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Happy Summer Rate Increase Comcast Customers! Rates Up for A Second Time in 10 Months For Many

Phillip Dampier July 20, 2010 Comcast/Xfinity, Consumer News 4 Comments

Comcast subscribers in cities across the country are getting as hot as the summer as they learn the cable company is jacking up prices again — for many the second time in a year.  This time, the rate hikes are blamed on the cost to deliver an expanded lineup of HD channels, increased programming costs, and new cable modems.  Yet on the eve of the European Union approving a proposed Comcast-NBC Universal merger, many Comcast cable customers are beginning to wonder if all of these rate hikes are going to pay for that deal.

Here is a sampling of press reports from across the country on the latest round of increases:

San Francisco Chronicle: Comcast Corp. said it is raising rates for California cable and Internet customers by an average of 3.8 percent starting Aug. 1. The average video customer will see their monthly bill increase by $2.49 from $60.76 to $63.25 a month. Internet service will also increase for the first time in five years from $44.72 to $46.67 a month, a $1.95 increase. Andrew Johnson, regional vice president for Comcast California, said the increase is necessary to pay for more programming choices, new features, faster Internet speeds and improvements to customer service.  The last rate increase came October 15, 2009 when rates went up just over 1 percent.

The Record (Stockton, Calif.): For the second time in less than 10 months, Comcast Corp. customers in San Joaquin County face price increases for cable television service and, for the first time in five years a boost in charges for a cable Internet connection, the company announced recently. Customers in Stockton, Manteca, Lathrop and San Joaquin County served by Comcast will see an increase of nearly 4 percent in their cable bills beginning Sept. 1. Notices began going out to subscribers late last week. Other Northern California areas served by the cable giant will see prices change Aug. 1.

“They’ve got you tied in,” said Art Hickey of Stockton, who has five television sets in his home and subscribes to the highest tier of digital service. “They tease you with those six-month deals and 12-month deals and they don’t say what it’s going to be after that. People buy into it and then they’re just stuck with it,” he said.

So why not try another source of television?

“I haven’t compared, and I don’t want to because it’s a nuisance,” Hickey said.

The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.): Most of Spokane’s Comcast subscribers will see price increases in their Internet and video services effective in August, the cable company announced. Comcast’s last price increase went into effect October 2009. According to Comcast spokesman Walter Neary, most Spokane cable television subscribers will see an average monthly increase of about $3.21, or 4.9 percent. Customers who subscribe to Limited Basic, the least expensive package of Comcast TV channels, will have no increase in their monthly bill. Limited Basic includes all over-the-air local stations and the public, education and government channels.

Customers who pay for Comcast cable Internet will see two increases – a modem rental fee that will rise to $7 from $5 per month, and a $3 hike for monthly Web service. Subscribers who bundle Internet with either Comcast voice or TV service won’t pay the $3 hike, but will still see the modem fee increase, Neary said. Subscribers can eliminate the modem fee by buying their own modem. The Internet price hike reflects increased investment by Comcast in additional security services for subscribers and technology upgrades, Neary said. Another price increase, not reflected in Comcast’s stated 4.9 percent average monthly hike, is a $2 hike in the “HD technology fee.” TV subscribers who see HD Comcast channels will pay $8 per month for that technology fee, said Neary.

York Daily Record (York, Penn.): Comcast Cable is about three weeks away from putting into effect its second price increase in less than one year. On Aug. 1, the company will boost the average York County customer’s bill by roughly 3.5 percent, said Bob Grove , a spokesman for Comcast Cable’s Keystone Region. That increase is on top of a 1.9 percent price hike for the average Comcast customer that took effect Nov.1. The current rate increase is rooted in Comcast’s company-wide digital upgrade that calls for a jump in the number of high-definition channels to climb from 50 to 100, Grove said. Also, Comcast’s on-demand video menu will increase from 18,000 choices, 4,000 of which are HD, to 20,000 selections with 5,000 of those coming in as high-definition, he said.

“We’ve continually invested in next-generation technology to support new product features, more programming choices and improvements to customer service,” according to a statement released by Comcast concerning the increase. However, for those currently enrolled in a Comcast promotion, your bill will remain unchanged until that particular deal ends, Grove said. “Nearly half of all Comcast customers are on some kind of promotion,” he said.

Public Opinion (Chambersburg, Penn.): Many Comcast customers will see an increase in their monthly bills starting next month. The average customer bill in the Chambersburg area will increase by about 3.5 percent, according to a company spokesperson. The new rates take effect Aug. 1. A customer with standard cable or digital starter service will now pay $63.50 a month, or $3.50 more. Expanded basic, digital preferred, digital premier and total premium services are also increasing by $3.50 a month. Limited basic service, digital economy and family tier services are not affected. Economy, Performance and Blast! tiers of high-speed Internet will be increasing $2 a month. Monthly prices for the Ultra and Extreme 50 tiers will not change. Digital voice services will also cost $1.95 more a month.

