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CPUC Tweaks T-Mobile/Sprint Conditions Before Thursday Vote

The California Public Utilities Commission reasserted authority to review T-Mobile/Sprint, while tweaking some conditions the carriers opposed, in a revised proposed decision released Wednesday (see 2004150050). Commissioners plan to vote Thursday. T-Mobile and Sprint “have California wireless subsidiaries that are…

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public utility telephone corporations under state law, and subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission,” the CPUC said. The agency rejected the carriers’ motion to withdraw their wireline application, plus Sprint’s letter relinquishing its wireline certificate, both of which the carriers used to lay a foundation for closing without California OK. The CPUC removed specific backup power obligations and requirements that 5G commitments extend to 2030. It added a condition that 93% of California's population have 300 Mbps download speeds in 2024. The agency also tweaked conditions for Lifeline, a Boost pilot program and CalSpeed testing. The edits “are more meaningful in what they do not say, more so than the relatively small changes,” emailed The Utility Reform Network Managing Director-San Diego Christine Mailloux. The commission “held steady in its correct and critical position that it has the full authority under the California Public Utilities Code to review all aspects of this merger and to impose conditions.” The companies completed their deal and began integrating in states other than California.