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More Details on Frontier’s Internet Overcharging Experiment in Mound, Minnesota

Phillip Dampier April 14, 2010 Consumer News, Editorial & Site News, Frontier 12 Comments

Karl Bode over at Broadband Reports offers an additional detail on Frontier’s Internet Overcharging experiment which is now being tested in Minnesota:

Late last week, someone familiar with business operations at Frontier Communications indicated to Broadband Reports that the company was going to begin testing a new capping scheme for heavy users. “Just wanted to let you know that Frontier is sending out letters to the top 50 bandwidth users in Mound Minnesota,” said the individual.

The city of Mound, a suburb located 19 miles to the west of Minneapolis/St. Paul, is home to 9,800 residents.  Mound is the birthplace of the Tonka truck, named after Lake Minnetonka, which surrounds Mound.  Residents of Hennepin County have watched their local phone company change hands several times over the years from Contel to GTE of Minnesota to Verizon to Citizens Telecommunications Company of Minnesota, which does business as Frontier Communications. Frontier has served this part of Minnesota since the end of August, 2000.

Hanus

For a community aggressively pursuing a downtown revitalization and redevelopment program designed to make the community attractive to new residents and businesses, news that the local DSL provider is now going to limit broadband usage and overcharge those who exceed their arbitrary limits is not good.

Among city officials, Mayor Mark Hanus and councilman David Osmek are both Frontier broadband customers.  The city is proud to stream its regular city council meetings online, something Frontier DSL customers will now have to avoid if they want to preserve as much of their 5GB monthly usage allowance as possible.

Action Alert and Alternatives for Mound, Minnesota

Mound City Hall (courtesy: City of Mound)

For Mound residents who do not want to be forced to limit their broadband activities to the ridiculously low 5GB allowance Frontier is now enforcing, we recommend these actions:

1) Call Frontier Communications at 1-800-921-8101 and tell them you will not keep your Frontier broadband service with a usage cap and you are prepared to take your business elsewhere immediately if they do not rescind their “experiment.”  If they attempt to charge you an early termination fee or cancellation fee if you do decide to cancel, let us know through the Contact link at the top of the page or in the comments attached to this article.

2) Contact your local media — the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, the Lakeshore Weekly News, The Laker, local news radio and television stations and let them know you think they should be covering this story and its potential impact on the local economy in Mound.

3) Your best alternative broadband provider is cable operator Mediacom which does not have a usage limitation on their broadband accounts.  Their speeds and pricing are also much better, based on Frontier’s advertised pricing of  “as low as” $49.99 a month for Frontier High-Speed Internet Max 3Mbps service or “prices starting at” $39.99 a month for Frontier High-Speed Internet Lite 768kps service.

Mediacom offers 3, 12 and 20Mbps broadband service in Mound.  Here are the details:

For New Mediacom customers:

Mediacom offers soon-to-be-ex Frontier customers free standard installation and a 12-month introductory offer for 12/1Mbps service for $49.95 a month.  Telephone service is also available through Mediacom with a bundled service discount.  Customers looking for a budget broadband alternative can sign up for 3Mbps service for $29.95 a month if they also take digital cable or digital phone.  For customers looking for the highest speeds, Mediacom offers 20/2Mbps service for $59.95 a month if you also get digital cable or phone service.

Mediacom is Mound's incumbent cable company

For Current Mediacom Non-Broadband customers:

If you have cable from Mediacom but use Frontier for broadband, you can switch to Mediacom cable modem service and obtain special discounts.  Add Mediacom’s 12/1Mbps service to your existing cable TV account for $19.95 a month for 12 months, or 20/2Mbps service for $59.95 a month for 12 months.  Installation is done by the customer.

Questions about Mediacom service in Mound can be directed to 1-800-332-0245.  Mediacom’s local offices in and around Mound are at:

Waseca 1504 2nd St SE Waseca, MN 56093 800-332-0245 8:00AM TO 5:00PM / MONDAY – FRIDAY / (CLOSED EVERY WEDNESDAY 9-10AM)
Mound 2381 Wilshire Blvd Mound, MN 55364 800-332-0245 8:00AM to 5:00PM / Monday – Friday (Closed 12 – 1PM Daily & Every Wednesday 9-10AM)
Chanhassen 1670 Lake Drive West Chanhassen, MN 55317 800-332-0245 8:00AM to 5:00PM Monday-Friday *Closed Noon – 1:00PM (Closed Every Wednesday 9-10AM)

4) Customers who are absolutely stuck with Frontier broadband who anticipate approaching or exceeding the 100/250GB usage levels should explore a business broadband account with Frontier.  Although pricing may vary from city to city, residents of Rochester who confronted the original effort to impose a 5GB usage cap in western New York found business account DSL service was not much more expensive than residential service, and carried no usage limitations.  Pricing is likely to be less than the punitive rates Frontier wants to charge residential customers for exceeding their allowances.