Centre Daily Times (State College, Penn.): Comcast this week started sending out another round of mailings notifying customers of another change. But this time around the mailing isn’t warning of an impending digital conversion, or announcing the addition of more high definition television channels. This time around, it’s a notification of a rate increase. Effective Aug. 1, the average price for Comcast in the State College area will go up about 3.5 percent.

The company cited technology and infrastructure investments when contacted for comment. “These investments make it possible to deliver continued innovations, such as more HD and On Demand choices, converged services, faster Internet speeds, multi-platform content and new services consumers want and value,” said Bob Grove, director of public relations for the Keystone region of Comcast. Grove said the recent digital conversion by the company was one of the cost factors, as well as other programs that have included increasing Internet speeds for customers in the area. He noted that bills for customers whose service operates under one of the company’s promotions will not be affected until the promotion period expires.

Appeal Democrat (Marysville, Calif.): Cable giant Comcast plans to raise prices nearly across the board for Yuba-Sutter residents for cable television and Internet service, effective Aug. 1. The Philadelphia-based corporation posted public notices in the Appeal-Democrat last week notifying rates would rise for its monthly cable and Internet rates, though two bundle packages will actually drop by about $20. Limited basic cable service, for example, will go from $15.40 to $16.85, while the digital premier package will go from $66.95 to $69 a month. A basic Internet package will go from $24.95 to $26.95, while a “performance” Internet package will rise from $57.95 to $59.95. Customers who bundle digital premier-level service and Internet or digital premier and phone service will see a reduction, from $195.10 and $197.10 a month, respectively, to $174.94 for either package.Some customers at the company’s Yuba City office Thursday said they weren’t aware of the pending price hike, though not all of them were overly surprised, either. “It’s gone up once every year for awhile now,” said Anthoney Stark, 42, of Marysville. “If they’re adding more channels, I don’t mind it.”

But Lori Switt of Yuba City reacted with dismay as she surveyed the list of price changes. “Each one of them added up …” she said. “We might have to switch.” She said paying more for cable and Internet is a tough pill to swallow when her boyfriend, a state worker, may have his pay reduced because of budget squabbles and she is only working part-time.

The price hike comes on the heels of Comcast dropping analog services in the Mid-Valley last month, angering many residents who said they hadn’t gotten proper notice. John Simpson, consumer advocate with nonprofit group Consumer Watchdog, said it was particularly galling for Comcast to raise its most basic cable package by the highest percentage, from $15.40 a month to $16.85. “In times like these, when people are hard-pressed, companies ought not to stick it to their basic cable customers,” he said. He also questioned the supposed upgrades in equipment, noting Comcast should take any money it makes in higher rates and apply it to customer service instead. Comcast is frequently listed among companies with the highest levels of customer dissatisfaction.

The Times Leader (Wilkes-Barre, Penn.): Most Comcast cable television customers will see an increase in most rates and services on Aug. 1. The Standard Cable and Digital Starter prices will increase by 5.7 percent while the Total Premium Package will rise to $136.90, a 2.6 percentage increase. The Value Plus Triple Play price, which includes Digital Starter, Performance High Speed Internet Service and CDV, will increase by 4.3 percent to $119.99. Expanded Basic Service, a popular package, will rise 6.8 percent to $55.05.

Comcast released the following statement: “We’ve continually invested in next-generation technology to support new product features, more programming choices and improvements to customer service. These investments make it possible to deliver continued innovations such as more HD and On Demand choices, converged services, faster Internet speeds, multi-platform content and new services consumers want and value.”

Although prices for premium services like HBO and Showtime as well as most installation and equipment rental charges will remain the same, Comcast stated that bills will increase by an average of 3.5 percent. Comcast did not comment when their new prices would be released to the public. Most rates increased between 2.6 and 6.8 percent.Comcast provides service in the northern portions of Luzerne County, including some West Side communities, the Back Mountain and the Pittston area. The company declined to say how many subscribers it serves.

The Press Democrat (Santa Rosa, Calif.): Like clockwork, Comcast is raising its prices, for the 10th time in 10 years. And like clockwork, customers are fuming.

“Here we go again,” said customer Aileen Bianchini, 84, of Santa Rosa. “It is out of line,” said Doris Trucco, a retired senior citizen in Santa Rosa. “I think a lot of us are unhappy. They just keep raising it.”

