Among all the leading telecom
service providers, there prevails a monopoly of one government cell phone service provider or the other. To maintain
this monopolist position, the telecom giants often go out of their way to be an
impediment in the services of others.
The exact thing happened recently
when Verizon was seen coming in Charter’s way. Let’s see what happened.
Verizon Being an Obstacle in Charter’s Expansion
Now, the problem arises with
Charter’s move of expansion where the company needs to attach its equipment and
wiring to roadside poles in order to provide customers with its services. The
expansion is to be carried out in New York State.
The services to be offered by
Charter include internet service and TV services offered by the company.
The issue arises because most of
these roadside poles are either owned or co-owned by Verizon. Thus, to give
Charter a chance to deploy its equipment on these poles, Verizon, the leading government cell phone service provider,
has to take its own equipment down from a number of them.
For this, Charter Communications
has evidently submitted 822 applications for pole attachments to Verizon. These
applications included attachment requests for around 55, 856 poles. Along with
the applications, Charter has also paid application fees of $409,296 to
Verizon.
Now, besides this, Verizon – that
is known for its government cell phone plan – has been giving a hard time to Charter in the approval of the applications.
Out of the 822 applications, only
179 have been approved by Verizon to date. According to a complaint sent to the
PSC by Charter, even after receiving the application fees, the government cell phone service provider
isn’t taking the desired actions.
It has been seen that after the
acquisition of Time Warner cable by Charter Communications, the company is
bound to expand to new areas and Verizon is being a great obstacle in its way.
According to Charter, Verizon is
doing so for competitive reasons as the company, while being celebrated for its
government cell phone plans, also
offers TV services through its FiOS cable TV.
This clearly shows that Charter’s
TV and Internet services are bound to clash with that of Verizon’s in the
capital region and this is evidently dodged by the leading government cell phone service provider – Verizon.
What Verizon Has To Say
While being accused of deliberately
delaying its work on pole requests by Charter, Verizon denies the matter
completely.
According to Verizon’s spokesperson
Raymond McConville, "We have been more than cooperative and even presented
Charter with options to speed up their construction efforts,"
"For them to try to shift
blame is puzzling at best. We stand ready to continue to assist them and again
provide them with the methods to speed things up”, he added.
In a Nutshell
If
Verizon is deliberately getting in Charter’s way, the reasons are pretty loud
and clear. However, because of these reasons, the internet users that have
opted for Charter’s services might suffer because of Verizon’s level of
cooperation.
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