Los Angeles Times

State will not appeal merger

-

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.

Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra, along with New York Atty. Gen. Letitia James, led a coalition of 14 state attorneys general who sued to stop the deal. They had argued that combining two major wireless companies would harm consumers by reducing competitio­n and adding billions of dollars to phone bills.

T-Mobile and Sprint said the deal would benefit consumers by helping the companies build a better nextgenera­tion, 5G wireless network than each could do alone. They also said the deal would lead to lower prices, as combining would help them better compete with 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 as much as $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, TMobile also agreed to provide price and job protection­s in California beyond the deals struck with federal regulators. (The company has made such agreements in individual settlement­s with such states as Colorado and Texas, both of which left the coalition before the trial began.) For example, it will freeze prices for five years for California­ns — up from the three-year freeze it’s offering at the national level.

California’s settlement also requires T-Mobile to do what the company already said it would in a November: offer free internet service and Wi-Fi hot spots to 10 million low-income households with children nationwide. The offer is capped at 100 gigabytes a 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, TMobile 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.

A federal judge in Washington, D.C., has yet to approve the Justice Department settlement. California’s Public Utilities Commission also plans to rule on the deal by April 16.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States