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66 Unanswered Questions on Wireline
Aug 15, 2012

 

August 14, 2012
 
 
 
Executive Director, New Networks 
Dear DOJ & FCC:
66 Unanswered Questions and Issues of Wireline-Wireless-Cable Connections and Collusion
 
Important NOTE: Dear Reader: If you use a cell phone, a wired connection or cable service including broadband, or internet, this impacts you -- from the price of services you pay for, or the choices you have, to even the speed and controls over these services from your providers.
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The Department of Justice (DOJ) and FCC are currently evaluating whether Verizon should be allowed to purchase wireless spectrum from the cable companies as well as co-market wireless services with cable-broadband products offered by the cable companies.
Instead, we request the Department of Justice investigate Verizon's business dealings and the harms to customers by Verizon Wireless and the rest of Verizon's affiliate companies, such as Verizon-state-based utilities, such as Verizon, New Jersey or New York, or Verizon's other affiliates from Verizon Business to Verizon Online. This analysis should also be done of AT&T and its affiliate companies.
This not only relates to the current Verizon deal with the cable companies but the manipulation of assets and data to help close down America's Public Switched Telephone Networks (PSTN), America's state-based public utilities.
It is a multi-layered problem as the companies have been at this for a decade and can manipulate the data (or eliminate collection of data completely) as well as have the financial resources to make their own agenda the 'common wisdom' on both the state and federal level, even though it is biased, anti-consumer, anti-public interest, and will harm the US economy.
Our research (based mostly on Verizon and AT&T's own SEC filings, statements as well as the regulators):
Report: "Verizon's State-Based Financial Issues & Tax Losses: The Destruction of America's Telecommunications Utilities, the Public Switched Telephone Networks (PSTN)." (NOTE: When we mention a specific telco it is because we have specific data about their actions. The other companies may be doing identical things.)
Wireline-Wireless Cabal and Affiliate Transactions:
1) AT&T has admitted that they are 'goosing', read increasing their wireless profits, which has been depressing AT&T's wireline services' profits. Thus, AT&T can claim that their local phone service is not profitable, which is then used to help close down the networks and get rate increases. 
2) Verizon has been moving assets out of the utility into separate subsidiaries, then reclassifying publicly funded assets as 'private' assets, which also creates losses in the utility. 
3) Verizon appears to be charging local phone customers for wireless construction, as well as dumping other expenses into the utility. 
4) Verizon has a 'secret network,' which the company does not discuss in their discussions of FiOS deployment or their closing of the PSTN, which includes not only business services but also 'special access' network services that are sold to all cell phone companies and have an estimated monopoly profit margin of 80% or more. This gives Verizon control of all wireless service and pricing, but also wired broadband.
5) Verizon Wireless appears to be short-changing the utility in fees -- it appears Verizon is paying almost half of what other competitors are forced to pay for access but worse, it appears the utility (PSTN) doesn't benefit from these fees. 
6) The movement of assets out of the utility, the failure to pay market rates, and the manipulation of profits has created massive losses in the state utilities, which means that Verizon is saving billions on state-based taxes. Worse, the companies use these losses as an excuse to raise rates and as 'data' to close down the PSTN.
7) The state commissions have not investigated the 'affiliate transaction' or wireless issues. 
8) The FCC has never investigated the state-based issues, which has allowed AT&T and Verizon to manipulate the data including expenses, revenues and profits. 
9) Bundling 'affiliate' products' with regular phone service reclassifies the phone service, especially when it's bundled with an "information service" like DSL, even if it uses the same wires. Which bucket of money does it go to, the utility or an affiliate? 
10) Affiliate Freebees: Do the affiliates pay for mailing and printing of the phone bill or the phone bill insert advertising? This is just one of thousands of areas in question. (In some states there was a charge to customers for the 'educational insert' not just an advertisement.)
11) When Verizon puts in FiOS and pulls the copper wire, is that harm to the utility property compensated in some way? 
12) When AT&T uses the old copper wiring of the utility for U-Verse, doe U-Verse compensate the utility for that use? 
13) Shifting phone utility customers to fiber with or without their permission. Customers claim that when their service breaks they are forced onto using the fiber, which is 'digital voice' and can go dead in a power outage. They are also forced off of DSL and not given similar services on the fiber upgrade.
14) Because of a failure to properly upgrade the copper, many states are experiencing 'quality of service' complaints, such as 
New York, which filed a petition with the State Commission to put in stricter quality commitments.

Broadband Failure:
15) AT&T has announced it is not expanding U-Verse. 
16) AT&T announced it has no plans to upgrade rural areas, and is closing down DSL, their slower copper-based product.
17) Verizon has announced it is 
not expanding FiOS's footprint.
18) Verizon has announced it is 
abandoning DSL and the other wires
19) Verizon, AT&T and Centurylink, in multiple states, failed to properly upgrade the PSTN to a fully fiber optic network-- but charged customers billions per state, though it varies by state.
20)
In New Jersey, 100% of the state was supposed to have been upgraded to a fiber optic service capable of 45 Mbps in both directions by 2010. There is currently an open docket where the state issued a show cause order for Verizon's failure to upgrade the state
21) Whole areas of the US are not going to be upgraded, much less have competition, which harms local as well as national economic growth.
22)
America 17th in the world in broadband (though it varies by organization and category) because of the monopoly controls over special access and the companies' failure to properly upgrade infrastructure.
23) The really fast American cities such as Chattanooga, TN or Google's play in Kansas City are 'by-pass' builds, going around the intransient incumbent. Yet AT&T, Verizon and even the cable companies have declared war on these by-passes and got at least 19 states to stop municipality builds.
Government Failure to Protect the Public Interest: Verizon and AT&T have been able to Shut Down Investigations by: 
24) Data Deception. Verizon and AT&T have manipulated the data presented to the public to the point where it could be considered fraud. From the number of access lines to the financial 'losses' being claimed in the state utilities, or even the definition of the term "PSTN", Verizon has been able to obscure and obfuscate basic facts, shaping America's communication's policies with corrupted data.
25) AT&T does not include its 'digital voice' services (which are part of the U-Verse package) as an access line, not its other services over the copper wire. 
26) Verizon claims that it is upgrading 18 million households with FiOS but never mentions the business customers or the total number of business lines.
27) In fact, FiOS only had 4.3 million TV customers, end of 1st quarter 2012, which means the majority of this 'potential 18 million are still using the old copper wiring.
28) Verizon and AT&T have stopped publishing any specifics on business lines, including special access, which can include alarm circuits.
29) Verizon is not publishing any state-based SEC reports as of 2010 (AT&T hasn't done it for over a decade), 
30) AT&T and Verizon got the FCC to stop requiring basic business data as of 2007 that was published in ARMIS and other FCC sources.
31) AT&T and Verizon do not supply the state Commissions with data, especially about affiliate transactions.
32) AT&T and Verizon are getting rid of the oversight of the state commissions through new laws
33) AT&T and Verizon are getting laws to remove the obligations as the "carrier of last resort." 
34) AT&T and Verizon are removing the state commission oversight claiming that it is all VOIP and not regulatable. 
35) AT&T and Verizon are removing all telecommunications laws claiming everything is VOIP and therefore an 'information service.'
36) AT&T and Verizon's contracts are replacing tariffs and consumer protections with 'arbitration' clauses that protect the companies for legal remedies. This includes taking legal actions for wireless issues and more recently any 'information service,' from DSL to FiOS.
Attack on the PSTN
37) Verizon and AT&T have declared war on PSTN. While couched as a technology play, it is a play to close down all regulations. 
38) The closing of the PSTN is also the way the companies close down the unions, those who can actually fix the lines when broken.
39) Verizon and AT&T are 
acting as a cartel; they are now coordinating state and federal campaigns to close down the PSTN with hundreds of groups they finance, including ALEC, American Legislative Exchange Council.
40) AT&T and Verizon captured the FCC's Technical Advisory Council, (TAC) which has also proclaimed the need for 'sunsetting' of the PSTN. We filed a separate complaint as the majority of the members have direct financial ties to the companies, not to mention AT&T and Verizon are also on the Committee.
The Deal With the Cable Companies Exasperates All of these Situations.
41) Widening Digital Divide: Screwing Seniors, Low Income Families. Increased prices on all services is one of the primary reasons low-income families, seniors can not be part of the digital revolution. Without competition at all levels, there is nothing to stop continued rate increases. 
42) Verizon will control the wireless markets because there will be no competition for 'special access' in their territories from the cablecos, which harms all wireless competitors -- and will keep 'bandwidth' caps and expensive wireless in place.
43) The wireless markets are not competing with the wireline markets, they are colluding so that the wireline companies won't upgrade the plant - thus eliminating all forms of cable competition in 50% of the US or more, which includes many rural areas. 
44)
Wireless is not a direct substitute for cable or even DSL of broadband and yet, Verizon is now pushing customers onto very expensive wireless options -- or nothing in rural areas.
45) Because of no cable competition, the cable companies can raise rates and create 'bandwidth caps' to block outside video. Netflix customers for example, are a target -- bandwidth caps curtails their use. 
46) Wireless prices and bandwidth caps. If the incumbent controls access fees, they also can block video by making it too expensive... Currently with the $10.00 a gig pricing.
47) There is also no local phone competition. The 
prices of services has gone up over 100% in AT&T California, 84% in New York. 
48) AT&T and Verizon are 'harvesting' the entire utility customer base -- either bundle or leave or get overcharged.
49) Time Warner Cable in NYC does not advertise a stand-alone local service option, so it does not provide direct local competition without bundling. 
50) Because of 'vertical integration' and the collusion of various affiliates, Verizon or the cable companies can block competitors of VOIP, for example, as the customer has to buy multiple products.
51) Major issues of costs for all services, which might be stopped if there was competition. These include: 
52) The gimme, which is when the advertised is 20-50% less than the first bill because items, such as the $10.00 cable box (which has to be rented for service) or the FCC Subscriber Line Charge (a fee on phone bills that is direct revenue to the telco but not included in the advertised price).
53) Promotional price scam, where the costs of the package increase 20-50% once the first (or second) year is over. 
54) Mistakes on bills -- without competition, phone bills have been allowed to go feral and an estimated 80% of bills have mistakes costing hundreds, if not thousands of dollars. Competitors would help to 'point' out these abuses.
Insult to Injury: Government Subsidies by 'Crying Poverty' and "Broadband"
55) The National Broadband Plan created multiple new fees and charges, such as the Access Recovery Charge, on bills in July 2012, increases to the Universal Service Fund (now adding 15%) and other new charges, like the Connect America Fund, among others. 
56) These new charges mean that the phone companies are 
collecting $50-75 billion from U.S. customers over the next 5-6 years. We estimate that residential customers will be spending $40-75 a year more and small businesses $150-300 a year, and this amount increases with the number of phone and wireless services they have.
57) The FCC has also initiated Connect2Compete, (C2C) dedicated to helping low income families get online except neither the FCC nor the C2C members ever bothered to discuss these new increases are on ALL customers, or even question the fact that the state's rate increases also harmed the same 'low income' families the FCC purports to be helping.
Harms To Business Innovation Are On Multiple Levels:
58) VOIP services are harmed as it requires broadband and if Verizon closes down the PSTN, then VOIP can't be used while customers use VOIP on cable will be harmed as the stand alone VOIP service is redundant to a package, which customers buy for the price advantages over stand alone. 
59) Cloud Computing becomes a joke: A cloud service requires upload speeds. AT&T's U-Verse doesn't have great upload speed nor do most wireless services. And rural customers with no broadband can't use it.
Questions and Issues:
60) Are customers' de facto investors in the wireless spectrum being purchased?
61) Does 1 wire in the US constitute a robust market that will help America -- or anti-trust violations?
62) Market forces are missing for infrastructure building. Wireless can never get to 1 Gbps speed (1000 Mbps), and without serious infrastructure building the entire economic growth will be moving overseas to countries who are building next generation networks. 
63) Market forces are missing for competition to create next generation networks or lower prices. 
64) Is wireless going to be a competitor to the wired service or a collaborator? 
65) If the DOJ is going to allow one wire to win -- the cable wire -- and the phone companies' wireline-and wireless collude, here's the future -- slow broadband, higher prices, less choice and the creation of a new digital wasteland for most of America, controlled by the telecom-cable-cartel.
66) It ain't a fair fight. The bottom line is that this is all a very well coordinated attack on the American public with the goal being -- how much money can we squeeze out of customers and how little can we actually deliver. Its like a chess game where one side owns the board and even has secret passageways, while the American public sits blindfolded with own pawn.
Discussion: Taking a Ride on a Superhighway.
Let's first go through the wireless-wireline market failure landscape slowly as there are a number of moving parts. I will use a loosely fitting analogy of a highway and air travel to explain the lay of the land for the layman.
In the 1990's a state pays a contractor to upgrade the State's highway system from an old road to one as 'smooth as glass', which will allow cars to go at higher speeds. The state creates a series of new fees to pay for this, charged to everyone in the state for this new highway. The company decides to not build for the first decade but puts in some new shrubs, as the state has allowed other contractors to do some of the work. After they get 'exclusive rights' they start building the new highway -- but whatever they build they now claim it is private property. And then, suddenly, they stop building and decide to abandon any plans -- even though they are still getting paid through rates.
Instead they put the allotted construction budgets into a new airport for planes that they and few others own. Like all planes, they have to take off and land using a runway, and the company controls those runways.
But there's a secret -- along the way the company figured out that if it controls the gas price and quality, it also controls the air planes as well as the auto traffic over their highway -- they control the distance a car can go and how fast it will burn fuel.
• Is it legal for a company to privatize public-funded assets? 
• Is it legal if the taxes are still being collected on drivers who will never get the upgraded highway?
• Is it legal for collusion if the owners of this highway also own the gas the cars use while traveling on the highway?
• Is it legal for collusion between those who control the runways and the airport as well as are the suppliers of the fuel for the planes?
Before we delve into the cable-telco comparisons, first let's tie-in the wireline-wireless issues.
Information Superhighway: The History of Wireline and Wireless in the US
In the 1990's Verizon and AT&T went state-to-state to get rate increases to fund the construction of the information superhighway -- replacing the old copper wiring with fiber optic services. After the deals were cut, the companies pulled a bait and switch and rolled out DSL -- which is a slow broadband service that goes over the old copper wiring. Then in 2004, AT&T announced U-Verse and Verizon announced FiOS -- which were their cable services, and whereever they did this construction, (which was paid for out of the budgets to upgrade the PSTN), they now claim it is private property -- even though it has mostly, if not all been publicly funded.
However, as of 2011, both companies have a) stopped deploying these new networks and moreover b) have been claiming that the remaining un-upgraded sections are the "PSTN' and that they are abandoning these 'older' networks.
Also, around 2004, Verizon and AT&T were able to get the FCC to close down competition on the wires. In fact, then-AT&T was an independent company as was MCI. However, the two largest competitors were shut out from using the networks -- then sold to SBC (now AT&T) and Verizon bought MCI.
The stupidity of blocking wired competition in America can best be seen by the rampant price increases that occurred since 2004 where Verizon New York's price of local service went up 84% while AT&T California's local service went up over 100% -- because there is no competition to lower the price. It also put 7500 small Internet Service Providers (ISPs) out of business -- the same small companies that had brought America to the web. It was not the current Verizon or AT&T but companies like AOL or small companies like Bway.net in New York City or BrandX in California or STIC in Texas.
In short, AT&T and Verizon were able to consolidate through mergers (even though at every merger they claimed they would be competing out of region), as well as vertically integrate the wired local phone, broadband, Internet and even the long distance markets, then cable and wireless.

