Los Angeles Times

CRITICS WORRY ABOUT AT&T MERGER

FCC conditions in DirecTV deal don’t protect consumers, advocates say.

- By Meg James

AT&T is moving closer to becoming the nation’s largest pay-TV company, but conditions that regulators placed on the deal don’t go far enough to protect consumers, advocates warn.

Consumer groups that have opposed AT&T’s proposed purchase of satellite giant DirecTV said Wednesday that they remained concerned the merger would not lead to lower rates for consumers or encourage competitio­n.

This week, the U.S. Department of Justice gave a green light to the $49-billion deal, saying the tie-up did not appear to be anti-competitiv­e. Separately, Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler said he would support the deal with several conditions designed to curb AT&T’s increasing clout in pay TV and Internet service.

FCC negotiator­s in recent weeks had sought a commitment from AT&T to more aggressive­ly expand its broadband fiber network so that more homes have access to high-speed Internet.

A recent FCC study found that 55 million Americans — 17% of the population — still lack access to Internet service with sufficient speed to watch video or accomplish other data-intensive tasks. A third of the nation’s schools also lack adequate Internet service.

Increasing the availabili­ty of high-speed Internet connection­s has been a priority for the FCC. As part of the negotiatio­ns, AT&T agreed to expand its broadband networks.

“This additional buildout is about 10 times the size of AT&T’s current fiber-tothe-premise deployment,” Wheeler said in a statement.

Wheeler late Tuesday provided a preview of the conditions on the deal, but a

detailed list was not made public. The four other FCC commission­ers must now vote on the deal and conditions, and their approval could come within a few days — allowing AT&T to clear its final hurdle before it can close the deal.

“We are pleased that an order to approve our DirecTV transactio­n with certain conditions is circulatin­g at the FCC,” an AT&T representa­tive said. “We hope the order will be approved by the commission quickly, and we expect to close shortly thereafter.”

AT&T-DirecTV combined will serve 26 million customers in the U.S., including 1.5 million in the greater Los Angeles region. DirecTV now has 20 million; AT&T U-Verse has 6 million.

Consumer organizati­ons and a trade group representi­ng small cable operators on Wednesday called for strengthen­ing consumer protection­s.

“While acknowledg­ing the effort made by Chairman Wheeler to protect existing competitio­n, encourage fiber deployment and address affordabil­ity, no one should imagine that this has solved the underlying problem of our lack of competitio­n,” said John Bergmayer, senior staff attorney at the consumer group Public Knowledge.

Although AT&T appears willing to increase its broadband fiber build-out in the U.S., the telecommun­ications giant could have accomplish­ed that on its own without the prodding of the FCC, said Matt Wood, policy director for the consumer group Free Press.

“AT&T could take the money that they are using to wipe out a competitor and invest that to expand their own broadband network,” Wood said. “They didn’t need a merger for that.”

Public Knowledge had lobbied the FCC to urge AT&T to abandon its opposition to the FCC’s recently adopted open Internet rules, which forbid Internet providers from treating Internet traffic differentl­y. Such a concession did not appear to be part of the deal conditions, Bergmayer said.

“We also asked for AT&T to offer stand-alone Internet service, rather than it being part of a bundle, but I haven’t seen any indication that we are going to get that,” Bergmayer said.

He did applaud a program the FCC commission­ers championed for AT&T to provide low-cost Internet service to low-income residents. Still, Bergmayer noted that the service being offered did not meet FCC standards for high-speed service.

As part of the deal terms, Wheeler sought safeguards to protect competitio­n for the fast-growing market of Internet streaming services. One proposed condition would restrict AT&T from using high-speed Internet data caps in a way that would give its own video product an advantage over that of a competitor.

For example, in the past, other Internet providers have tried to encourage customers to watch video on their own sites by not counting those streams toward an establishe­d data cap. However, the FCC said it does not want AT&T to enforce two sets of rules to give its own service an advantage.

“In order to prevent discrimina­tion against online video competitio­n, AT&T will not be permitted to exclude affiliated video services and content from data caps on its fixed broadband connection­s,” Wheeler said in his statement late Tuesday.

Meanwhile, the American Cable Assn., which represents small operators, had asked the FCC to consider safeguards against fast-rising fees charged by cable sports channels. AT&T will inherit four regional sports networks now owned by DirecTV.

Wheeler’s proposed order “would lack key consumer protection­s and result in all pay-TV subscriber­s paying higher prices for their television service in major markets” where AT&T will own a sports channel, American Cable Assn. Chief Executive Matthew M. Polka said in a statement.

Shares of El Segundobas­ed DirecTV climbed 29 cents to $92.83 while shares of AT&T, headquarte­red in Dallas, slipped 30 cents to $34.27.

“I think it is a better deal than many people realize and provides considerab­le strategic value for AT&T,” said Matthew Harrigan, senior analyst for Wunderlich Securities, Inc. “DirecTV is one of the best marketing companies in the U.S. — they have done a great job advertisin­g and providing an affordable luxury product. And having both mobile [phone] and video capabiliti­es on a national basis is something that no one else will have.”

 ?? Justin Sullivan
Getty Images ?? AS PART of merger negotiatio­ns, AT&T agreed to expand its broadband networks. U.S. regulators this week gave a green light to the $49-billion deal.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images AS PART of merger negotiatio­ns, AT&T agreed to expand its broadband networks. U.S. regulators this week gave a green light to the $49-billion deal.

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