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New Owner Ziply Fiber Moves Quickly to Overhaul Frontier’s Network in Pacific Northwest

Phillip Dampier May 21, 2020 Broadband Speed, Competition, Consumer News, Frontier, Public Policy & Gov't, Ziply Fiber 47 Comments

Even with the threat of COVID-19 and a virtual nationwide work-from-home initiative, the new owners of Frontier Communications’ network in Washington, Oregon, Montana and Idaho are moving rapidly to repair persistent network issues, create a backup network, and lay the foundation to bring fiber to the home service to 85% of its customers over the next three years.

Ziply Fiber of Kirkland, Wash., formerly known as Northwest Fiber, acquired the Frontier Communications service areas in the Pacific Northwest just as Frontier itself was on the verge of declaring bankruptcy. It will waste little time upgrading Frontier’s copper wire network to get fiber service to customers fast.

“After Frontier bought Verizon’s landlines and FiOS networks in Washington and Oregon in 2010, it felt like the last decade was a phone company driving in neutral,” said Dale Prescott, a FiOS customer in Washington State. “You could feel Frontier never wanted to spend any money out here. It was like they were a caretaker of Verizon’s network, and while we got some service improvements here and there, Frontier also took away a lot too.”

Service reliability suffered, especially in areas that remained served by copper over the last decade. Customers reported lengthy outages and waiting times for repairs, and DSL speeds were actually reduced in some areas because deteriorating network infrastructure could no longer support earlier, faster speeds. In a decade of service, Frontier only managed to provide fiber connections to about 33% of its customers, the vast majority of it acquired from Verizon.

“Frontier never invested much in its network, and what it did invest seemed mostly to keep the lines from falling off the poles,” Prescott said. “Businesses got slightly better service when Frontier boosted its fiber capacity, primarily to serve commercial customers. But if you lived in the sticks, your service got worse over time, not better.”

Ziply Fiber plans to change that experience with a promise to regulators to spend about $500 million overhauling Frontier’s network in the region. Most of that spending will be devoted to upgrading customers to fiber optics. Just a few weeks after closing on its acquisition of Frontier landlines, Ziply told residents in 13 communities to expect fiber upgrades that began this spring. The majority long suffered with Frontier DSL, often at speeds as low as 3 Mbps.

Among the first towns to get fiber service are Kellogg, Moscow, and Coeur d’Alene — all in Idaho. Work has already commenced and is expected to be finished by fall. Ziply wants to keep construction costs as low as possible, so it intends to do aerial deployment of fiber by wrapping the optical cable around existing copper wire telephone cables already on the pole. This process, known as “overlashing” will simplify installation by not requiring additional space to place fiber cables next to existing telephone wiring or going to the effort of removing the existing copper wiring, which raises costs.

Overlashing has met with some controversy, however. Telephone companies are strongly in favor of allowing the process for optical fiber installation because they rarely need permission or costly permits from utility pole owners, often electric utilities. Opposition comes primarily from some electric companies, which claim overlashing can make existing installations “unsafe” by placing too much weight on existing wiring, which may have been installed decades earlier. Those electric utilities also stand to make money from forcing companies to seek new permits for placing fiber on poles, and that permission does not come free of charge.

Fiber customers will be able to select internet plans up to 1,000 Mbps. Enhanced DSL service in some areas is available at speeds up to 115 Mbps, but most of these service areas will probably be served by fiber to the home service, eventually.

Ziply Fiber Upgrade Projects (May, 2020)

  • Washington—Anacortes, Kennewick, Pullman, Richland and Snohomish
  • Oregon—Coquille, Coos Bay, La Grande, North Bend
  • Idaho—Coeur d’Alene, Kellogg, Moscow
  • Montana—Libby

To further speed fiber upgrades, Ziply acquired Wholesail Networks, already contracted to manage fiber network design for Ziply. Company officials quickly identified multiple weak spots in Frontier’s network, particularly relating to its resiliency when fiber cables were cut or copper wiring was stolen. Ziply is building in network redundancy, with each portion of its network served by at least two sets of fiber cabling and identical equipment in each of more than 130 central switching offices. In many markets, Ziply will maintain at least three redundant fiber connections to make certain if one (or two) networks go down, customers can still be served by a third with no interruption in service.

Ziply is also avoiding the usual nightmares customers experience when switching between one company’s systems to another. Frontier’s customers suffered significantly from a cutover from Verizon’s operations and billing systems, which often left them disconnected or mis-billed. To prevent that from happening again, Ziply literally cloned Frontier’s existing back office systems, so customers won’t experience any “cutover” problems.

