Supporters throng hearing on merger
By TUX TURKEL
MaineToday Media, Inc.
Kennebec Journal & Morning Sentinel 09/26/2007

Staff photo by Andy Molloy
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Staff photo by Andy Molloy
FAIRPOINT POSTCARDS: Maine Public Advocate Richard Davies, center, collects postcards that spilled from a wheelbarrow that Maine AFL-CIO President Ed Gorham, right, brought to the Governor's office Tuesday in Augusta with Brian McAnally, second from right, of Working America. Several labor unions helped collect the cards throughout Maine to object to the proposed sale of Verizon to Fairpoint Communications. The unions believe 5,000 cards were collected.
PORTLAND -- FairPoint Communications promises to aggressively expand high-speed Internet service in rural Maine, if it wins regulatory approval to buy Verizon's telephone assets.

One thing it did deliver Tuesday night was supporters.

Backers of the sale dominated testimony at a public hearing in Portland before the Maine Public Utilities Commission.

At least 175 people filled the Portland High School auditorium, according to police estimates. A majority of those who addressed the three commissioners spoke in favor of the $2.7 billion transfer of Verizon's phone network in northern New England to FairPoint.

The deal would transfer poles, wires and other equipment from a legacy carrier of the Bell Telephone age to an independent phone company with no experience in running a statewide telecommunications system.

If approved, it could lead to better telephone and Internet access in Maine for homes and businesses, or a deterioration of service and higher rates -- depending on your point of view.

Kurt Adams, the PUC's chair, has said he considers the sale Maine's most important telecommunications issue in a generation.

The Portland hearing was the last of three sessions before commissioners. The first two were held earlier this month, in Fort Kent and Bangor.

The sale was heavily supported by those who testified in northern Maine, where FairPoint currently operates in the St. John Valley. Supporters and opponents were more evenly split at the Bangor session.

Tuesday's hearing wraps up attempts by both sides to sway public opinion -- at least for the moment.

Earlier in the day, labor unions organized a media event at the State House in Augusta. Opponents delivered a wheelbarrow filled with post cards addressed to Gov. John Baldacci, asking him to stop the sale.

Last week, on the eve of the Bangor hearing, FairPoint sent out a news release promising to build an advanced fiber-optic network in the three states within 24 months of approval. The announcement was aimed largely at gaining business support.

FairPoint obviously made a strong effort to organize a show of support in Portland for Tuesday's hearing.

FairPoint currently has 180 employees in Maine at offices from South Portland to Fryeburg to South China. Dozens of those workers came to the hearing, some by bus. Many wore forest green T-shirts that read: "FairPoint Communications. Connecting northern New England to a brighter future." They filled several rows in the middle of the auditorium.

The workers were joined by local business people and state legislators who voiced support.

Heather Collins, executive director of the Southern Midcoast Maine Chamber of Commerce, said her area is growing and needs better access to broadband Internet services to attract new workers and employers.

FairPoint can do that, she said.

Similar economic development comments were made by Chris Hall, who represents the Portland Regional Chamber of Commerce.

Stacey Morrison, chief executive of Ganneston Construction Corp. in Augusta, said her growing business relies on the Internet to communicate with customers, but many in rural areas lack good access.

She also said FairPoint can provide that.

But the PUC also heard from residents and business people who expressed doubt that FairPoint, a much smaller company than Verizon, has the resources to bring high speed service that will compete with fiber optic technology.

Christopher Weston, a photographer from Parsonsfield, said he subscribes to Time Warner Cable because speed is important for uploading his pictures. The DSL technology FairPoint uses, he said, would put Maine at a disadvantage.

William Barker, a long-time employee of Micucci Wholesale Foods in Portland, said he's on the phone all day with pizza shops and businesses around the state that depend on good phone service. Many of them fear the sale, he said.

Barker also got a laugh from the audience when he distinguished himself during his introduction: "I'm not an employee of FairPoint. I'm not an employee of Verizon. And I'm not a politician."

The details behind FairPoint's commitments on rates, speed and service will be among the issues taken up by the commission over the next two weeks as it holds technical hearings in Augusta. The sessions get under way Oct. 4.

The commission will analyze the financial soundness of the merger, effects on consumer rates and telecommunications competition. It also will consider deployment of high-speed Internet and FairPoint's abilities to meet service quality standards.

It's possible the commissioners will make a decision by year's end, although deliberations may last until January.

Regulators in New Hampshire and Vermont also must approve the sale for it to go forward.

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1-9 of 9 comments:

Joe Schmoe of Topsham, ME
Sep 26, 2007 9:52 PM
Pathetic. FP's highest speed "broadband" is 768K... VZ offers that as the lowest speed they consider DSL -- and at 1/4 the price.

This is a goat path we're getting onto. Buildout like FP promises is a waste of time.report abuse
Chris of Harpswell, ME
Sep 26, 2007 3:08 PM
I garbled a sentence: the FCC proposal is that the best wireless bandwidth options in a major federal bandwidth auction will go to national wireless BROADBAND competitors (not bandwidth). That is the FCC seems determined that consumers in rural Maine will have wireless broadband that will be competitive with DSL.report abuse
tev of Augusta, ME
Sep 26, 2007 3:05 PM
It is unbelievably sad that everyone thinks arguing makes a difference. These hearings are just for the sake of appearance, people.

