The California Public Utilities Commission voted Thursday to accept Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks' motion to withdraw their application to transfer control, closing the proceeding officially in the state. Other potential courses of action that were on the agenda were officially withdrawn. Another option was to approve the transfer of control subject to conditions, which would also close the proceeding but would require Comcast to provide enhanced service and information to VoIP users about safe operation during power outages and 911 calls. The other proposal on the agenda was to deny the application in the state and close the proceeding, which would maintain the current ownership structure of all involved parties.
The California Public Utilities Commission is scheduled to discuss Thursday how it will proceed with the now-dead Comcast purchase of Time Warner Cable and resulting divestitures to Charter Communications, and if it needs to investigate the condition of the state’s aging copper phone networks, said a Tellus Venture Associates blog post by Steve Blum. Blum is president of Tellus, which consults on developing community broadband systems. The commission can wrap up the Comcast deal in three ways: Approve it to establish a precedent for review of future transactions, deny it or allow Comcast to withdraw the application, Blum said. The CPUC previously approved a study of the aging copper networks, but the new agency President Michael Picker wants to scrap that and rely on the telcos to repair and maintain the networks, Blum said. Other commissioners are interested in going through with the study, he said. CPUC didn't comment.
The New York State Public Service Commission added a hearing Aug. 6 in Syracuse to its schedule for a telecom study (see 1506240034), it said in a news release. The commission is seeking public comment on the assessment report and on the questions posed in the original public notice, it said. Comments received in response to the notice will be used to develop recommendations for further regulatory changes, the PSC said. The hearing is at Syracuse City Hall, with an information session at 6 p.m. and the hearing at 7 p.m. There's also a hearing at the Poughkeepsie Town Hall, with information sessions at 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. and hearings at 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. Aug. 11. The final scheduled hearing is in Albany at the Bethlehem Town Hall, with an information session at 6 p.m. and the hearing at 7 p.m. Aug. 13.
The Agriculture Department approved $74.8 million in telecom loans and $11 million in community connect grants that will increase access for rural Americans in seven states, said a USDA news release Monday. Included in the grants is $6 million for Minnesota's Northeast Service Cooperative to provide broadband service to subscribers on the Fond du Lac Reservation. South Carolina is one of the states that received a loan from the USDA, for $12.38 million to upgrade its wireless network to 4G/LTE.
The New York State Public Service Commission said residential, business and wireless customers within the existing 631 area code in Suffolk County should be preparing for the introduction next year of the new 934 area code, according to a news release. The new 934 area code will be overlaid over the same geographic area as the 631 area code, said the PSC. Beginning July 16, customers in the 631 area code region requesting new service, an additional line or in some cases moving their service may be assigned a number in the new 934 area code. The ability to place calls within 631 using seven digits will end June 15, said the commission. Beginning June 18, all calls within 631 and 934 area codes must be placed using the 10-digit phone number, it said.
Verizon is offering its new FiOS Quantum Internet speed tier for upload and download speeds, giving residents in New York City and parts of northern New Jersey access to symmetrical 100 Mbps speeds, the company said in a news release Monday. Verizon is the only communications provider to offer a symmetrical speed tier of 100/100 Mbps in the New York metropolitan area, it said. Verizon’s 100/100 Mbps FiOS internet service tier addresses that growing demand and offers another option to subscribers between the company’s 75/75 and 150/150 tiers, the company said.
Emergency call dispatchers across Kansas will soon have access to vital 911 caller information due to an agreement with AT&T, said the company in a news release Monday. The Kansas 911 Coordinating Council awarded a contract to AT&T to provide a next-generation 911 emergency communications system statewide, it said. AT&T will use cloud, wireless and wireline technology to improve the system, it said. The new 911 system is expected to improve emergency response capabilities statewide, allowing individuals in rural areas to receive the same level of service as their big city counterparts in Kansas City and Wichita, it said.
Zayo took over support responsibilities and network oversight of Colorado intergovernmental broadband provider EAGLE-Net Alliance, the company said in news release Friday. Zayo Treasurer Scott Reardon told us that the agreement "doesn't have anything to do" with the suspension of a $100 million federal grant to expand educational broadband in the state given to EAGLE-Net, after issues with the project and much congressional scrutiny (see 1212100042). Reardon said that Zayo is stepping in as a "natural partner" for EAGLE-Net and is "in discussions about [further] expanding the partnership." EAGLE-Net didn't respond to a request for comment.
Mayor Bill de Blasio Thursday said New York City will be investing up to $10 million in providing free broadband services for Housing Authority developments in Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx. The program comes two months after the Democratic mayor promised to invest $70 million in achieving universal broadband by 2025. The investment "in free, high-speed Internet access in NYCHA developments across the city is part of that commitment, is part of building out a city where there is truly broadband access for all," de Blasio said, according to a transcript of the speech posted online. The effort is going to reach more than 16,000 people living in public housing, he said.
The Colorado Public Utilities Commission extended to Aug. 13 the reply deadline on possible revisions to 911 rules in response to recent legislation as well as events that affected 911 network reliability in Colorado, including recent catastrophic fires and floods (see 1505290056), said a notice from the PUC mailed on Thursday.