- late 1994 for Lincoln Telephone area); 505 New Mexico (14 Feb
- 1994, full cutover 19 Jun 1994); 801 Utah; 307 Wyoming; 406
- Montana; 208 Idaho; 509 Washington (15 May 1994, full cutover
- 17 Sept 1994); 1993-1994 (U.S. West areas except Arizona,
- Oregon, 206 in Washington state)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (303 now 303/970)
- 219,317,812 Indiana, c. Aug 1993 (full cutover 1 Dec 1993)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 615 Tennessee, 1 July 1993(?) (full cutover 1 Sept 1993)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (to become 615/423)
- 901 Tennessee, Sept 1993?
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 803 South Carolina, Sept 1993?
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- (to become 803/864)
- 502,606 Kentucky, 4 Sept 1993 (full cutover 2 Apr 1994)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 318,504 Louisiana, 4 Sept 1993 (full cutover 2 Apr 1994)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 209,408,619,707,805,916 California; Pacific Bell, by 11 Oct 1993
- (full cutover for all points on or before 11 Oct 1994)
- These are the California area codes not cited above, as of Feb
- 1993, as preparing for N0X/N1X prefixes; but some of these, in
- whole or in part, already had the new instructions.
- GTE areas: 0+NPA+7D for 0+ within own area code permissive 11 Oct
- 1993, fully cut over 10 Oct 1994; direct-dial not affected.
- (7D on all calls within area code)
- 412,717,814 Pennsylvania, for 717 1 Nov 1993 (full cutover 31 July 1994),
- for 814 8 Nov 1993 (full cutover 1 Aug 1994); announced Sept 1993
- (7D on all calls within area code)
- I found 1+NPA+7D on all toll calls in use in some places not served
- by Bell. These include pay phones on: 814-634 Meyersdale, 4 July 1994;
- 717-533 Hershey, 19 Nov 1994.
- 716 New York, 5 Dec 1993 (at least for Rochester Telephone;
- is this permissive or mandatory date?)
- (7D on all calls within it)
- (but on 1 June 1994, NYNEX announced 1+NPA+7D on all toll calls,
- for its portion, including Buffalo, of 716 area)
- 601 Mississippi, Dec 1993
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 302 Delaware, 1 Apr 1994 (full cutover 7 Jan 1995)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 304 West Virginia, full cutover 1 Jan 1995
- (earlier, saw 16 or 30 Apr 1994 for 1+NPA+7D for local to other area
- codes; and 30 Apr 1994, with full cutover 1 Oct 1994, for 7D on all
- calls within area code)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 517,616,906 Michigan, 1994 (1 May in 517 & 616; 1 Feb 1994 in 906)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 808 Hawaii, 19 June 1994
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 314,417,816 Missouri, July 1994
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 316,913 Kansas, July 1994
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 405,918 Oklahoma, July 1994 (mandatory 1 Jan 1995)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 501 Arkansas, July 1994
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 409,806,915 Texas, July 1994
- (also applies by then to 817 outside of Fort Worth area?)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 702 Nevada, July 1994
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 519,613,705,807 Ontario; 418,514,819 Quebec; 204 Manitoba; 306
- Saskatchewan; 403 Alberta (and Yukon and NW Territories); 506
- New Brunswick; 604 British Columbia; 709 Newfoundland (and
- Labrador); 902 Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island; 4 Sept 1994
- (all of Canada except 416 and 905 in Ontario)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 315,516,518,607,914 New York, 1994? (mandatory 24 Sept 1994,
- at least in 516 & 914)
- (7D on all calls within area code)
- (note that "PSC may ask telcos to provide option for mandatory 1+NPA+7D
- on all toll calls at subscriber's request" for 315,518,607)
- 217,309,618,815 Illinois, 1994?
- (7D on all calls within area code)
- 216,419,513,614 Ohio, 1994? (full cutover 1 Jan 1995)
- (but in late Dec. 1994, I saw a notice for 216, at least for a part of
- it along Ohio Turnpike: permissive 1 Jan 1994, mandatory 1 Oct 1994)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 414,608,715 Wisconsin, 1994?
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 817 Texas, 1994? (already in use in & near Fort Worth)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 203 Connecticut, 1994? (seen in Southern New England Telephone
- directories which were not to be used before 25 Apr 1994;
- what about the NYNEX part in the southwestern corner?)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 804, Virginia, 16 May 1994 (full cutover 16 Nov 1994)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 907 Alaska, 1994? (full cutover 1 Jan 1995)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
- 809, Caribbean area (full cutover 9 Jan 1995)
- (1+NPA+7D on all toll calls; one exception: St. Vincent, Turks & Caicos
- to use 01+NPA+7D on all toll calls)
-
- Areacode splits and realignments:
- Early ones might not have been announced publicly due to lack of direct-dial
- facility at the time.
