What is the status of this? What I mean is it is my understanding that if I have a land based telephone number I can switch it to a cell phone. Also vice versa. First of all is this assumption correct?
Second. I go to get a cell phone and since I am in Chicago they ask me if I want a 773 number or a 312 number. (312 covers downtown and an extended area outside of downtown. 773 is the rest of Chicago in the city limits)
So I live in 773 and have a 773 phone number. So I go get a cell phone and say I want a cell phone with a 312 number. I get this. So am I now able to take this 312 number on my cell phone and switch it to my house (which is 773) and effectively get a 312 number for my house?
Yes. As long as you don’t have to dial a “1” to dial from 312 to 773, then you can move the number around within that rate center (Chicagoland, in this case). (rate center = your local calling area. It could be a group of small rural towns or a large metropolitan area.)
Keep in mind that your plan may cost you time and/or money to implement. The cell carrier is going to want lock you into a rate plan for a year or two. Breaking that contract will cost you.
Not entirely correct. The FCC link Merhouse provided notes that “WLNP also allows consumers to move a phone number from a wireline phone to a wireless phone in some cases.” There is currently no provision for porting a wireless number to a wireline phone. This is one of the major points of contention from the wireline carriers regarding WLNP. The rationale for number portability is to encourage competition between carriers. As the rules currently exist, the wireless carriers can compete by converting wireline numbers to wireless service, but there is no way for a wireline carrier to compete by converting a wireless number to a wireline service.