Ziply executives have been candid about the network they are acquiring. They told regulators the network was in reasonably good condition in some places, but not all. Ziply promised to fix the network weak spots, resolve customer repair orders at least two-thirds faster than Frontier did, and make comparatively broader investments in network operations. Analysts predict Ziply has a better chance of success than Frontier did, primarily because Frontier’s operations were mired in debt, making new investment in network upkeep and upgrades difficult.

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Andrew
Andrew
3 years ago

Good for them. Frontier thanks for holding everyone back all this time. /s

Ian
Ian
3 years ago
Reply to  Andrew

Jokes on us.

Since the Ziply acquisition our fiber while faster (actual gig speeds) now cuts in and out every evening between 7 and 9pm.

So faster, but family movie night is borked.

Lee
Lee
3 years ago

Frontier’s logo should be on urinal screens.

Joe
Joe
3 years ago

Worse service ever ( Snohomish County(. They crashed my mail app which erased all the browser bookmarks, I keep getting facetime calls from myself, and my internet stalls or turns on and off constantly. Although they sent out a nice welcoming letter to all of us with a list of great up-grades, not anywhere did it mention maintaining or increasing security.

The Dude
The Dude
3 years ago
Reply to  Joe

I really can’t see how a service issue can be responsible for crashing your mail app and erasing your bookmarks.

Mouse
Mouse
3 years ago
Reply to  The Dude

My mail app has froze and stopped working.

Master of None
Master of None
3 years ago
Reply to  Mouse

That’s not a ISP issue. That’s a software issue.

Jerry
Jerry
2 years ago
Reply to  The Dude

Then you’re probably a company hack.

Ronnie Robinson
Ronnie Robinson
3 years ago

Why can’t i disconnect service effective today? They told me I have to wait til the end of the month for it to disconnect, meaning I have to pay the full month even though I already have Xfinity service activated today.

Epiphany
Epiphany
3 years ago

Are you sure you haven’t already paid and they’re saying you pay a month ahead, you already subscribed, no refund.

Either way their customers service so far are all unhelpful liars. They say no contract so you should be able to leave if you want, same day. AND I would not have an unexplained almost 20percent raise in price.

Jerry
Jerry
2 years ago

Because Ronnie, they are a very poor company that seemingly knows NOTHING about the telecomm business…but..they are trying to browbeat lots of us for every single penny they can get out of you….

Carol Cole
Carol Cole
3 years ago

I have experienced problems since Ziply took over. I no longer can use my Dish Anywhere app because it will not connect with my server. I can not even run a speed test because it cannot find my server! Not real happy.

Jack
Jack
3 years ago

Ziply is a bad joke a huge downgrade from Frontier, they actually lowered my internet speed to 2.7 mbps from a previous 4.3 mbps. Empty promises, third world connection speeds, they recite “you are getting all the service you are paying for” if you make a complaint.

Eric
Eric
3 years ago
Reply to  Jack

2.7 and 4.3 are odd numbers.. 4.3 doesn’t seem right in the first place.

Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  Eric

Eric,
The numbers are what I can actually get using Ookla Speed Test. The service line to my home needs to be replaced, it has been damaged multiple times by Comcast and other utility companies.
My speed routinely falls below 1.0.

Roger
Roger
3 years ago
Reply to  Jack

I agree with the above Jack in that I use DSL and it went from SLOW to almost a stop ! And now it sends an e-mail several times in the effort of sending it once. A blazing 264KB up and 2.18 Download and I can only upgrade for double the price (for one year ). You would think that they might be able to have an increased speed for much less since it takes nothing to turn it on and no service since its on my existing phone wires.

Jonathan
Jonathan
3 years ago

I just had new service installed from Ziply fiber. So far so good. My only complaint is that technician showed up without a phone call. When I ordered the service I picked 12:00 to 4:00 PM window for install. However the tech showed up around 9:00 AM without a call ahead. Tech also shared with me that they are offering Gig speed service but their network is not capable of delivering gig speeds yet.

Catwoman
Catwoman
3 years ago

I would disassociate myself from the Frontier name if I were you. They have a lousy reputation in Seattle area.

Eric
Eric
3 years ago

I’ve had Frontier fiber internet since 2015 and haven’t had any problems until Ziply took over. Since Ziply took over, my internet service has been going down several times almost every day. Recently I called Ziply customer support a couple times about it and got hung up on after a few minutes. A couple days ago, I finally got a customer support person at Ziply who ran a test and said it detected a low signal at my house, so they’re sending a tech out tomorrow afternoon to diagnose it.

Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  Eric

Eric,
So far I have only received promises to replace the undergraound service wire to my home. Did they actually repair your line or did you get the “Ziply promise”.