Wireless and Airplanes and Gas
Like an airplane that has to take off and land at an airport, most don't know that wireless services are in actually wired services -- and Verizon in their territories are the incumbents doing this wiring.
More importantly however is the gas -- which are the special access and other fees that all wireless competitors pay back to Verizon to handle your calls and downloads for service. And the control of the price of gas also controls the price of wired and wireless broadband service.
The Competitive Highway and Services.
Returning to our model, in the same state there was another highway system, which was originally funded via investors and given a franchise for all buses, not to mention all the advertising and even billboards. And it too owns the gasoline rights for these services. However, over the years the company got the government to give them more 'subsidies' so they could expand the business with the intent to compete with the other highway system.
After a decade the company decides it wants to enter the 'airplane business' and starts buying up routes to airlines, but stops and decides to approach the other company and divide up the state. It will keep the buses and if the other company doesn't encroach too much on their business, they will let the company keep the airports and gas rights, and even sell them their airplane routes and advertise on their buses.
Cable franchises started in the 1980's and by 1996 the companies wanted to enter the broadband and Internet businesses and got the FCC to grant a new hidden fee called the "Social Contract", adding up to $5 a month to cable bills for upgrades. The cable companies also purchased wireless spectrum but are now in the process of selling it to the Verizon. As Verizon has stopped deploying FiOS and is abandoning the rest of the networks they did not 'privatize,' it now appears that they will not compete and create cable competition.
While the analogy has many moving parts, the bottom line is that if Verizon is allowed to close down the PSTN, stop building FiOS and takes over the wireless spectrum from the cable companies -- not to mention owning the 'gas -- the harms we have laid out will be the reality.
 
 

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