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SBC seeks freedom from price-increase limits
By Jerri Stroud
Of the Post-Dispatch
02/11/2005
SBC Communications Inc. is asking Missouri
regulators - and legislators - to free it from regulations that limit price
increases.
The Missouri Public Service Commission recently
completed hearings on the company's proposal to reclassify nearly all of its
services as competitive. Currently, rates for basic local services may increase
no more than the consumer price index for telecommunications services. Other
services can increase up to 8 percent. Neither limit would apply if the services
are considered competitive.
SBC said the proposal and related bills in the
Missouri House and Senate reflect increasing competition for telephone service
from wireless phones and those that use a high-speed Internet connection to
transport calls.
The Senate Committee on Commerce and the
Environment will hold a hearing on Senate Bill 237 at 8 a.m. Tuesday in
Jefferson City. The bill would declare services competitive in any area where
three companies provide services, whether they are wired, wireless or
computer-based voice-over-Internet-protocol services.
SBC is seeking the changes "absolutely based on
the changing nature of the industry," said spokeswoman Ellen Bogard. SBC
competes with cable system operators and wireless companies for customers, but
those industries aren't regulated. That puts SBC at a disadvantage, she said.
But Mike Dandino, senior counsel in the Office
of Public Counsel, said wireless and computer-based phones are incomplete
substitutes for regular phone service. Both are more expensive than basic local
phone service, and there are no discount plans for low-income users.
"It's providing competition, but I don't think
it provides the competition that's necessary to really serve as a counterbalance
to SBC having virtually no constraints on increasing prices or offering
services," he said.
Competitive phone companies contend that the
change in classification could lead companies to raise prices on stand-alone
telephone service while cutting prices on bundled-services that combine local,
long-distance, wireless, satellite television and high-speed Internet service,
for example. Customers might end up paying more for a less robust service.
Large telephone companies could raise rates for
basic residential service in areas with limited competition and use profit from
those areas to woo business customers that have switched to competitors, said Ed
Cadieux, senior regulatory counsel for NuVox Communications Inc.
Jerry Howe, president of Big River Telephone
Co., said: "The biggest concern I have is that if they were given the freedoms
proposed in the bill, they could keep rates high in some areas and make them low
where they had competition."
He noted that SBC isn't asking to deregulate
access fees it charges to terminate calls from long-distance companies and other
carriers. SBC and other phone companies collect $485 million a year in access
fees that are supposed to keep basic rates low.
Greg Harrison, president of the Missouri Cable
Television Association, said, "We just don't feel like the time is right to be
talking about total deregulation. We feel like it's premature."
Parties in the PSC case are expected to submit
briefs by Friday, and a decision could come in the spring.
Reporter Jerri Stroud
E-mail: jerristroud@post-dispatch.com
Phone: 314-340-8384
From the St. Louis Post Dispatch |