The nation’s largest cable TV company announced Friday that rates would increase 3.8percent, on average, across Sonoma County on Aug. 1. Bianchini and others complained that a decade of price hikes haven’t resulted in much better service, just additional low-quality stations. But Comcast spokesman Andrew Johnson said the company has invested more than $600 million in Northern California in recent years to increase Internet speeds, add high-definition channels and deliver a host of new digital tools such as movies on demand.

“We can give our customers the best in voice, video and data,” Johnson said. “We’re a heck of a value.”

Comcast is dropping the price on one of its budget options, called Digital Economy, from $39.95 to $29.95. But it is raising the price on its Internet service for the first time in five years. The minimum price jumps from $24.95 to $26.95, and the high-end price jumps from $67.95 to $69.95.

Tina Jackson of Cloverdale said she calls Comcast about every four months to ask for a new promotional package. If they say no, she threatens to cancel. “It doesn’t always work,” she said. But if customers are willing to go through with it, they usually find that the last customer service person they talk to as Comcast processes the cancellation will offer them a great deal, she said. “I’ve saved $50 a month,” Jackson said.

The Seattle Times: Fireworks will go off as soon as Comcast customers open their next bill. The company is raising rates an average of $3.21 per month, or 4.9 percent. It’s also raising the fee to rent a cable modem by $2 a month. Comcast just announced that it will be notifying its 1.1 million customers in Washington of the new rates, which take effect Aug. 1. The statement from spokesman Steve Kipp:

“We continue to invest in next-generation technology to support new product features, more programming choices and improvements to customer service. These investments make it possible to deliver continued innovations such as more HD and On Demand choices, converged services, multi-platform content, faster Internet speeds and new services consumers want and value. As a result of these investments, combined with the increased cost of doing business and rising programming costs, the average customer bill will increase by 4 percent.”

Digital Starter — the most common package — is increasing in price $3.54, from $57.45 to $60.99. People who get barebones, absolute basic cable won’t see a price increase. Those plans will stay $13 to $18 per month, depending on where you live. For people who subscribe only to Comcast broadband, and not its TV service, there will be a $3 per month increase “to standardize our pricing with other Comcast regions around the country,” Kipp said via e-mail. Those who get the “Digital Economy” package will get a break. Their rates will decline, ranging from 4 cents per month to $10.04 per month, depending on their bundle, because Comcast is standardizing this service tier at $29.95 per month. Digital Economy includes the limited basic channels but 17 digital cable channels, including Food Network, History, Disney Channel, Lifetime, AMC and USA.

One in Eight Americans Will Drop Cable/Pay Television by 2011: It’s Too Expensive

Phillip Dampier May 3, 2010 Consumer News, Online Video, Video 7 Comments

One in eight Americans are poised to drop or curtail their cable, satellite, or telco-TV packages in the coming year because the bill has gotten too expensive, according to a new study.

With an average cable bill now $71 a month and rising an average five percent a year, middle class consumers are being priced out of pay television according to the Yankee Group.  The Boston research firm conducted the study of cable, satellite and telephone-company IPTV services and surveyed 6,000 consumers from across the country.

“At the most basic level, the decision to cut off pay TV services is an economic one,” says Vince Vittore, principal analyst and co-author of the report. “As programmers continue to demand ever higher fees, which inevitably get passed on to consumers, we believe more consumers will be forced to consider coax-cutting.”

Coming on the heels of a steady erosion away from traditional telephone landline service which has threatened the fortunes of major phone companies, the implications of millions of consumers coax-cutting are not lost on cable operators or phone companies getting into the IPTV business.

Back to the Future: Older Americans Going Back to Rabbit Ears When Confronted With Today’s Cable Prices

Retro TV is a network that piggybacks on digital television sub-channels in many cities across the country. The network airs classic television shows popular with older audiences.

Those dropping service often take diverging paths for their future entertainment in a cable-free household.  Among older consumers, especially those on fixed incomes, it is back to the future with over the air television and a pair of rabbit ears or rooftop antenna designed to receive digital television broadcasts.

Among these consumers, the most common reason for canceling service is cost.  Many signed up for cable in the 1970s and 1980s for better picture quality, and with the right rooftop antenna, last year’s conversion to digital television solved that problem for over the air viewers.  Post-cable, many are pleasantly surprised to discover new channels piggybacking on traditional stations, several offering classic TV shows from decades past that are familiar and welcome in older Americans’ homes.  Even better — no confusing equipment to deal with.

Jesus Chea, 59, of Queens, told the NY Post he ditched his Time Warner subscription “because I’m on a fixed income and I believe it’s not worth the money.”