- Early splits could be guessed at with the following
- guidelines (reference is page 856 of the Sept. 1952 Bell System Technical
- Journal, in the article "Nationwide Numbering Plan" by W. H. Nunn):
- If an areacode is of form N1X, it is in a state or province with more
- than 1 areacode. (The reverse is now obsolete.)
- If an areacode is in a state or province with only 1 areacode, it is
- of form N0X. (The reverse is now obsolete.)
- List of splits and realignments:
- 317/219 Indiana, 1948?
- (realignment of 213/415/916 California, 1950? The earliest area code
- maps have only those three area codes in California, and appearing
- in that order from south to north, with both boundaries running
- from the Pacific Ocean to the Nevada state line. In the realignment,
- a triangular wedge along the Nevada state line shifted from 415 to
- 213; and afterwards, to the north of 213, 415 touched the Pacific
- Ocean and 916 touched the Nevada state line, going all the way north
- to the Oregon state line.)
- 816/417 Missouri, 1950
- 914/516 New York, 1951
- 213/714 California, 1951
- 415/318 California, 1951
- 318 was used for San Francisco only, during the Englewood (N.J.)
- Customer DDD Trials; Oakland remained in 415. Sometime before 1957,
- 318 was reclaimed for future use, and San Francisco returned to 415.
- 416/519 Ontario, 1953 (519 also took part of 613)
- 305/813 Florida, 1953
- This and the 405/918 split were the first splits of N0X area codes.
- 405/918 Oklahoma, 1953
- 915/817 Texas, 1953 (817 also took part of 214)
- 218/612/507 Minnesota, 1954
- Before this split: 218 was shown as extending down the entire
- western boundary of Minnesota (along the North & South Dakota
- borders) to the Iowa border; 612 was also shown extending down
- to Iowa; 507 did not exist. Apparently, 507 took parts of 218
- and 612, and 612 took part of 218. (Starting 1954, new N0X codes
- began to be assigned in splits of both N0X and N1X area codes.)
- 315/607 New York, 1954 (607 also took part of 716 at this time or later?)
- 901/615 Tennessee, 1954
- 404/912 Georgia, 1954
- December 1991 Greater Atlanta call guide, in discussing 404/706
- split, said "It's been 38 years since Georgia added an Area Code."
- 704/919 North Carolina, 1954
- 402/308 Nebraska, 1954
- 502/606 Kentucky, 1954
- 902/506 Canadian maritime provinces, 1955
- New Brunswick and Newfoundland/Labrador switched to 506; Nova Scotia
- and Prince Edward Island stayed in 902.
- 414/715/608 Wisconsin, 1955 (new area code 608 took parts of 414 and 715)
- 504/318 Louisiana, 1957
- 318, used earlier for San Francisco, had been reclaimed by this time.
- 206/509 Washington state, 1957
- 1957 marked the beginning of the use of N09 area codes.
- 613/705 Ontario, 1957 (705 also took part of 519)
- 213/805 California, 1957 (805 also took parts of 415 and 916)
- 514/819 Quebec, 1957 (819 also took part of 418)
- 217/815/309 Illinois, 1957 (new area code 309 took parts of 217 and 815)
- 915/806 Texas, 1957 (806 also took part of 817)
- (808 in Hawaii and 907 in Alaska were implemented in 1957.)
- 201/609 New Jersey, 1958 (New York Times, page B4, 27 April 1989)
- 916/209 California, 1958
- (809 in the Caribbean area was implemented in 1958.)
- 415/408/707 California, 1959 (new area codes 408 and 707 formed from 415)
- (In or about 1960, several area code boundaries were realigned. At this or
- some other time, area code 914 in New York expanded by taking southern
- part of 518.)
- 616/906 Michigan, 1961
- 506/709 New Brunswick and Newfoundland/Labrador, 1962
- Newfoundland/Labrador switched to 709; New Brunswick stayed in 506.
- 705/807 Ontario, 1962
- 305/904 Florida, July 1965
- 703/804 Virginia, 24 June 1973 at 2:01 AM
- (In or after 1975, did a few prefixes, including 394 Canandaigua,
- move from 315 to 716 in New York? Another one might have been
- 657 Holcomb.)
