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FiOS Expansion is Still Dead: New Jersey’s Efforts to Win Over Verizon for Naught

Phillip Dampier May 6, 2019 Broadband Speed, Competition, Consumer News, Public Policy & Gov't, Verizon 4 Comments

Verizon’s FiOS expansion is still, still, still, still, and still dead.

Despite the passage of favorable legislation deregulating the state’s largest telecom companies, Verizon has thumbed its nose at New Jersey’s efforts to convince the company to expand its fiber-to-the-home service.

“Verizon does not plan to expand its FiOS service footprint,” wrote Tanya Davis, a Verizon franchise service manager for FiOS in New Jersey and New York. “The company remains focused on continuing to meet its franchise obligations, and delivering competitive services, and enhanced consumer choices, where the services are available.”

More than a decade after passing the 2006 Cable TV Act in New Jersey, designed to convince telecom companies to compete more vigorously with each other, Verizon remains uninterested in further expanding its fiber network in New Jersey and beyond.

After successfully lobbying the state to adopt a statewide cable TV franchise policy, making life easier for Verizon by not requiring the company to negotiate a contract with each town serviced, Verizon suddenly stopped caring after announcing a pullback in further FiOS expansion in 2010. The change in heart appears to have started at the top. Then CEO Ivan Seidenberg, who approved FiOS, retired and was replaced by Lowell McAdam, who preferred Verizon invest mostly in its wireless networks.

Vergano

As a result, New Jersey has a telecom industry-friendly deregulatory policy in place with nothing to show for it.

“People want to see competition,” Wayne Mayor Christopher Vergano told the North Jersey Record, citing complaints his office has received about Altice USA’s Optimum service. “Over the years, they’ve seen their cable bills increase. We’re trying to give residents options.”

Wayne’s Township Council passed a resolution asking state lawmakers to review the 2006 Cable TV Act to find a way to coerce Verizon to do more fiber upgrades in the state. In 2006, then Gov. John Corzine got Verizon to commit to wiring 70 towns across New Jersey, and Wayne was not one of them.

Verizon agreed to expand its fiber network to all county seats, as well as areas with a population density in excess of 7,111 residents per square mile.

New Jersey’s Board of Public Utilities (BPU) is still allowed to report on Verizon’s progress, but little else, thanks to deregulation. A BPU report stated deployment of FiOS slowed to a crawl between 2010-2013, when only three new towns were reached with fiber upgrades. What little interest Verizon still had in FiOS expansion ended after 2012’s Superstorm Sandy, after which Verizon ended expansion in urban areas of New Jersey as well.

“It’s solely Verizon’s discretion to add municipalities to its system-wide franchise,” a BPU spokesman told the newspaper.

Prior to deregulation, utility boards and regulators could compel companies to offer service instead of shrugging their shoulders and telling state lawmakers ‘it’s all up to Verizon.’

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Jim
Jim
4 years ago

They just retired their copper network with fiber in Mays Landing, NJ according to your post.

https://stopthecap.com/2018/09/05/verizon-switching-off-copper-network-in-parts-of-ny-nj-ma-pa-ri-and-va/

Once they retire locations that already have FIOS, they’ll begin to replace copper with fiber in new areas. Those areas will not have video just high speed FIOS internet. Cable tv is dead already.

Streaming is an option.

paul
paul
4 years ago

Im curious , I live in West Long Branch , Parts of it already have Fios but my area does not. I was told the hub is getting upgraded then the Fios will be completed. But other people tell me Comcast has a lock on West long branch and other companies aren’t allowed in. Can someone clear this up? Is it going to be completed in a town that has it partially like mine

Cindy
Cindy
4 years ago
Reply to  paul

I live in Pennsville in Salem County and I guess we don’t have a high enough population to get Verizon FiOS. Although like you I also heard that there are politics involved and Comcast is the only game in town (other providers “not allowed in”). Who knows if the politics thing is true. I guess it costs a lot of money to run fiber and they don’t think enough people will sign up for it to be profitable? Sorry I couldn’t answer your question, I’m just another person like you, wishing I could get something besides Comcast.

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