To get around the $136 monthly bill, the retiree, who lives with his wife and two grown sons, had antennas installed on both of his TVs — at a cost of $298 — taking advantage of last summer’s national conversion from analog to digital broadcasts.

“Antenna is great,” he says, “because they don’t charge you for rent on digital boxes and they don’t charge you for the remote control. When you add up all those extra fees and so many extra [cable] charges, even if it’s three or four extra dollars, they all add up.”

For many others, the arrival of Redbox video rental kiosks in area grocers has replaced the HBO subscription, and has proven to be a worthwhile supplement to the coax-cutter who drops cable service altogether.

The savings from cord cutting can be dramatic.  Some have saved upwards of $60 a month — $720 a year just by dropping the cable-TV part of their package.  Those kinds of savings have become important when wages are frozen or in decline, jobs are hard to find, and everything else is still going up in cost.

The cable industry has never imagined a country where consumers have quit cable (or satellite) and gone “cold turkey,” especially when upwards of 90 percent of Americans pay for some type of entertainment — pay television, movie rentals, or broadband video.

But as the Yankee Group discovered, Americans are simply tapped out.

Your Father’s Cable TV: Why Would Anyone Under 30 Subscribe?

For younger Americans, the addiction to cable or pay television was something that afflicted their parents.  They never had a problem dropping service from a cable company with whom they never did business.  The teens and twenty-somethings have spent most of their video dollar on broadband and DVD’s for much of their viewing, not cable.

Younger cable subscribers are most at risk for coax cutting, rationalizing they can watch most of their favorite shows online through services like Netflix, Hulu, or websites run by the major American networks.  Others download content (legally or otherwise), rent or buy DVD’s, or subscribe to services like Netflix which combine video streaming with DVD rentals-by-mail.

Many of these viewers also own devices that can bring web-based viewing right to their 50-inch television sets, using set top boxes or video game consoles with web connections.

“Admittedly, this is a small phenomenon now, but a number or recent transactions and new items point to a shift in consumer thinking,” said Vittore.

With the increasing ubiquity of Internet-capable devices, the challenge to traditional coax-based cable TV has never been greater.

“Just like with telephone land lines, it’s going to become hard to sell pay TV to anyone under 30,” Vittore said.

Provider Revenge: You Won’t Get Away That Easy!

With billions of dollars at stake, providers and content producers are intent on not allowing a repeat of what happened to the newspaper industry to afflict their business plans.  Giving it all away for free is not their idea of a sustainable business model.  Keeping tight control over content and its distribution is their ticket to maintaining profits.

Many Olympic events were not aired on NBC television, instead moved to NBC Universal-owned cable networks.

Older Americans who’ve gone back to over the air television are least susceptible to provider revenge, but content is still king and the cable industry will own an increasing percentage of it if the NBC-Comcast merger is approved.  While the two companies are currently promising not to dispense with free over the air broadcasting, an increasing amount of content could be diverted to pay television channels like cable sports networks, movie networks, and general interest basic cable channels.  Broadcasters themselves are now hungry for the same dual-revenue stream their cable competitors already enjoy – advertising income and subscription fees.

Most of the coming wars over pay entertainment are expected to be fought on the broadband battlefield.  For younger Americans relying on Hulu and other video streaming services, subscription fees are coming.  Hulu promises to keep some free viewing options open, but additional access to back episodes or certain series are likely to be restricted only to those who agree to pay an anticipated $9.95 per month.  The cable industry’s own TV Everywhere streaming services offers a clearer dividing line — its available only for those who maintain their pay television package.

Broadband providers, often the same companies that stand to lose from the retreat from television subscriptions, are considering making up the difference with limits on broadband service to make sure consumers can’t watch too much online, or charging consumption fees for heavy online viewers to make up their losses on the TV side.

The long-standing business relationship between content producers and distributors, such as those between Hollywood studios and cable companies, have led to a united front against would-be competitors.  For consumers seeking access to the latest Hollywood movies through low cost rental services or online video, expect to wait longer.  The window of time between a movie release in the theaters and when it becomes available for rental through Redbox or Netflix is growing longer to protect video-on-demand revenues for the cable industry and DVD sales for Hollywood.

Some consumers don’t mind the wait, but are still regularly reminded what they can miss when they don’t agree to a monthly pay television bill.

Jeremy Levinn, a 27-year-old personal trainer from Manhattan, told the Post he jumped the cable ship last year, but Time Warner Cable reminded him whose still boss during the Olympics, when numerous events were available only on Universal-owned cable channels including USA, CNBC and MSNBC and not broadcast over the air.