Some Verizon Customers Locked Out Of E-Mail Accounts – Upcoming Switch to Frontier ‘Part of the Problem’

Phillip Dampier April 13, 2010 Consumer News, Frontier, Verizon Comments Off on Some Verizon Customers Locked Out Of E-Mail Accounts – Upcoming Switch to Frontier ‘Part of the Problem’

“It’s FairPoint Communications all over again,” writes Stop the Cap! reader Jenna who is mad as hell with Verizon Communications who first locked her out of her e-mail account, and then accidentally deleted it, along with all of her e-mail, in preparation for the handover to Frontier Communications.

Jenna is referring to similar debacles which caused billing and service nightmares for residents in northern New England who lost their Internet access for days, along with e-mail accounts, followed by months of inaccurate bills when FairPoint moved away from Verizon’s internal systems.

Her problems started the last weekend of March, when Verizon notified Jenna and other Fort Wayne, Indiana residents who use Verizon Yahoo! e-mail service that they would have to take steps to convert their e-mail accounts.

Verizon Yahoo!: Service No Longer Available in Some Areas

Starting March 27, 2010, Verizon Yahoo! for Broadband will be discontinued in the following areas:

AZ, ID, IL, IN, MI, NV, NC (except Knotts Island), OH, OR, SC, Crows-Hermatite (VA), WA, WI, and the following communities in California that border AZ, NV and OR–Big River, Blythe, Coleville, Crescent City, Desert Center, Eagle Mountain, Earp, Felicity, Fort Dick, Gasquet, Klamath, Kneeland, Markleeville, Merced, Needles, Orick, Parker Dam, Ripley, Smith River, Topaz, Trinidad, Vidal and Winterhaven.

These changes will not impact your Verizon Internet service access plan or pricing, and your Verizon.net email primary and sub-account User names and passwords will stay the same.

“They told us we would have to use this service called Verizon TrueSwitch in order to convert our e-mail box and that all of our contacts and existing e-mail would be transferred from the old Yahoo! webmail account to the new Verizon one,” Jenna writes.

But her experience with Verizon TrueSwitch turned into a TrueNightmare when attempts to use the service resulted in error messages.

“First it popped up with ‘unable to authenticate’ error messages, and then we were locked out of our Yahoo! e-mail account.  The Verizon e-mail account worked, but was empty,” she writes. “I tried to use Verizon’s ‘in-home agent’ online support but it suddenly told me it was ‘only available to Verizon customers.’  Apparently they can’t wait to get rid of us.”

Jenna then did what most customers of a phone company might do — she picked up her phone and called customer service.

“That was the second nightmare — I waited on hold 49 minutes the first time before a representative came on the line, sneezed, and then disconnected me.  The second call was a real marathon — over two hours on hold waiting for someone to help me,” Jenna notes.

When a representative did finally speak to Jenna, she apologized for the delay and candidly admitted their call center was swamped with calls regarding the e-mail conversion.

“When she thought she put me on hold, I was able to overhear her talking with someone else about getting word from a supervisor that the problem was somewhere on their end, and she felt bad because she had spent a good part of the morning blaming TrueSwitch, which I later found out was not even owned by Verizon — it’s a service sold by Esaya, a private third-party company,” Jenna says.

Jenna was transferred to a supervisor when attempts to correct her e-mail account lockout were not working.

“The guy they transferred me to wouldn’t listen to me and kept telling me he knew what the problem was, claiming I had ‘sub-accounts’ and they were messing up their systems,” said Jenna. “But Mr. Expert ended up permanently deleting the account, along with all of my e-mail, contacts, and everything else Verizon claimed I was able to store online.  Years of e-mail and contacts — gone.”

Jenna was right when she noted Verizon’s call centers were jammed with customers experiencing similar problems.

Verizon’s own customer support forum is hot with angry customers who are going through the same thing:

Verizon spokesman Harry Mitchell acknowledged the significant e-mail conversion issues were partly in preparation for the pending transition some customers face to Frontier Communications.

“The systems realignment will facilitate the closing of the transaction with Frontier, which we expect at the end of the second quarter, subject to conditions including regulatory approval,” Mitchell told the Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette.

