Verizon’s hold on Surf City loosened
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Jenny Marder
The California Public Utilities Commission’s decision to break
Verizon’s seven-year hold on the Huntington Beach telephone market
last week, and set lower wholesale rates for competitors, will open
the door for other phone companies to enter the local market.
It may also lower phone bills for Surf City residents and add to
their choices for local phone service, some industry officials say.
Because it built the network infrastructure in Huntington Beach,
Verizon has had a monopoly on the market, charging competitors to use
its hardware.
Competitors have always been allowed to lease parts of the
network, but until last Thursday, the cost to use Verizon’s equipment
deterred competitors from entering the market.
“This will allow competitive phone companies to come in and offer
their services to Huntington Beach residents with rates lower than
what residents have been paying,” said Nikayla Nail, spokeswoman for
Caltel, an association made up of telephone companies competing with
Verizon and Southern Pacific Bell.
Verizon Pacific Region President Tim McCallion denied charges that
there has been a lack of competition, saying that there are competing
services aside from telephone service.
“The [California Public Utilities Commission] decision completely
ignores the unprecedented array of choices consumers have for
communications, cell phones, e-mail, broadband and the Internet,”
McCallion said.
Although Verizon officials say service will not change because of
the decision, other phone companies say the rates they will offer are
cheaper than anything Surf City residents have seen and predict that
this will lead to lowered rates across the board.
“Previous rates were so high, it didn’t make sense for competitive
phone companies to lease rates from Verizon.” Nail said, adding that
rates in Verizon territory are the highest in the state.
AT&T; is one of the companies that will mount an aggressive
marketing campaign in the coming year, with offers of low rates and
improved service, AT&T; spokesman Gordon Diamond said.
By the end of the year, AT&T; will be offering rates at least 20%
below what Verizon charges now for local service, Diamond said.
“We have plans to enter Verizon territory as quickly as we can,”
he said.
But before they can offer phone service, the company must undergo
complete systems testing to make sure that Surf City customers can
transition smoothly from one system to the other without any
glitches, such as a loss of dial tone or a systems crash.
“We’re relying on their systems to perform the switch,” Diamond
said. “It is absolutely critical that these systems work flawlessly.”
Verizon has no plans to change pricing either in the short or long
term for its customers, spokesman Jon Davies said. It has, however,
begun offering new service packages that will help to keep it
competitive.
The phone company launched a new service package last month that
offers extra local and long distance minutes, caller ID, voice mail
and call waiting at a discount price, Davies said, adding that
package options will soon expand to include DSL and wireless Internet
services.
“We’re concentrating on offering more value,” he said.
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