- 714/619 California, Nov 1982
- 713/409 Texas, Mar 1983 (full cutover 90 days later)
- 213/818 California, Jan 1984
- 212/718 New York, 2 Sept 1984 (full cutover 31 Dec 1984)
- Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island became 718;
- Manhattan & Bronx stayed in 212;
- Bronx switched from 212 to 718, 1 July 1992 (full cutover
- 15 May 1993; but until then, calls from Bronx to Brooklyn/
- Queens/Staten Island still had to be dialed 1+718+7D, and
- effective 25 Sept 1993 had to be dialed 7D)
- 303/719 Colorado, 5 Mar 1988
- 305/407 Florida, 16 Apr 1988
- 617/508 Massachusetts, 16 July 1988
- 312/708 Illinois, Nov 1989 (full cutover 9 Feb 1990)
- 202 District of Columbia & vicinity, 1 Oct 1990
- This was like a split despite no new area code. 202 area
- code, previously useable for all but the outermost Maryland
- and Virginia suburbs, was restricted to DC proper, with 301
- or 703, as the case may be, necessary for suburbs. As a
- result, government offices (by then including the Pentagon)
- using zipcodes starting with 200,202,203,204,205 and located
- in Md. or Va. could no longer be listed in area 202. Prefixes
- in the Pentagon, which is in Virginia, were previously in area
- 202 (not 703), and moved to area 703 in 1990 because of local
- calls across area code border changing from 7D to NPA+7D; 202-
- 694 had to be replaced by 703-614 because 703-694 was in use
- at Stuart.
- 214/903 Texas, 4 Nov 1990 (full cutover 4 May 1991)
- 201/908 New Jersey, 1 Jan 1991 (full cutover 8 June 1991)
- 415/510 California, 2 Sept 1991 (full cutover 27 Jan 1992)
- 301/410 Maryland, 1 Nov 1991 (full cutover 1 Nov 1992)
- 213/310 California, 2 Nov 1991 (full cutover 16 May 1992; was
- to be 2 May 1992, but was postponed indefinitely because
- of riots just before then)
- All GTE plus some PacBell went into 310.
- 212/718/917 New York, 1 Jan 1992 (cellular/pager overlay on 212 and 718)
- 404/706 Georgia, 3 May 1992 (full cutover 3 Aug 1992)
- 512/210 Texas, 1 Nov 1992 (full cutover 1 May 1993)
- 714/909 California, 14 Nov 1992 (full cutover 14 Aug 1993)
- Riverside and San Bernardino counties went into 909;
- Orange County remained in 714.
- 416/905 Ontario, 4 Oct 1993 (full cutover 25 Mar 1994,
- postponed from 10 Jan 1994)
- 919/910 North Carolina, 14 Nov 1993 (full cutover 13 Feb 1994)
- 313/810 Michigan, 1 Dec 1993 (full cutover 10 Aug 1994)
- 215/610 Pennsylvania, 8 Jan 1994 (full cutover 7 Jan 1995)
- Because of this split, Denver 267, Adamstown 484, and Terre Hill
- 445 moved to 717 rather than 610, since their telephone companies
- serve adjacent areas already in 717; Denver went to 717-336 because
- of 717-267 being used at Chambersburg. I learned of this change for
- Denver and Adamstown on 2 September 1993; their dialing instructions
- are discussed elsewhere in this file. I did not learn of the Terre
- Hill area code change until 21 September 1994; that change was messy
- because Terre Hill had to go from 7D long distance within old area
- 215 to 7D long distance within area 717.
- 312/708/630 Illinois, 7 Jan 1995 (was cellular/pager overlay on 312 and 708)
- This was in dispute, and it eventually became 708/630/847 (geographic).
- Change was formalized 21 March 1995:
- 1. 312 in Chicago would no longer be involved in this split (see later
- note regarding area code 773). Instead, two new geographic area codes
- would be carved from 708, which would keep only its current southern
- part. Wireless numbers already in 630 would not be required to move.
- 2. northern part of 708 would get a new area code, later announced
- as 847 (20 Jan 1996, full cutover 20 Apr 1996).
- 3. 630 would become geographic and get western part of 708; this would
- not happen until 3 Aug 1996.
- This split of 708 would change the area code of some people who went
- into permissive mode for 708 only in November 1989.
- 205/334 Alabama, 15 Jan 1995 (full cutover 13 May 1995)
- The first NNX area code to be announced, on 22 July 1993.
- 206/360 Washington state, 15 Jan 1995 (full cutover 20 Aug 1995; originally
- 9 July 1995, then changed to 21 May 1995, but then extended 90 days
- by the Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission on 26 Apr
- 1995, because of problems in reaching 360, which is of NNX form)
- 713/281 Texas, 1 Mar 1995 (cellular/pager overlay, but to get new
- landlines starting 1 Mar 1996)
- 602/520 Arizona, 19 Mar 1995 (full cutover 21 Oct 1995 except in
- Tucson, Yuma, Flagstaff, Prescott)
- Announced 29 Nov 1993. Full cutover was set for 23 July 1995, then
- on 19 June it was postponed 90 days to 21 Oct because of problems in
- reaching 520. Then full cutover was postponed to 1 Jan 1997 in Tucson
- and to 1 July 1996 in Yuma, Flagstaff, and Prescott. However, some
- new prefixes, in 520 only, are to be added in Tucson in Nov 1995.