Mitchell released a statement to the paper regarding the problems:

“In advance of a planned systems conversion over the weekend of March 27-28, Verizon online users who maintain e-mail accounts with Yahoo were notified that a customer-initiated service change would be required following the systems conversion in order to maintain their e-mail service,” he said in an e-mail.

“Customers were given instructions to use a ‘Trueswitch’ service to migrate their existing e-mail and contact information from Verizon Yahoo to Verizon servers in order to maintain e-mail access. Some customers have experienced difficulty when trying to initiate the service change. We’re working to address this as quickly as possible with those customers.”

Mitchell stressed that customers should make sure they validate their passwords in both the Verizon.net e-mail system and the Verizon Yahoo e-mail system. And they should “take extra care to write down those passwords so that, if they want to migrate their old e-mail and contact information, it will go smoothly through the Trueswitch process.”

Unfortunately, that won’t help Jenna.

A supervisor contacted her this week to apologize for the problems and the loss of her e-mail, which may not be gone for good if Verizon and Yahoo! can figure out a way to get the deleted account back, but for Jenna the damage has been done.

“I have read Stop the Cap! since 2008 and followed the misadventures of FairPoint Communications and the endless promises from Frontier they won’t repeat the mistakes the others have made, but it’s a case of ‘here we go again,’ and Frontier isn’t even in the picture yet,” she says.  “Verizon clearly can’t wait to get rid of us and Frontier will probably make us wish we had Verizon back, which should tell you the people of Fort Wayne now live on the corner of Rock Avenue and Hard Place.”

AT&T Giving Nashville Customers Bill Shock – Hundreds of Dollars of Overcharging… Month After Month

Phillip Dampier April 12, 2010 AT&T, Consumer News, Video 2 Comments

How would you like to open your AT&T bill and discover you were overcharged more than $1,000?

An AT&T-admitted “computer glitch” is routinely overbilling customers in Tennessee several hundred dollars a month for charges that are supposed to be included in their service plan at no additional cost.

One Clarksville woman has been getting bills nearing $1,000 a month every month since January, and AT&T is well aware of its mistake, crediting her bill each times she calls.

But Belinda Horton wonders what happens to other customers, especially the poor and elderly, who may not be up to scrutinizing their phone bills every month and aggressively pursuing credits from the phone company.

“This is crazy. This keeps happening over and over,” Horton told WSMV-TV in Nashville. “When I got the next bill, it was $921.”

Now she’s fed up.

“At this point, they can correct my bill, and then they can just keep AT&T,” said Horton. “Everyone needs to check their bills.”

[flv width=”480″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WSMV Nashville Customer’s Phone Bill Severely Overcharged 4-12-10.flv[/flv]

WSMV-TV in Nashville tells the story of Belinda Horton, a resident of Clarksville who is routinely overbilled by AT&T up to $1,000 every month since January.  She isn’t alone.  (3 minutes)

News & Notes: Bright House Networks

Some odds and ends regarding Bright House Networks you may have missed over the past several weeks:

Hernando County, Florida Ticked Off About Bright House Rate Hikes

Hernando County commissioners were united in their opposition to a recent $3 rate increase from Bright House Networks that spiked bills for standard service to $55.49 a month.  They voted unanimously for a resolution condemning the rate increase, noting it comes as a result of insufficient cable competition.

The commissioners want local consumers to shop around for alternative providers, but outside of satellite, Bright House is the only cable television provider for local residents.  Despite tough economic times, the rate increases just keep on coming.

“This, for lack of better words, really frosts me,” County Commissioner Dave Russell told Hernando Today. “As a retailer and a business owner in Hernando County, we’ve done what we can to keep our prices down.”
Bright House, he said, should do the same and “suck it up just like the rest of us have,” he said.

Additional rate increases of $2 per month for HBO and $1 a month each for digital phone, voicemail, and DVR service are also now in effect.

Vandals cut fiber optics on Bright House Networks in Birmingham area

Vandalism can result in major service disruptions for cable customers, especially when a fiber optic link is cut.  The Birmingham, Alabama area suffered a major outage in late February when vandals sliced an important fiber link.  Service was knocked out on the west side of Birmingham, including Five Points West, Ensley, and part of Ross Bridge for almost a day.

Customers generally have to call and request service credit for outages — most cable companies don’t automatically credit accounts.

