This section is from the document '/news-archives/clari/nb/telecom'. From clari.nb.telecom Fri Jul 31 06:45:54 1992 From: newsbytes@clarinet.com Date: 30 Jul 92 19:51:19 GMT Newsgroups: clari.nb.telecom,clari.nb.top Subject: ****Study Calls Bell Divestiture a Rip-off 07/30/92 NEW YORK, NEW YORK, U.S.A., 1992 JUL 30 (NB) -- In a conclusion he called "startling and disturbing," researcher Bruce Kushnick charged that the public is being ripped-off as a result of the 1984 break-up of the Bell System. Kushnick's New Networks Institute, a telecommunications market research and analysis firm based in New York, came to that conclusion as Phase One of an ongoing project called "10 Years Since Divestiture: The Future of the Information Age." Kushnick charged that both Congress and the Federal Communications Commission are making decisions about the future of telecommunications "based on incomplete and misguided information, and these decisions should be reexamined." Specifically, Kushnick recommends that Congress explore the dismantling of the seven regional Bell companies created by divestiture. Ironically, Pacific Telesis is considering just such a break-up, between regulated and unregulated entities, in a bid to increase the value of its business to shareholders. In his report, Kushnick charges that FCC statistics on local charges are incomplete, and that in fact the cost of local service has risen 315 percent since 1984, with New York City charges have growing 553 percent since 1980. The FCC claims such costs are up just 50 percent. Service, Kushnick charges, has not improved. Kushnick said long distance charges have gone down by 60 percent, but other studies have charged that the decrease in long distance costs represents only a reduction in the money paid by long distance companies to access local networks. Most damning, Kushnick charged that the regional Bells have changed their mandate from supplying, "Universal Service at a Reasonable Price" to pursuing a strategy which first serves their investors. $11.3 billion has been spent in the last three years on foreign investments. Using their natural monopoly positions, Kushnick charges these regional Bells are costing consumers $5.6 billion in extra charges for toll calls, while the average consumer bill shows over $125 a year in added fees and expenses. Kushnick came to his conclusion after examining actual charges and payments of telephone bills from 1980-92. Information was combined with data from over 1,600 separate documents, with sources including the FCC, the Department of Justice, the Bells' own BellCore research group, the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners, telephone company annual reports, tariffs, and product literature. Kushnick will now look at the future of the industry, including the creation of a new telecommunications agency, a plan for regional Bell divestiture of their local networks, the creation of a universal fiber network, and the outlook for new services based on area codes like 500, 600, and (star)100. (Dana Blankenhorn/19920730/Press Contact: Bruce Kushnick, New Networks Institute, 212-837-7867) -- This, and all other articles in the clari.nb hierarchy are Copyright 1992 by the Newsbytes News Network. Only paid subscribers may access these articles. Any unauthorized access, reproduction or transmission is strictly prohibited. We will reward the first provider of information that helps us stop violators of this copyright. Send reports to reward@clarinet.com.