Richard Robinson
Richard Robinson
3 years ago
Reply to  Eric

In Arlington Ziply is as poor as, or worse than, Frontier. Slow, no fiber, pay fast internet prices for dsl speeds ($40) when they advertise $20, I think, for new fiber. They also are very difficult to contact to talk with. Not good at all.

Linda
Linda
3 years ago
Reply to  Eric

I had similar internet experience when Ziply took over and I thought they were adjusted to the system and sometimes it did get better. Recently due to the remote learning, our WIFI seems not strong enough to meet the need. But I tested wired speed and it was 30/30 Mbps as what the company promised and it should be enough for 5 devices on streaming but the WIFI speed only got 2 to 5 Mbps. I was about to switch to Xfinity but thought to give Ziply Fiber a chance. So I called the technical support and they suggested to… Read more »

ALF
ALF
3 years ago

Frontier had the worst customer service ever. DSL speeds remain mired at about 1 (yes, ONE) Mbps, down, much slower than that, up. I live a few miles South of Snohomish, and am hoping that Ziply will string fiber that far in the near future.

just me
just me
3 years ago
Reply to  ALF

You are lucky, that is one if 4 locations in the state that will get fiber. It is a lot more reliable.

L H
L H
3 years ago

Frontier had service issues but was an adequate steward of the FiOS at least, although they squandered a lot of their potential. Already since Ziply took over, we’re experiencing buffering issues we never had with Frontier. This is unrelated to internet speed, it’s got traffic flow is managed by Ziply. I’ve seen similar complaints on NextDoor.It’s particularly frustrating to wait a minute or more for apps to reconnect with the server. I hope this is not a sign of things to come!

Ian
Ian
3 years ago
Reply to  L H

It’s not buffering. The service actually cuts out and your router has to reconnect.

A downgrade from Frontier.

Cody
Cody
3 years ago

Frontier has never been great, but since Ziply Fiber took over it’s been a nightmare. Internet cuts out multiple times daily, causing us to reboot our (new) router. Sometimes it’s out for hours at a time. We were also overcharged $100+ and have been trying to get it resolved for 2 months now. They tell me they will call me back in 5-7 days, and we hear nothing back. Everytime I call them it’s like I’m restarting the whole process over again. Now they are supposed to mail me something within 30 days and I can almost guarantee it won’t… Read more »

Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  Cody

I have had terrible internet since Wave went under. Version, Frontier and now Ziply all have failed to provied me anything but terrible speeds for $96 a month. By terrible I mean 2.7 mbps measured by Oookla Speed Test, for a lot of the time less than 1.mbps. The FCC should set minimum levels of service that a company must meet to be able to bill a customer.

Nathat Sampson
Nathat Sampson
3 years ago

I think it’s god-awful there should not be data caps on any internet whatsoever

Carl
Carl
3 years ago

…oh boy… here we go again…! my internet service started with verizon, then frontier communications took over, and now, here we are again, a ‘new’ company – ziplyfiber – is taking over… yikes…! …if “Ziply Fiber plans to change that experience with a promise to regulators to spend about $500 million overhauling Frontier’s network in the region.” hmmm... well, maybe that might be true for ‘hardware end’, but when it comes to spending money on updating the website ‘infrastructure’ end, hmmm; well, when is ziply gonna remove the frontier communications branding and replace it with their own…? and the product… Read more »

Ken
Ken
3 years ago

I had Frontier for 7 years and never had any trouble. Now since Ziply took over, our internet slows to a crawl (3 minutes to load Amazon) all the time, at random times everyday.
When I called Ziply, they said i need to get a computer with an ethernet cable to do some tests. All my computers are laptops with only wireless.
I’m done with Ziply. They’re lame.

just me
just me
3 years ago
Reply to  Ken

It take about 20 seconds to plug an ethernet cable into your laptop. If you are that lazy you are getting the service you deserve.

Paul Houle
Paul Houle
3 years ago
Reply to  just me

20 seconds if your laptop has an Ethernet cable. The one I am typing on now has one, but my late-model Dell laptop from work doesn’t. You can get a USB-to-Ethernet adapter, but at least half of the time I’ve tried one the drivers didn’t work. Internet performance is related to the product of packet loss and ping time. WiFi introduces packet loss by its physical nature. If your internet connection has a slow ping, it takes longer to recover from packet loss. Thus bad WiFi + bad DSL is a match made in hell. I am all for wired… Read more »

Poopsie
3 years ago
Reply to  Paul Houle

Ouch, that was a painfully inaccurate oversimplification of how the Internet works…

Richard Robinson
Richard Robinson
3 years ago
Reply to  just me

We are using ethernet cable and ziply still sucks.

