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Windstream’s Lousy Performance in Georgia Sparks Facebook Protest Group, Media Scrutiny

windstream-logoWhile Windstream continues to heavily lobby the Georgia legislature for a bill that would ban competition from publicly owned broadband providers, the company is doing little to address the growing concerns of its own broadband customers getting poor service.

Mark Wyatt, a Windstream customer fed up with not getting the broadband speeds he pays for, launched a Facebook group in January to collect evidence and attempt to leverage the company to fix its problems. Wyatt, like many other customers in rural Georgia, has only one option for broadband service — Windstream.

Now the growing Facebook group has gotten attention from an Atlanta reporter who wants customers to record videos detailing their broadband problems with Windstream for an upcoming news report.

Jeff Chirico at WGCL-TV, the Atlanta CBS affiliate, has a call out for videos due by March 6:

I’m a reporter for CBS Atlanta News. I want to hear from Windstream customers in Georgia about their experiences with the company’s Internet service. Please shoot a video (30 seconds or less) explaining the speed of Windstream’s service and how it impacts you, your family or your business. Please include your name and city and download it to our dropbox account. http://dropbox.yousendit.com/JamesEstes539379

Also, feel free to follow me on Twitter @CBSATLChirico or find me on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/JeffChiricoCbsAtlanta

windstream speedtestThe horror stories are already clear all over Windstream’s service areas:

Don Jackson, who lives outside Milledgeville pays Windstream for 6/1Mbps service. On a good day, he gets 750kbps after 4pm every day, and speeds do not improve until the early morning hours.

“I talked with a local manager and he said that there is no solution anytime soon,” Jackson reported. “I have screen shots of speed tests from different sites for months to demonstrate that this is not a fluke but a fact. I have complaints on file with the FCC and BBB of Arkansas, [which handles complaints regarding Windstream].”

Adam Ridley qualified and pays for 3Mbps broadband service from Windstream, but that is not the speed he actually receives.

“It’s 9:40pm and I’m rocking my 210kbps connection — 7% of the speed I pay for,” he reported last night.

Rodney Gray pays Windstream a premium for 12Mbps service, but the phone company does not come close to delivering those speeds. His service actually ranges from 580kbps-1.4Mbps.

“My upload speed is faster than my download,” Gray complains.

A representative answering Windstream’s Complaint Line threatens a customer in Odum,. Ga. with legal action for “harassment” in June, 2012 after he complaints about Windstream’s mailers advertising DSL Internet service that is actually “not available to him this year.” (2 minutes)
You must remain on this page to hear the clip, or you can download the clip and listen later.

Kimberly Brown’s broadband problems with Windstream are so pervasive, even the company admits there is a problem, and they have given her service credits.

“Our primary problem is dropped connections — constantly,” Brown says. “They sent a technician out because surely it must be in our lines. He told us that there is something going on in one of the main hubs or whatever, and that it should be months (if ever) that it’s fixed. Then, customer service was suddenly able to look into our account and see that we had hundreds of dropped connections in just a few days. Hundreds. To their credit, they did give us a smallish break on our monthly bill because of the aggravation.”

broke windstreamA typical day for the Brown family is to wake up, reset the modem, send an e-mail or two, reset the modem, try to go to a web page, reset the modem.

“It’s crazy and extremely frustrating,” says Brown. “I work from home and rely heavily on the Internet to get my job done, so this problem affects us in many ways, not just casual web surfing.”

Things are worse for Mark B. Watson, who lost his service entirely for two days.

“The bad thing is that mine and my wife’s business is located in our house,” says Watson. “Being without Internet means we are not making an income for two days. It is getting old.”

While Windstream’s broadband service is suffering, company executives are celebrating a planned major reduction in extra investment in its broadband service, telling Wall Street its broadband expansion and fiber-for-cell-tower projects are nearing completion. That could leave rural Georgia broadband customers without improved service indefinitely.

At the same time, Windstream is reportedly the primary proponent of legislation that would make sure rural Georgians have no alternatives to choose from. The company’s support for HB 282, now working through the Georgia legislature, would prohibit communities from launching their own broadband services to improve connectivity and speeds.

Chattanooga’s Gigabit Fiber Generates $400 Million in Local Investment, 6,000 New Jobs

[flv width=”512″ height=”308″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/CBS Chattanooga Fastest Broadband in America 2-28-13.flv[/flv]

Chattanooga’s gigabit fiber network demonstrates local government works. The fiber to the home network has already brought $400 million in investment dollars and more than 6,000 new jobs to the area. At the same time, both Comcast and AT&T are working to lobby state legislatures to ban these kinds of public networks from ever getting off the ground. CBS News profiles EPB Fiber. (6 minutes)

Time Warner Cable Contractor Fingered for Gas Explosion in Kansas City; 1 Dead

Phillip Dampier February 21, 2013 Consumer News, Video 1 Comment
jjs

The remnants of JJ’s restaurant in Kansas City, Mo. after a gas explosion on Tuesday.

