Last updated: February 21, 2008 - 8:29am
QWEST PLAYING HARDBALL TO GAIN CABLE FRANCHISE
[SOURCE: Rocky Mountain News, AUTHOR: Jeff Smith]
Qwest Communications, rebuffed in previous efforts to land cable TV franchises in Colorado, is now playing hardball. The Denver telco is giving the city of Arvada 90 days to decide whether to accept a video franchise application. The application marks the first local test of a new Federal Communications Commission order enabling telcos to put communities on a 90-day shot clock. Qwest Colorado President Chuck Ward said in a letter to Arvada officials that if the two sides "are unable to negotiate an acceptable agreement . . . then pursuant to FCC rules, Qwest will be authorized to offer service pursuant to an interim franchise." One of the main sticking points has been whether Qwest should get franchises without being required to provide TV services throughout a community. Many municipalities fear Qwest will cherry-pick neighborhoods. Qwest's application to Arvada includes no buildout provision.
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/tech/article/0,2777,DRMN_23910_5661785,00.html
Related
- Politics hamstrings FCC, Powell says
- Former FCC Chairman Powell: Net Neutrality 'Doing Great'
- Antitrust issue blocked EchoStar-DirecTV deal
- Qwest Backs State Franchise Bill
- Qwest renews bid for franchise deals
- AT&T Attacks Google Voice Again — This Time With Nuns
- Re-Examining the Role of State and Local Governments in Telecom Regulation
- Colorado Ready to Approve CenturyLink-Qwest Merger, For a Price
- CenturyLink merger could help Qwest's case for video franchise rule changes
- Colorado Innovation Council Seeks to Make Good on State's Promise of Better Broadband
- Local Officials Push Hill for Say in Telecom Rewrite
- McCain's Camp Shaves Its Ad Targets
- House Would Grant 10-Year National Franchise
- Colorado town fights Qwest to bridge a digital divide
- Rove super-PAC launches $25 million swing-state ad blitz
Topics
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

