Los Angeles Times

Why your internet bill could soon rise

- DAVID LAZARUS

Thursday’s the day that the Trump administra­tion will overturn former President Obama’s rules protecting consumers from greedy telecom companies manipulati­ng internet access and pricing.

I got a preview of what’s to come over the weekend as my Spectrum internet bill soared by 20% — and as I encountere­d the take-it-orleave-it policy imposed by Spectrum’s owner, Charter Communicat­ions, which purchased Time Warner Cable last year.

The Republican-controlled Federal Communicat­ions Commission is expected to vote along party lines this week to end net neutrality. That’s the policy ensuring broadband providers such as phone and cable companies can’t give preferenti­al treatment to anyone — their own streaming-video service, say, over Netflix.

The Obama administra­tion passed regulation­s in 2015 prohibitin­g internet service companies from interferin­g with the content flowing over their networks or charging extra for more reliable access.

President Trump’s appointee as FCC chairman, Ajit Pai, argues that those rules have “depressed investment in building and expanding broadband networks.”

They haven’t. What they’ve depressed is the ability of telecom companies to fleece broadband internet customers who have cut the cord on pricey pay-TV packages and switched to streamingv­ideo services.

Happily for the industry, but not so much for consumers, that’s about to change.

My encounter with Spectrum hints at what’s to

come. The company’s latest bill showed that my internet access had jumped 20% as the latest 12-month “promotiona­l offer” came to a close.

Like many cable customers, I’ve grown accustomed to an annual dance with cable service reps: My bill goes up, I call to say I’m canceling my service, they offer a fresh deal.

I was warned by Time Warner Cable insiders after the acquisitio­n by Charter that the new owners were putting away their dancing shoes. There’d be no more haggling. Prices would go up and customers would be told to take it on the chin.

Charter can get away with being so hard-nosed because it faces precious little competitio­n. Rivals such as AT&T and Frontier Communicat­ions aren’t available in all neighborho­ods. And many consumers find it’s just too much hassle to switch service providers.

A Spectrum service rep told me she had no new promotiona­l discounts. If I wanted to maintain service, she said, I’d have to swallow this price hike.

I took to Twitter to complain. A Spectrum rep quickly stepped up to say the company felt my pain and that I should direct-message with my phone number so they could fix things.

After I did, the online rep said via direct message there was nothing to be done — suggesting that the earlier tweet was just for show, making it look on social media like Spectrum cares.

Here’s the thing that makes this so offensive: No telecom company offers service at a loss. Those “promotiona­l offers” are still profitable.

They’re just not profitable enough for executives whose bonuses depend on showing shareholde­rs steady revenue growth.

According to the FCC, which is about to screw us with its net neutrality vote, price increases for cable have outpaced inflation every single year since 1995. Every. Single. Year.

I asked Dennis Johnson, a Spectrum spokesman, if it’s official Charter policy not to offer discounts to retain customers.

I also asked if the company loses money with its promotiona­l rates and, if not, how does it justify the staggering price increases. He declined to answer any of those questions.

Instead, Johnson said in a statement that “we offer promotions to new customers so they can sample Spectrum services at a discounted price for a specific period of time, and then decide what regularly priced package matches their interests and budget.”

He added that “consumers have embraced our customer-friendly approach.”

Perhaps consumers want to tell Spectrum what they really think of the company’s customerfr­iendly approach. You can email Charter’s chief executive, Tom Rutledge, at Tom.Rutledge@chartercom.com.

Phone bill fees

Speaking of telecom bills, Virginia resident Barbara Lee says she recently switched from Comcast to Verizon because her cable bill kept going up.

“Imagine my surprise when I received Verizon’s first bill and noted ‘Verizon Surcharges & Fees’ totaling $12.40,” she told me, adding that a Verizon service rep was unable to clearly explain why she faced nearly $150 a year in extra fees.

“Are these charges legitimate?” she asked. “Is there anything I can do to get them either reduced or removed from my bill?”

It’s understand­able why Lee was scratching her head over her bill’s “Carrier Cost Recovery Charge” ($1.38) and its “Federal Subscriber Line Charge” ($7), among others.

What consumers need to understand is that some fees are required by government authoritie­s. That’s why you pay a fee for 911 service and a federal excise tax.

Other fees are entirely at the phone or cable company’s discretion, which means they don’t have to charge them but are allowed by regulators to do so. So of course they do.

Take the “carrier cost recovery charge.” That’s misleading­ly official-sounding jargon for a phone company passing along some of its costs of doing business.

Verizon, for example, says its charge covers “administer­ing and complying with government programs,” which is, of course, something the company would have to do under any circumstan­ces.

AT&T says its carrier cost recovery charge allows the company to provide “state-to-state and internatio­nal long distance service,” which is kind of the very definition of being a phone company.

And AT&T bills separately for those services, so that makes this a classic case of double dipping.

Can you get such bogus charges reduced or removed from bills? Short answer: No.

These are optional fees on the phone companies’ part, but they’re nonnegotia­ble for customers. If you refuse to pay them, you risk having your service disconnect­ed.

 ?? Mary Altaffer Associated Press ?? THE FCC is set to vote this week to end net neutrality, which has ensured internet providers don’t give unequal treatment. Above, a rally in New York last week.
Mary Altaffer Associated Press THE FCC is set to vote this week to end net neutrality, which has ensured internet providers don’t give unequal treatment. Above, a rally in New York last week.
 ??  ??
 ?? Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images ?? AJIT PAI, chairman of the FCC, claims that net neutrality rules have “depressed investment in building and expanding broadband networks.” They haven’t.
Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images AJIT PAI, chairman of the FCC, claims that net neutrality rules have “depressed investment in building and expanding broadband networks.” They haven’t.

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