A contractor working for Time Warner Cable is alleged to have pierced a two-inch gas line in Kansas City, Mo., eventually causing a massive explosion that demolished a popular restaurant, leaving one worker dead and 15 injured.

Early Tuesday morning Heartland Midwest LLC, working on behalf of the cable operator, notified local authorities it intended to use a trenchless horizontal boring machine near JJ’s restaurant to install a fiber optic cable to reach a nearby office building.

Mark McDonald, president of North American Gas Workers Association told the Kansas City Star such installations can be dangerous because of nearby gas pipelines.

“You’re basically drilling blind,” McDonald told the newspaper. “You’re taking a lot of risk.”

Authorities now suspect that boring machine pierced the gas line and started a major leak.

There are conflicting reports about when the contractor notified emergency officials about the rupture. Some press accounts suggest it could have been one hour or more before 911 was notified.

Other reports criticize the local gas utility for not treating the gas leak as a more urgent threat.

Evacuations of nearby buildings, including JJ’s, did not begin until at least an hour after authorities were notified. Approximately one hour after that, JJ’s exploded leaving little more than a pile of rubble.

Megan Cramer, a 46-year-old server at JJ’s, was reportedly killed in the blast. More than a dozen others were injured.

At attorney for the contractor said the company was cooperating with local authorities in the investigation.

[flv width=”640″ height=”380”]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/KCTV Kansas City TWC Contractor Responsible for KCMO Blast 2-20-13.mp4[/flv]

KCTV-TV in Kansas City reports they could find no evidence Heartland Midwest filed a permit request before starting work on behalf of Time Warner Cable.  (2 minutes)

Comcast Calls $1.99 Charge for Digital Adapters a “Service Fee” to Avoid FCC Complications

dta letterComcast may be attempting to get around Federal Communications Commission regulations governing what cable companies can charge for cable equipment by recasting the monthly fee as a “service charge.”

The cable operator’s decision to start charging $1.99 a month for digital transport adapters (DTAs) — small boxes that can convert digital signals into analog for older televisions — has at least one Minnesota city up in arms.

Eagan city officials met with outraged residents Tuesday to discuss the fee hike and hear a number of complaints about how Comcast does business in the community.

“It really ran the gamut, from concerns about losing stations, to concerns about being bait and switched, to having gotten boxes for free and worried that you had to pay for them in the future,” Eagan Mayor Mike Maguire told WCCO-TV.

Comcast customers in Minnesota are receiving letters from the cable operator some call deceptive. The letter warns “digital equipment is needed on all your TVs to receive channels,” despite the fact many televisions manufactured after 2007 are equipped with QAM tuners that will receive the digital signals without extra equipment, at least for now.

Only in fine print at the bottom of the letter does Comcast admit QAM-equipped sets won’t need the equipment, saving $1.99 a month per set.

Letters have also been sent to customers who have used DTA equipment provided by Comcast at no charge… until now.

Comcast earlier announced it intends to collect $1.99 a month from each subscriber using DTA equipment, even if those customers previously had received the equipment for free.

But Comcast’s decision to charge $24 a year in perpetuity for a box with a wholesale cost of less than $50, depending on the model, may run afoul of Federal Communications Commission regulations that forbid cable operators from charging excessive amounts to lease cable equipment:

Cable operators may require their subscribers to use specific equipment, such as converters, to receive the basic service tier. They may include a separate charge on your bill to lease this equipment to you on a monthly basis. This monthly rate must be based on the operator’s actual costs of providing the equipment to you. Operators may also sell equipment to you, with or without a service contract. If an operator provides a choice between selling and leasing the equipment, the monthly leasing rate will be regulated but the sales price will be unregulated. If an operator only sells equipment and does not also lease equipment, then the sales price must be the actual cost of the equipment plus a reasonable profit, and any service contract should be based on the estimated cost to service the equipment. If the customer buys the equipment but does not purchase a service contract, the customer can be charged for repairs and maintenance. Cable operators may not prevent customers from using their own equipment if such equipment is technically compatible with the cable system.

Eagan Mayor Mike Maguire

Eagan Mayor Mike Maguire

In a possible attempt to avoid regulatory language regarding cable equipment, Comcast has declared its new $1.99 fee is actually an “additional outlet service charge,” not an equipment fee.

