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It seems to me that part of the challenge of the survey is doing it on the

proper scale. Another challenge, from my own perspective, is that it's only

meaningful to me if enough people from a very specific area respond. If I'm

working in Boston, it only helps me to know what people are charging around

Boston or in a very limited area beyond - even 10 - 15 miles out the rates

vary greatly. In that case, because such a limited field of information is

actually useful, I think the risk of being seen as " price fixing " becomes

much higher - the survey may be a broad one, but the information that

applies to me is very restricted. My guess is that this will be a similar

challenge for most of us in putting the information to good use. Rural Ohio

will not necessarily be the same as rural Minnesota or Texas, and urban

Boston won't necessarily be the same as Chicago or San Francisco.

And what am I going to do? I'm going to look at what people in Boston are

charging, and charge a similar amount. I'm not going significantly over

(unless I can say I offer services above and beyond what others do) because

presumably the market won't bear it, and I'm not going to go significantly

under because I want to make a living wage. That may not be intentional

price fixing, but the result to the consumer is essentially the same.

My .02 -

in Wellesley, MA

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This concern is precisely the reason behind the requirement that five

participants are required for any given statistic. When five participants

combine their data and the fees are presented in a range of prices, " price

fixing " (which again is a deliberate agreement to charge one price) is not

at risk.

I agree that the scale is important. If we get the go-ahead from the DOJ,

I intend to publicize this survey widely and attempt to gain the input from

as many private practice IBCLC's as possible. There undoubtedly will be

fewer than five participants in some areas requiring that data to be rolled

into other areas, but hopefully we can obtain some useful information in

several areas.

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- thanks so much for all the legwork on this. i, for one,

really appreciate it! ? I am really looking forward to

your perspective on this development . .. thanks!

Lyla

At 12:02 PM 11/9/2003 -0500, you wrote:

This concern is precisely the

reason behind the requirement that five

participants are required for any given statistic. When five

participants

combine their data and the fees are presented in a range of prices,

" price

fixing " (which again is a deliberate agreement to charge one price)

is not

at risk.

I agree that the scale is important. If we get the go-ahead from

the DOJ,

I intend to publicize this survey widely and attempt to gain the input

from

as many private practice IBCLC's as possible. There undoubtedly

will be

fewer than five participants in some areas requiring that data to be

rolled

into other areas, but hopefully we can obtain some useful information in

several areas.

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