Governor Baldacci made the decision long ago, in agreement with Verizon, a very wealthy company with lots and lots of money that it spends on big political interests groups to buy the good will of politicians just like our governor. They want out of Maine, and even though Fairpoint has the WORST service record of any utility ever seen in Maine and has never kept any of the promises it has made before, Baldacci has been bought off and intends to see that Verizon gets what they want and is selling the people of Maine out to Fairpoint.

Baldacci first pushed out the longtime Chairman of the PUC and replaced him with his buddy Kurt Adams, and then pushed out the longtime Public Advocate and replaced him with his pal Richard Davies. These two career politicians do whatever Baldacci wants, with no care as to what is best for Maine. And that is why these hearings are meaningless. Baldacci decided two years ago that Verizon would be let out of Maine, and so Adams and Davies are going to make it happen.

End of story.report abuse
Chris of Harpswell, ME
Sep 26, 2007 2:51 PM
A survey in 2006 found over 10% of US consumers rely exclusively on wireless technology, and among those in poverty the percentage who have "cut the cord" is highest. However the companies who offer wireless service to those who have "cut the cord" have to pay federal Universal Service Charge now amounting to over 10% of their wireless revenue. One reason the tax rate is so high and has gone up rapidly is because of the rapidly growing cost to subsidize uneconomic rural telephone service in states like Maine, where many consumers have no broadband alternative besides DSL.

Obviously as the voting power of those consumers who have "cut the cord" increases and wireless broadband becomes more available, then federal subsidies for rural telephone service in Maine will be increasingly in jeopardy. Also the FCC believes that a national wireless broadband network is more economic for rural consumers and is proposing to give the best wireless bandwidth options in a major federal bandwidth auction to national wireless bandwidth competitors. The FCC Chairman said before Congress in July:

"I am also proposing stringent build-out requirements – the strictest build-out the Commission has ever proposed – to help ensure that the rural and underserved areas of the country will benefit from the provision of new services that this spectrum will facilitate. These build-out requirements include interim benchmarks and tough penalties. We also would permit higher power limits in rural areas, which will reduce the number of towers necessary to serve consumers and lower the cost of build-out."

The Chairman also said he believe that a national wireless broadband network will be economic in rural areas, whereas obsolete rural telephone service and DSL is not economic without massive federal rural telephone subsidies. In this light FairPoint Communications proposal to promote DSL for rural Maine doesn't make economic sense.report abuse
Lowrider1340 of Windsor, ME
Sep 26, 2007 1:32 PM
Why isn't there a hearing in the China/Sidney/Winthrop areas where Fairpoint has total control and is failing miserably?? Service is terrible, DSL is as slow as dialup, and if you're late by a day on a payment, you get a final cancellation notice!! Ask the areas that have Fairpoint now how they like it!! Deregulation was supposed to promote competition, but yet Fairpoint won't let Time Warner offer digital phone in these areas! So what's gonna happen when they have control over the whole State and Vermont and NH?? Sounds like a miserable monopoly on the rise!! (And I'm just a regular citizen, not an employee or union member of either company.)report abuse
firemandav of kennebunk, ME
Sep 26, 2007 9:43 AM
Micheal of Gardiner is right, the unions don't care about the worker, it's only the money and power. It's all right there on the CWA (Communications Workers of America) District 1 website. Big labor likes big companies, they're easier to strangle.

Despite what the unions say, Fairpoint has promised to honor all outstanding collective bargaining agreements.

I suggest to all union members to make nice with Fairpoint, they will be writing your paychecks in just a few months.report abuse
brcuda of Winterport, ME
Sep 26, 2007 8:37 AM
I say let Fairpoint have it!! You would be hard pressed to find a company that does so little and waste so much as Verizon. I have workeed for the State for over 25 years, and have observed first hand the extreme lack of effort and waste of time and money by Verizon crews, region managers, and even their Consultants. For example, I was told by a crew that it takes 2 crews to get any work done, this particular verizon camp has 5 crews, they will send 2 crews to one project, 2 crews to another project, and one crew to yet another project. Well, the one crew will sit in their bucket truck all day and do nothing, because, as they explained to me, it takes 2 crews to work. So instead of driving 20 miles up the road to assist the 2 working crews on a different project, this one crew will arrive and sit day after day until another crew can show up to help. Then their 8 hour work day consist of hours of 10 to 2 with about a one hour lunch thrown in. I could go on and on. Region Managers do nothing because the crews are all Union. I am not against Unions, but this is just another example of how when a Union gets to big and powerful, they actually end up hurting the very people they are supposed to protect.report abuse
Taxpayah of Farmingdale, ME
Sep 26, 2007 8:35 AM
William Barker is not a long-time Micucci employee unless 4 years counts as "long". He is a union shill who retired out of Verizon in 2003.

report abuse
Michael Smith of Gardiner, ME
Sep 26, 2007 8:33 AM
Don't kid yourself folks - the AFL-CIO doesn't care about your internet or phone service. Their only concern is that the sale might jeopardize their revenue from IBEW-affiliated locals in Verizon. They don't care about you, only the money.report abuse

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