“The deployment of DTA technology allows us to bring more value to our customers through additional HD channels and faster Internet speeds, both of which are used by the majority of our customers,” said Mary Beth Schubert, vice president of corporate affairs. “These types of enhancements require significant investment, and we feel the nominal fee now being implemented for DTA additional outlet service on our digital tiers reflects the additional value of the service.”

“There is no charge for the first three DTA devices,” said Schubert. But she quickly added, “After the digital transition in March and April, those TVs will not have access to these channels unless they are paying the $1.99 DTA additional outlet service fee.”

Michael Bradley, an attorney representing 20 local communities, is investigating to see if Comcast’s language about its new fee violates FCC rules.

The new charge is expected to be lucrative for Comcast, earning the company at least $550 million annually in new revenue.

Comcast intends to boost that even further as it embarks on encrypting its digital lineup, making QAM-equipped televisions useless to receive scrambled cable channels.

“These customers will eventually need to connect a digital device to their QAM tuner equipment at a future date as we implement additional network security features,” warned Schubert. “Customers will be provided complete information well before any additional measures take place.”

The FCC previously negotiated an agreement with cable operators intending to encrypt their cable lineup to keep customers from experiencing bill shock from new, mandatory equipment fees:

If, at the time your cable operator begins to encrypt, you subscribe Then you are entitled to
only to broadcast basic service and do not have a set-top box or CableCARD a set-top box or CableCARD on up to two television sets without charge or service fee for two years from the date your cable operator begins to encrypt.
to a level of service other than broadcast basic service but use a digital television to receive only the basic service tier without use of a set-top box or CableCARD a set-top box or CableCARD on one television set without charge or service fee for one year from the date your cable operator begins to encrypt.
only to the basic service tier without use of a set-top box or CableCARD and you receive Medicaid a set-top box or CableCARD on up to two television sets without charge or service fee for five years from the date your cable operator begins to encrypt.

But by recasting new fees as unregulated “additional outlet fees,” Comcast and other cable operators may have successfully outwitted the FCC’s good intentions, earning billions in new revenue annually as a result of a simple language change.

[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WCCO Minneapolis Comcast Fee Causes Outrage in Minn 2-20-13.mp4[/flv]

WCCO reports the city of Eagan held an informational meeting Tuesday about Comcast’s newest fee for digital boxes required on older televisions. Comcast customers nationwide will soon pay the new $1.99 “DTA additional outlet service fee” for each television equipped with the digital set top DTA box “to offset increasing programming and operational costs.”  (2 minutes)

Three Men Posing as AT&T Workers Ransack Elderly Oklahoma City Resident’s Home

Phillip Dampier February 19, 2013 AT&T, Consumer News, Video Comments Off on Three Men Posing as AT&T Workers Ransack Elderly Oklahoma City Resident’s Home
mugsy

If an unexpected technician arrives on your doorstep without proper ID, keep them outside. When in doubt, call authorities.

Phony AT&T workers ransacked a metro Oklahoma City home earlier this month looking for cash and jewelry while distracting the homeowners with stories of network upgrades and repairs designed to improve service. Instead, the crooks improved their personal jewelry collection and bank accounts.

At least three men were in on the scheme. The first two, both wearing jumpsuits, rang the doorbell of the elderly homeowner claiming they needed access to her property to complete work in the neighborhood.

“[They said we’d have] less static and our lights wouldn’t dim, all these other wonderful things, that our bills would be less because we’re using so much electricity just to keep the phone system going,” or so the story went, according to the daughter of the homeowner who was also at home at the time.

Bizarrely, the workers instructed they turn off all the lights and the television inside the home so work could proceed, and both women were then lured outside to keep them distracted.

A third “employee” later joined the pair, but just as quickly disappeared. More about him in a moment.

About 30 minutes later, the “work” was complete.

“After they left we came back into the house, and that’s when we discovered somebody else had been in the house and ransacked the bedroom looking for things,” the women said.

In all the thieves walked away with an heirloom wedding ring and at least $300 in cash.

“It makes you feel very vulnerable,” the woman told a reporter from KWTV. “It makes you feel like, ‘why didn’t I see what was going on here?'”

It is not the first time phony telecommunications company workers have gained false entry into customers’ homes. AT&T says it does not dispatch technicians without proper identification, plainly visible and available for inspection when requested.

If technicians suddenly arrive on your doorstep without warning, ask them to produce identification and contact the provider for verification. If in doubt, keep them out and call authorities.

[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/KWTV Oklahoma City Thieves Pose As ATT Workers, Ransack OKC Family’s Home 2-3-13.mp4[/flv]

KWTV in Oklahoma City talked with two women who were victimized by phony AT&T technicians who claimed they were there to improve service. Instead, the men robbed their home.  (2 minutes)

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