[flv width=”384″ height=”236″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/CNN Converging Broadband and Television April 2010.flv[/flv]

CNN aired this review of the next generation of television sets capable of connecting with your broadband service to receive television shows and movies over the Internet.  (4 minutes)

‘Their Prices Are a Crime’ – Pennsylvania Inmate Sues Over 75-Cent Cable Fee

Phillip Dampier February 26, 2010 Public Policy & Gov't 3 Comments

An inmate serving time for robbery is convinced the local cable company and state corrections department are robbing him on his monthly cable bill.

Joel Santos Maldonado, 28, of Lancaster is serving a 12- to 26-year sentence at the State Correctional Institute at Fayette in Labelle, Luzerne Township, according to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.

Maldonado already feels his monthly bill from Texas-based Correctional Cable TV (CCTV), which provides cable service to prisoners, is high enough, but when he discovered the state included a 75-cent monthly “administrative fee” he filed a lawsuit.

Maldonado accuses the state of interfering with his business relationship with CCTV by including the fee.  Without the fee, his bill would be $15.75 a month for the 47-channel cable package.

His suit asks for a reversal of the 75-cent fee as well as unspecified damages.

Prison officials counter the administrative fee has been part of the cable package for at least four years.

Trinity Broadcasting Network offers inmates special programming on CCTV that it claims "rebuilds inmate lives and reduces recidivism"

“The inmate signs an agreement that states we charge this fee when he elects to purchase cable,” corrections department spokeswoman Susan Bensinger told the newspaper. “If he doesn’t want to pay the fee, he can simply elect to not purchase cable TV service.”

Those outside of prison pay more for their cable service.  Cable pricing from Atlantic Broadband is a comparably worse deal.  For $19.99 a month, residents of Labelle get 20 channels, mostly local broadcast stations, public access, and a handful of basic cable channels.  To get a package comparable to what Madonado receives, a customer would have to upgrade to the 67-channel standard service package — for $59.99 a month.

The lawsuit awaits further action in Fayette County court.

Correctional Cable TV began providing cable service to Correctional Facilities in the early 1990’s and currently serves more than 130 facilities across 20 states, particularly in Colorado, Virginia, Michigan and Pennsylvania.  The company furnishes, installs, and maintains the equipment to provide the programming at no up front cost to the prison authority.  Programming costs are recouped by charges paid by inmates to receive the service.

Tennessee Proposes Cable Tax to Balance Budget, Consumers Displeased

Phillip Dampier February 24, 2010 Public Policy & Gov't, Video 5 Comments

Bredesen

Tennessee governor Phil Bredesen has proposed increasing a tax on cable television service to help raise money for education and public safety.

The tax proposal would remove a current exemption for state residents on the first $15 of their cable bill, making the entire amount subject to the state sales tax.  The monthly cost — about $1.35.

The “cable tax” was part of a package of “revenue enhancers” proposed by the governor to create a $50 million dollar earmark targeted to preserve government jobs in education, as well as foresters and those working in the criminal justice system.

Bredesen’s proposal may stem, in part, from a lawsuit filed by satellite providers against the state.  They’re upset customers must already pay sales tax on the entire amount of their satellite service bill, while cable gets a special partial exemption.  Bredesen’s saw their point.

“You can’t tax the same service from one person and not tax it from another,” Bredesen told reporters at a press event earlier this month. “I don’t think of it so much as though we’re raising taxes across the board on television, but really we’re kind of fixing a loophole.” 

Loophole or not, many consumers and Republicans in the state legislature don’t like the proposal.

Senate Speaker Ron Ramsey (Blountville), among several other Republicans participating in a press release objecting to the tax, said raising cable rates is not an appropriate way to balance the state budget.  The Republicans called instead for spending and tax cuts to encourage businesses to create more jobs.

Governors across all 50 states are looking for creative solutions to solve state budget woes as the American economy, and tax receipts, continue to drag.  Many are proposing increases in service fees, new targeted taxes, and one state — New York, is proposing to delay sending some residents their state tax refund checks until this summer.

Republicans, who control both houses of the Tennessee legislature, suggested the cable tax would not find its way into law. 

Bredesen challenged the Republicans to come up with spending cuts or new revenue sources themselves.

“You’ve got to move beyond saying ‘I don’t like this,‘ and into ‘I don’t like this, and here’s how we plan to fix it,'” Bredesen said in a statement.

[flv width=”480″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WSMV Nashville Lawmakers Propose Increase In Cable Bill 2-4-2010.flv[/flv]

WSMV-TV in Nashville discusses Tennessee’s cable tax proposal and finds out what area residents think about it. (2 minutes)

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