Imperial Valley Press

California AG drops challenge to T-Mobile-Sprint merger

- BY TALI ARBEL AP Technology Writer

NEW YORK — California’s attorney general said Wednesday that the state will not appeal a judge’s decision approving T-Mobile’s $26.5 billion purchase of Sprint, bringing the companies closer to creating a new wireless giant on par with AT&T and Verizon in size.

Attorney General Xavier Becerra and New York Attorney General Letitia James led a coalition of 14 state attorneys general who sued to stop the deal. They had argued that eliminatin­g a major wireless company would harm consumers by reducing competitio­n and adding billions of dollars to phone bills.

The companies said the deal would benefit consumers by helping the companies build a better next-generation, 5G wireless network than each could do alone. The companies also said the deal would lead to lower prices, as they can better compete with the now-larger AT&T and Verizon. A federal judge in New York sided with the companies in February.

New York decided a few days later not to appeal.

Becerra said Wednesday that

T-Mobile would reimburse the remaining 12 states and the District of Columbia up to $15 million combined for the costs of investigat­ing and litigating the antitrust case.

He did not say how much the states spent.

In the settlement, T-Mobile also agreed to additional price and job protection­s in California beyond the deals struck with federal regulators, as the company has done in individual settlement­s with such states as Colorado and Texas, both of which left the state coalition before the trial began. It will freeze prices for five years for California­ns rather than three years at the national level, for example.

The California settlement also requires T-Mobile to do what the company already said it would in a November announceme­nt — offer free internet service and Wi-Fi hotspots to 10 million low-income households with kids nationwide. The internet offer is capped at 100 gigabytes for the year, or about 8 gigabytes a month. That won’t last long for a family that streams video.

The Justice Department and the Federal Communicat­ions Commission approved the merger last year. As part of its deal with the federal government, T-Mobile and Sprint agreed to set up satellite TV company Dish as a new cellular competitor, though it will be a much smaller one.

The states had argued that Dish was not an adequate replacemen­t for Sprint in the wireless market.

The California Public Utilities Commission on Wednesday issued a proposal approving the deal, with conditions including backup power in emergencie­s. Many of the conditions are similar to what the companies already agreed to. Commission­ers may vote on the proposal on April 16.

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