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August 24, 2004 6:15 PM PDT

Verizon blames federal rules for broadband holdup

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ASPEN, Colo.--Verizon Communications would like to wire tens of millions of homes in the northeast United States with high-speed fiber connections but is being stymied by arcane federal regulations, the company's president said Tuesday.

Lawrence Babbio, Verizon's vice chairman and president, said its 30 megabits-per-second Fios service went live in Keller, Texas, on Monday and will be available to more than 1 million homes by the end of the year. But the Federal Communications Commission is effectively preventing Verizon from offering Fios in a long swath of states, stretching from Maine to Virginia, Babbio warned.

"We absolutely have to let the market work," Babbio said at a conference here, organized by the Progress & Freedom Foundation. "The FCC hasn't done their job for the last eight years."

At issue is the interaction between the 1996 Telecommunications Act and a dense series of FCC decisions. If Verizon spends billions of dollars to run fiber to homes in the northeast United States, it could be forced to make those fiber links available to rivals at below its own cost--a money-losing prospect that is preventing the company from offering Fios in those states and the District of Columbia.

The explanation lies in a fluke of history: Verizon grew out of the combination of GTE, Bell Atlantic and Nynex. Because GTE is not a former Bell company, the areas it used to serve--including California, Florida and Texas--aren't covered by a heap of obscure regulations.

But the old Bell Atlantic and Nynex territories in the northeast are subject to different rules. That's why Verizon is offering Fios only in California, Florida and Texas. "We cannot run the risk of having fiber unbundled," Babbio said, referring to the Telecommunications Act's requirements that Verizon offer deeply discounted "unbundled" access to its fiber loops.

Even given those limitations, Babbio predicted, 2.5 million homes will have Fios available by 2005, with the number "possibly going to 3 (million) to 4 million."

Babbio also said Verizon is keenly interested in offering "a video channel to the home" that, when combined with Fios, could be a "turning point for our own businesses."

The FCC already has voted 3-2, with the pair of Democrats objecting, to immunize fiber from many regulatory burdens levied by one section of the Telecom Act. But because of a regulatory twist, another section is giving Verizon headaches--and the FCC has not acted to clear things up.

"While the FCC did agree to not apply the unbundling regulations to new fiber in a decision last summer under one section of the communications act, perhaps the new fiber nevertheless would have to be unbundled under a different section of the communications act," said Randolph May, a senior fellow at the Progress & Freedom Foundation. "In effect, one positive decision was partially negated by the lack of a clear decision on the application of another section."

May added: "It's important that the commission once and for all decide that new investment in fiber should not be unbundled."

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Verizon blames consumers for wanting a competivie choice...
by bobtheman22 August 25, 2004 10:01 AM PDT
Hey Verizon, just move to Cuba if you want to be a monopoly because us capitalist American's are getting sick and tired of your whining about competition!
Reply to this comment
plenty of companys
by simcity1976 August 25, 2004 11:17 AM PDT
there is plenty of other company's out the that isn't the problem. the rules are out dated. Nobody is going to build a billion dollar network and be forced to share it for less then what it takes to maintain it.

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