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Brian Roberts, Comcast’s CEO, Is a Billionaire Once Again

Phillip Dampier August 14, 2013 Comcast/Xfinity, Consumer News Comments Off on Brian Roberts, Comcast’s CEO, Is a Billionaire Once Again
Roberts

Roberts

Brian Roberts, the CEO of Comcast-NBC-Universal has two things to celebrate this week:

  1. His exclusive invitation to golf with President Barack Obama at the Vineyard Golf Club on Martha’s Vineyard, joined by World Bank president Jim Kim and former U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk;
  2. He is a billionaire again.

Thanks to a series of rate increases and improving broadband sales, Comcast’s chief executive has now amassed just over one billion dollars in assets, estimates Forbes magazine.

Much of his net worth rests in more than $800 million in Comcast stock controlled by Roberts. Comcast shares are up almost 30 percent in the last year and over 105 percent in the past 24 months. Comcast reported revenue of $16.27 billion in the second quarter alone.

Comcast’s earnings fueled the buyout of NBC-Universal.

Roberts had been a billionaire club member before, appearing on Forbes‘ 400 Richest Americans list in 1999 after inheriting the majority of his father’s stock, worth $750 million. By 2001, that stock increased in value to $1.2 billion. But by 2003, depressed Comcast share prices meant Roberts’ net value dropped to $625 million.

Executive compensation at most cable operators has increased right along with the prices customers pay for service.

Comcast’s Installation Fee to Bring Cable Service to Chappaquiddick : $1,526+ Per Customer

Phillip Dampier September 20, 2012 Comcast/Xfinity, Consumer News 3 Comments

Comcast has agreed to provide cable service to 540 homes on Chappaquiddick Island, but only if residents agree to cover part of the cost, which Comcast estimates will be $1,526 per home, assuming everyone offered the service signs up.

Martha’s Vineyard, with Chappaquiddick Island to the east

The cable company has been at odds with town officials in Edgartown, which is responsible for negotiating franchise agreements for six Massachusetts island communities and Edgartown itself. Comcast said it would cost $1.58 million to wire up the small island, and it wants residents to pay $824,000 of that.

The cable company also wants residents to pay extra for connections if their homes lie more than 250 feet from the primary cable Comcast intends to wire across the island. Beyond that, customers will pay Comcast’s usual rates for cable TV, phone, and broadband service.

Edgartown wants Comcast to cover the island towns that surround it, and the company in turn has routinely claimed there were insufficient customers available to recoup the costs of the investment.  But attitudes have softened now that Comcast’s franchise is up for renewal.

Local officials issued a request for proposals in February, 2011 to a variety of cable operators that might be interested in serving Martha’s Vineyard, of which Chappaquiddick is a part. As anticipated, Comcast — the incumbent, was the only company that responded.

But after an extended back and forth, Comcast seemed willing to relent, if someone split the tab.

Local residents have had mixed reactions to the proposal. Some wonder why they should have to foot the bill for a company that will earn $8 million annually from customers on the various nearby islands. Others are willing to pay, but in installments.

Edgartown town administrator Pam Dolby wants a more detailed breakdown of the cost estimate of $1.58 million to wire just over six square miles of the island.

President Obama Brings Improved Cell Service to Martha’s Vineyard… Temporarily

Phillip Dampier August 23, 2011 Consumer News, Verizon, Wireless Broadband 1 Comment
Courtesy: Norman Einstein

Martha's Vineyard

President Barack Obama’s arrival on Martha’s Vineyard brings a gift any local resident can enjoy: improved cell phone reception on the island, located off the coast of Massachusetts.

The president’s advance team and entourage rely on Verizon Wireless cell phone service, so when the president travels to a vacation spot, Verizon Wireless usually follows with one or two temporary cell towers to guarantee adequate coverage.  This summer is no different, and customers that used to have to walk outside and face the mainland for adequate reception are suddenly enjoying four bars, thanks to two traveling cell towers strategically placed on the island at Chilmark and West Tisbury.

Martha’s Vineyard is notorious for lousy cell phone reception, and the island’s small population has not justified investment for improved service.  Even when carriers explore the idea, local residents usually object to the proposed cell towers, dismissed as unsightly.

But for much of August, the island’s cell phones have been ringing as Verizon customers accustomed to simply going without service while on the island are suddenly getting rock solid service.  That puts a temporary end to the usual practice of trading knowledge of “known reception spots” — specific floors in buildings, certain sidewalks with an especially clear view to the coastline, or where unknown forces converge to deliver enough signal to make a quick call or send a text message.

The cacophony of ringtones has received a mixed reception from the locals, some of whom are unimpressed with wealthy vacationers, bankers, and politicians who call Martha’s Vineyard home for two weeks during the summer.

Rachel Fox, an entertainment lawyer from Manhattan whose family has a home on the island told the New York Times, “A lot of the people who vote here, who live here year-round, couldn’t care less if the people who invade them in the summer get to talk to their Hollywood producers in the middle of the Chilmark [general] store.”

Cell Tower on Wheels

When the president leaves, Verizon’s two cell-on-wheels-trucks leave as well, leading some 15,000 locals to ponder who is paying Verizon to haul the two towers on and off of the island and the expense to run them.  The newspaper wondered the same and didn’t get a clear answer.

Laura Williams, a spokeswoman for the White House Communications Agency, said its job was to ensure “that the president has the best communications possible wherever he travels” so that he can “remain informed and connected.” But Ms. Williams would not answer specific questions about the enhanced service, including how much it costs and who pays for it, citing security concerns.

One thing is certain, the two or three week cell phone nirvana the island enjoys in the summer only benefits Verizon Wireless customers.  Those with AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint find themselves with no bars in virtually all places on the island.

That suits Linda Alley, whose home in West Tisbury is located right next door to one of Verizon’s temporary towers, just fine.

“I’m not attached to my cell phone like a lot of people are,” she told the Times. “I couldn’t care less.”

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