- 602-696 is to be available in the southern Arizona LATA; similarly,
- 602-671 is to be available in the northern Arizona LATA.
- 303/970 Colorado, 2 Apr 1995 (full cutover 14 Jan 1996)
- Full cutover was to be 1 Oct 1995, but US West cited "continuing
- call routing difficulties" and a "decline in originally projected
- code demand."
- 813/941 Florida, 28 May 1995 (full cutover 3 Mar 1996)
- 703/540 Virginia, 15 July 1995 (full cutover 27 Jan 1996, changed from
- 13 July 1996)
- 404/770 Georgia, 1 Aug 1995 (full cutover 1 Dec 1995)
- Georgia Public Service Commission voted 3-2 in Apr 1995 to make this
- a geographic split.
- 203/860 Connecticut, 28 Aug 1995 (full cutover 4 Oct 1996)
- 615/423 Tennessee, 11 Sept 1995 (full cutover 26 Feb 1996)
- 249 was "too close to some exchanges in Kingsport" and 931
- "could be confused with the 901 area code for Memphis".
- 305/954 Florida, 11 Sept 1995 (full cutover 13 Apr 1996 for pagers,
- 1 June 1996 for landlines, and 1 Jan 1997 for cellular)
- This was to be a wireless overlay, to take effect 1 Mar 1995, but the
- Florida Public Service Commission ruled that it would be geographical
- with Broward County going to 954 and Dade and Monroe counties staying
- in 305; noted as such in Bellcore letter IL-95-08-011 (23 August 1995),
- which is the source for the above dates.
- 904/352 Florida, 3 Dec 1995 (full cutover 20 May 1996)
- Earlier reports indicated that this new area code would be 850.
- Jacksonville, Tallahassee, Pensacola were to stay in 904; Gainesville,
- Ocala, Daytona Beach were go to 352. It was then decided to keep Daytona
- Beach (and Volusia County) in 904; the split line had basically been a
- line from Crystal River east to Daytona Beach and south.
- 809/441 Caribbean area, 1 Oct 1995 (full cutover 30 Sept 1996)
- 441 is for Bermuda only.
- 503/541 Oregon, 5 Nov 1995 (full cutover 30 June 1996)
- 803/864 South Carolina, 3 Dec 1995 (full cutover 1 May 1996)
- Greenville LATA to 864; Charleston, Columbia, Florence stay in 803.
- 314/573 Missouri, 7 Jan 1996 (full cutover 7 July 1995)
- The state PUC voted for a geographic split, not an overlay.
- 708/847 Illinois, 20 Jan 1996 (full cutover 20 Apr 1996)
- See 312/708/630 note for further information.
- 214/972 Texas, 1 Feb 1996 (overlay, to get all newly-assigned numbers)
- 216/330 Ohio, 9 March 1996 (full cutover June 1996)
- State PUC decreed another split, to occur June 1997 in 216.
- 612/320 Minnesota, 17 March 1996 (full cutover 15 Sept 1996)
- Also at this time, five communities (biggest of which is apparently
- Red Wing) to southeast of the Twin Cities will switch from 612 to 507.
- 708/630 Illinois, 3 Aug 1996 (what date for full cutover?)
- See 312/708/630 note for further information.
- 604/250 British Columbia, 19 Oct 1996 (full cutover 1 June 1997)
- 312/773 Illinois, Oct 1996
- 312 was to get some relief through use of area code 630 (but that
- idea was cancelled when 630 was then planned as one of two new codes
- to be formed from a split of 708). Then 773 was planned for downtown,
- but still later it was decided to use 773 for outside of downtown,
- leaving downtown in 312.
- 310/562 California, 1 Feb 1997 (full cutover 6 months later)
- 562 was originally designed as a wireless (cellular/pager) overlay
- for area codes 213, 310, 818. But eventually the PUC on 11 Aug 1995
- voted for a geographic split of 310, with the 1 Feb 1997 effective
- date and 6 month permissive dialing, even though 310 was only created
- in 1991.
- 818/626 California, March 1997? (overlay or geographic split)
- 216/??? Ohio, June 1997
- See 216/330 note.
- 619/760 California, 1997?
- 809/340 Caribbean area, no date available
- 340 is for Puerto Rico only.
-
- Area codes 706,903,905 had been used, at least in the U.S., for calling
- parts of Mexico. (These codes were later announced for Georgia, Texas,
- and Ontario respectively.) In 1980, 903 was reclaimed, replaced by 706
- when northwestern Mexico border towns were renumbered to conform with
- Mexico (+52) 6. On 1 Feb 1991, 706 and 905 were discontinued for calls
- to Mexico (which was and still is reachable in country code 52).
-
-