Epiphany
Epiphany
3 years ago

Anyone want to join/start a facebook group calling out Ziply’s lies and bad customer service?

RYAN GREENE
RYAN GREENE
3 years ago

“Ziply is also avoiding the usual nightmares customers experience when switching between one company’s systems to another. Frontier’s customers suffered significantly from a cutover from Verizon’s operations and billing systems, which often left them disconnected or mis-billed. To prevent that from happening again, Ziply literally cloned Frontier’s existing back office systems, so customers won’t experience any “cutover” problems.” This couldn’t be a bigger lie. Our internet went from stable and sorta slow to a crawl and going down every few hours. We have already had our rates increased and been overbilled even given the rate increase. Also we have no… Read more »

Linda
Linda
3 years ago
Reply to  RYAN GREENE

Frontier was a crab. It secretly increased my bill without notice until I called them twice. They even lied to me the first time. Ziply Fiber just took over and it takes time to fix all the mired Issues that Version and Frontier left. Did you call their technical support? I had similar internet experience when Ziply took over and I thought they were adjusted to the system and sometimes it did get better. Recently due to the remote learning, our WIFI seems not strong enough to meet the need. But I tested wired speed and it was 30/30 Mbps… Read more »

Neo
Neo
3 years ago

Ziply just as bad as frontier our Internet drops dozens of times per day. They also have IP drift so we have the reset our HULU account weekly which takes 30-45 minutes each time. All this caused by Obamas internet rules.

Anonymous
Anonymous
3 years ago

Worst internet ever. Not one problem with Frontier now issues everyday

MW in Beaverton
MW in Beaverton
3 years ago

Ziply disconnected our DSL without warning even though we told them that we have elderly, high-risk (for C-virus) residents. When they reconnected, they reduced our bandwidth by 70%. Told us that we had been “overprovisioned” by accident, for the last 20 years. They can restore our bandwidth…for a (much) higher monthly rate. We’re moving to Xfinity.

KMun
KMun
3 years ago

What a joke. They raised the price AND their service is even worse than when we had Frontier!

Sherry
Sherry
3 years ago

A few weeks ago I had a problem with the download speed slowing to 1-2Mbps. Again there’s a problem with the speed and right now the download speed is 1.47Mbps. I can hardly do anything online. I’m paying $48 a month for the slowest DSL speed. I hope this will post. It’s not connecting with the reCAPTCHA. Will try again. Still can’t connect so I can post this. 3rd try. 4th. Will copy this and try later to post it.

Nadine
Nadine
3 years ago

My 94-year-old mother lives in an Assisted Living facility in Pullman. She has not had phone service for 6 days. Her phone is her only contact with the outside world during the Covid restrictions. These ongoing phone issues are a huge problem and are affecting her emotional well-being. When will these problems be finally fixed? It’s been almost a week without reliable phone service. I hope she can expect an adjustment to her monthly bill.

Tony
Tony
2 years ago

Now getting 2Mbps and its been quite along time since Ziply has taken over and did nothing. They still take my money for this sub par service and I keep giving it to them because. Sudden link is the worst and only service in the Kellogg Idaho area. We would get in and out high and low speeds. But now its just 2mbps all the time.. Thanks Ziply for taking a bad situation and making it worse!! What is are alternative nothing and they know it!!

angela evans
2 years ago

i hate ziplyfiber the sasame worthless criminals nightmare customer service B evil customer sservice..still same austomer account abuse emplyees .5 boxes on my freakin house..over charges me 125. a month and took away 911 service. i hate this worse than frontier aassholes liteeral hell ..ask customers no customers treated right my neighbors pay 29. they turn me off after one month over one ti.e charge 75. cant get a bill sent to me..hidden fees ..a complete criminal operation. no justice no 911..the accountant says ..if its true about illuminati and your land thief neighbor your dead…yup and no 911 service..neighbor… Read more »

Jerry
Jerry
2 years ago

We got Frontier here for our landline in 1981…from that time until zipperfly took over here, we had….ZERO COMPLAINTS…just good steady reliable phone service. THEN …ZIPPERFLY TOOK OVER WITH LOTS OF MOUTH AND PROMISES…ALL WORSE THAN EMPTY PROMISES. Since Zipper has been our carrier…we have had …CONSTANT PROBLEMS AND NOW…WE HAVE NO SERVICE AT ALL…I HAVE ADVANCED HEART DISEASE…THESE XXX’S DON’T GIVE A DIDDLY RATS BEHIND..THAT I’M HERE WITH NO PHONE SERVICE. IF EVER A “PHONE COMPANY” DESERVED TO BE SUED OUT OF EXISTENCE, IT THIS DESPICABLE OUTFIT.

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