Make Room for More HD Channels

Bright House Networks has been aggressively adding new HD channels to its lineups across the country.  In central Indiana, Bright House customers can spend even more time channel surfing through these additions:

  • BBC America HD – Channel 847 on December 14
  • Fuse HD – Channel 840 on December 16
  • G4 HD – Channel 810 on December 16
  • HLN HD – Channel 726 on December 14
  • IFC HD – Channel 794 on December 11
  • Investigation Discovery HD – Channel 804 on December 18
  • MAV TV HD – Channel 753 on December 18
  • NBA TV HD – Channel 862 on December 18
  • NHL Network HD – Channel 863 on December 11
  • Outdoor Channel HD – Channel 865 on December 11
  • Style HD – Channel 860 on December 14
  • Tennis Channel HD – Channel 864 on December 11
  • TV One HD – Channel 866 on December 16
  • BET HD – Channel 736
  • Cinemax HD – Ch. 228
  • CMT HD – Ch. 743
  • Comedy Central HD – Ch. 725
  • Crime & Investigation Network HD – Ch. 852
  • Game HD – Ch. 904
  • Hallmark  Channel  HD – Ch. 757
  • HD Pay Per View Events – Ch. 304
  • History International HD – Ch. 817
  • MTV HD – Ch. 775
  • Nickelodeon HD – Ch. 744
  • Spike TV HD – Ch. 724
  • Team HD – Ch. 886
  • The Movie Channel HD – Ch. 262
  • VH1 HD – Ch. 741

Wayde Klein, vice president of marketing and customer operations for Bright House Networks Indiana, said “In October, we announced that Bright House Networks had a goal of offering more than 100 high-definition channels in early 2010. We started by launching 17 HD channels in 17 consecutive days in November and then launched 13 new HD channels in December. Our launch of 15 HD channels this week is one step closer to our goal.”

In Orlando, Bright House added these networks in March:

  • Hallmark Channel HD at channel 1315
  • Nickelodeon HD at channel 1333
  • Comedy Central HD at channel 1366
  • Spike HD at channel 1368
  • BET HD at channel 1367
  • CMT HD at channel 1371
  • VH1 HD at channel 1372
  • MTV HD at channel 1374

Questions Answered from Bright House Customers

The St. Petersburg Times tackled this one from a Bright House customer:

Why doesn’t Bright House tell their customers that they have to pay for faster connection?

-Stephen, St. Petersburg

Like Big Mama always said, “you can’t get something for nothing.”

Bright House says customers are informed that the faster connections cost more. The higher speed Internet connections are not automatically given to customers.

“You have to request it,” says Joe Durkin, a spokesman for Bright House Networks.

Standard roadrunner Internet service is about $48. Then you can get Roadrunner turbo for $15 more or the fastest, Roadrunner lightning, for $30 above the standard.

The additional charges are listed, even online.

Bright House serves a large part of central Florida.  Comcast Cable serves territories further south.

[flv width=”576″ height=”409″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/Bright House Ad Campaign Spring 2010.mp4[/flv]

Bright House launched a new ad campaign this spring emphasizing bright colors and product bundles.

Vandals Cut Major Hawaiian Telcom Cable in Waipahu Cutting Off 1,100 Customers from Phone, Internet Service

Phillip Dampier April 8, 2010 Consumer News, Hawaiian Telcom, Video 1 Comment

Waipahu, Hawaii

At least 1,100 Hawaiian Telcom customers were left without service Sunday when vandals cut a cable providing the community northwest of Honolulu with phone and broadband service.

“Sunday night we learned that two of our cables in the Waipahu area had been cut in several places,” said Hawaiian Telcom’s Ann Nishida.

It took nearly three days to restore service to every affected customer because each cable required splicing 3,600 individual copper wires back together.  The company says all 1,100 customers had service as of 1:00pm Wednesday afternoon.

Vandals sliced apart this cable. (Courtesy: Hawaiian Telcom)

Customers reported experiencing no dial tone and having no access to the Internet.

Even as service restoration work was underway, several residents reported broadband service remained intermittent until the repairs were completed Wednesday.

Although HawTel claims vandalism to their lines is uncommon, residents in Waipahu say vandals have struck repeatedly in the community, especially when street lights aren’t working in the neighborhood.

Customers subjected to the outage should contact HawTel customer service to verify a credit for the lost day(s) of service appears on their next bill.

The company filed a police report and asked Waipahu residents who may have witnessed the vandalism to report it to local authorities.

Hawaii has had several disruptions in phone service, the most recent happening in February when a damaged AT&T fiber cable cut off long distance service to HawTel and T-Mobile customers.

[flv]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/KHON Honolulu Vandals Leave Hundreds in Waipahu with No Phone or Internet Service 4-7-10.flv[/flv]

KHON-TV Honolulu reports many Waipahu customers are going for the third day without phone or Internet service.  (2 minutes)

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