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Federal Probe of Baby Bells Urged

Comments by chairman of Qwest raise questions about the competitive zeal of the regional phone companies.

December 19, 2002|James S. Granelli, Times Staff Writer

Two members of Congress called on the Justice Department on Wednesday to launch an antitrust investigation of the failure -- possibly the refusal -- of the regional Baby Bell companies to compete against each other.

U.S. Reps. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.) and Zoe Lofgren (D-San Jose), seizing on a top executive's public comments in October, allege that the Baby Bells have refused to enter each other's local service markets even though the 1996 Telecommunications Act was designed to encourage such competition.


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In a letter to Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft, the two point out that "any arrangement to carve up market territories would not be permitted under antitrust law."

Conyers and Lofgren said they were troubled by a statement made by Richard Notebaert, chairman of Qwest Communications International Inc. In a talk with Chicago Tribune reporters, he was quoted as saying that it would be fundamentally wrong to compete against, say, SBC Communications Inc., noting that it "might be a good way to turn a quick dollar but that doesn't make it right."

Spokesmen for San Antonio-based SBC and Qwest said that the quote did not refer to overall competition and that the companies are competing against each other. Qwest covers local service in 14 Western states and SBC operates in 13 states including California, where its unit formerly was known as Pacific Bell.

But they also said they aren't offering local service to residential and small business customers outside their territories because the regulated pricing system is not workable and could change soon under a pending review by the Federal Communications Commission.

"We compete vigorously outside our market for long-distance and local service, long-haul [data service] and [high-speed] DSL service," said Billy Myers, a Qwest spokesman. "But we're not competing for residential and small business customers outside our market because of the way rates are structured."

Consumer groups, though, said that an antitrust investigation of the four Baby Bells, which also include Verizon Communications Inc. and BellSouth Inc., is warranted.

"The Baby Bells had no intention of competing against each other," said Regina Costa, research director at the Utility Reform Network. "Residential and small business customers are key. The telecom act means that ordinary customers are supposed to benefit from competition."

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