COLUMBIA - The Federal Communications Commission has until Sept. 18 to decide whether BellSouth can offer long-distance service in South Carolina, Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi and North Carolina. <br>
<br>
If the FCC allows it, BellSouth would be able to compete with more than 70 companies already in that $800 million business in South Carolina. <br>
<br>
BellSouth executives say the company's entry will bring lower rates. <br>
<br>
"This will be a good thing for consumers," said Harry Lightsey III, president of BellSouth operations in South Carolina. "More competition means better prices and more services. That's what customers want." <br>
<br>
Georgia and Louisiana could offer an example of what's ahead. The FCC approved BellSouth's request May 15. Nine days later, BellSouth rolled out a series of new customer calling plans. <br>
<br>
"In the first five weeks after that, we gained 147,000 new customers," said BellSouth spokesman Joe Chandler in Atlanta. <br>
<br>
That's 4 percent of the telephone market in BellSouth's Georgia and Louisiana territories, but BellSouth is aiming higher with its "BellSouth State Talk Plan" in Georgia and Louisiana. <br>
<br>
"Within 12 to 18 months, we estimate that we could gain a 20 [percent] to 25 percent market share," Chandler said. <br>
<br>
In Georgia and Louisiana, BellSouth long-distance customers pay $9.95 per month to call anywhere in their state for 25 cents an hour. Out-of-state calls cost 12 cents a minute. <br>
<br>
But the FCC also is weighing BellSouth's competitors' concerns. They say the company has not done enough to let competitors challenge BellSouth's near-monopoly on local calls, one factor in the FCC's decision. They say BellSouth aims to re-establish a monopoly reminiscent of the old Bell System. <br>
<br>
"It's pretty clear that BellSouth has not opened its South Carolina market to competition," said David Arneke, regional spokesman for AT&T. "Competition flourishes in New York, for example, but not here." <br>
<br>
A recent FCC study found new competitive telephone companies service only 3 percent of all lines in South Carolina, compared with 25 percent in New York. <br>
<br>
BellSouth competitors also complain that the company sent ads to customers in South Carolina promoting long-distance service before winning federal approval. <br>
<br>
BellSouth says the ads were a mistake. <br>
<br>
Still, some customers are anxious for BellSouth to get into the long-distance business. <br>
<br>
Todd Eischeid, a partner in the Charleston-based Sticky Fingers restaurant chain, now uses a BellSouth competitor for both local and long-distance service. <br>
<br>
"If BellSouth gets long-distance, it could take the competitive advantage," Eischeid said. "It would lower our long-distance rates and give us better service." <br>
http://accesswdun.com/article/2002/9/190277
© Copyright 2015 AccessNorthGa.com
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission.