JUDGMENT
These petitions for review of orders of the Federal Communications Commission were briefed and argued by counsel. The court has accorded the petitions full consideration and has determined that abbreviat*234ed disposition is appropriate. See D.C. Cir.R. 13(c).
As further detailed in the accompanying memorandum, the petitions raise questions the Commission is now proceeding to consider and resolve, hence court review would be premature. It is therefore
ORDERED and ADJUDGED that, the Commission having reached no final decisions as to the issues on which the petitioners seek review concerning the lawfulness of the current WATS tariff, the petitions for review are denied; and it is further
ORDERED and ADJUDGED, pursuant to this court’s retention of jurisdiction in MCI Telecommunications Corp. v. FCC, 627 F.2d 322 (D.C.Cir.1980), that the Commission file with the court, within 60 days, an estimated time schedule for final resolution of the pending WATS investigation and quarterly reports thereafter on progress toward such resolution.
MEMORANDUM
Petitioners Southern Pacific Communications Co. (SPCC) and Aerospace Industries Association of America, Inc. challenge particular provisions of American Telephone and Telegraph Company’s (AT&T) WATS tariff, now under investigation by the Federal Communications Commission (Commission or FCC), and effective by operation of law on an interim basis. See 47 U.S.C. § 204(a). We find both petitions premature. The Commission elected to proceed with its investigation of the lawfulness of the current tariff in two phases.1 In the initial phase, the Commission took only one final action: it prescribed, generically, time-of-day sensitive pricing for any WATS tariff.2 The second stage of the investigation is now underway. In an opinion and order released April 16, 1982,3 the Commission set out and scheduled for comment a range of issues, including those raised by the petitioners. Therefore the petitions do not present to this court final Commission decisions ripe for judicial review. The matters currently before the Commission are complex and important; they should be resolved expeditiously, but not in advance of an opportunity for expression of views by all interested parties and reasoned consideration by the Commission in light of those views.
Nor can we conclude, at this juncture, that the course the Commission is pursuing violates this court’s mandate in MCI Telecommunications Corp. v. FCC, 627 F.2d 322, 345 (D.C.Cir.1980). In MCI, the court required the FCC to adopt and follow a schedule for “final determination of a just and reasonable WATS tariff.” Id. Since the MCI decision, the FCC has prescribed resale and sharing of WATS and MTS4 and has established interim cost allocation guidelines for AT&T’s interstate offerings.5 In January 1981, the Commission reported to the MCI panel its plan to bifurcate the investigation of the tariff now in place.6 *235No party then raised an objection and the panel took no action in response to the FCC’s report. We further appreciate that this court’s recent decision in Ad Hoc Telecommunications Users Committee v. FCC, 680 F.2d 790 (D.C.Cir.1982), vacating the Commission’s Like Services decision,7 will require adjustment of the second phase of the WATS tariff investigation. Indeed, petitioner SPCC faulted the Commission, particularly, for failure to implement that now vacated decision and represented to this court: “Had the Commission applied [its Like Services] decision ... to its evaluation of the current WATS tariff, much of the reason underlying SPCC’s filing of its pe'tition for review would have been obviated.” 8
The Commission has stated its intention to proceed expeditiously with the second stage of the WATS investigation. To assure that the Commission does not lose sight of this court’s instruction in MCI, and consistent with the court’s retention of jurisdiction in that proceeding, we instruct the Commission to file with this court, within 60 days, an estimated time schedule, in view of developments subsequent to the MCI decision, for final resolution of the pending WATS investigation, and, thereafter, to report quarterly to the court on progress toward such resolution.