Police in Vancouver, B.C., said they used satellite tracking device for first time to follow bank robber who left scene of crime in taxi equipped with global positioning system. Suspect was arrested minutes after robbery after police called taxi company, which tracked vehicle.
Adelphia Communications said it raised $1.51 billion from sales of stock and debt, 71% more than planned. It said it sold 17 million Class A common shares to generate $761 million and $750 million of 5-year convertible subordinated notes. MSO, which lost $130.9 million in 3rd quarter ended Sept. 30, said it would use proceeds to repay bank loans.
Fox won’t promote Temptation Island in family-oriented shows, it said in letter responding to concern of FCC Comr. Tristani (CD Jan 19 p11). It said promos had been carried during such shows “on a limited number of occasions,” but that would stop “in the spirit of” network’s new policy of not accepting ads for R-rated films in family-oriented shows.
Nokia will supply and install GSM 900 MHz wireless equipment to expand network of China’s Shanxi Mobile Communications, which plans to increase network capacity by 230,000 subscribers in Taiyuan City, terms not announced. Nokia said agreement was reached with one of its joint ventures in China, Beijing Nokia Hangxing Telecommunications Systems.
SpectraSite Transco Communications SAS, French subsidiary of tower company SpectraSite Transco, bought 19% of share capital of Paris-based network developer Sofrer, terms not disclosed. SpectraSite said Sofrer has more than 2,500 wireless sites, with another 1,700 towers under construction. Sofrer’s wireless customers include Orange and Telefonica.
SAN JOSE, Cal. -- Standards for broadband wireless access (BWA) are necessary but shouldn’t delay “time to market” for new developments in BWA technology, said Sheldon Fisher, asst. vp- architecture and technology for Sprint’s Broadband Wireless Group in Wireless Communication Assn. (WCA) keynote here Fri. Industry “can’t wait” for standards process that takes 12-18 months, Fisher said, and such delays will impede innovation. Standards don’t “destroy innovation,” said WCA Task Force on Standards Chmn. Gary Smith of WorldCom, but standards process should be sensitive to industry’s rapidly developing new technologies.
Bidding in FCC’s C- and F-block PCS auction continued to edge up in small increments Fri., with total hitting $16.8 billion. Bids for top 3 participants were little changed, with Verizon Wireless at $8.9 billion, AT&T-backed Alaska Native Wireless $2.8 billion and Cingular Wireless-backed Salmon PCS $2.4 billion. DCC PCS had $539.4 million, followed by Cook Inlet/VoiceStream GSM with $510.4 million, VoiceStream PCS with $479.4 million, and Leap Wireless with $342.3 million. Competition appeared to have cooled somewhat for N.Y.C. licenses, whose highest bids have remained unchanged for last several rounds. Verizon has top bids of $2.05 billion and $2.03 billion for 2 licenses in that market, with Alaska Native Wireless bidding $1.5 billion for 3rd. Verizon also has top bids for licenses in L.A. and Chicago, at much lower price levels of $513.5 million and $494.6 million, respectively. Auction for 422 licenses began Dec. 12 and has gone 73 rounds, with FCC stepping up bidding last week to 6 rounds daily from 4 to accelerate pace. Among 15 most populous markets, Verizon Wireless has high bids for 9 licenses, Alaska Native Wireless for 2, Salmon PCS for 3 and DCC PCS for one in Washington.
Bill introduced in N.J. Assembly effectively would prohibit Verizon from seeking deregulation of retail or wholesale rates and services until its local market share fell below 50%. Measure declares that Verizon’s loss of half its current market share would be proof that effective local competition existed in state. At that point, company would be allowed to seek rate and service deregulation. Legislation (AB-3122/S-1522) would act by tying variety of regulatory requirements to market share test, including requirement for cost-based Verizon rates for unbundled network elements and carrier access, performance standards for wholesale services to CLECs, mandatory service quality standards, caps on retail basic service rates. Bill also would require full 3rd party testing of Verizon operation support systems and 90-day monitored commercial operation study as soon as practical, new service performance standards for all local exchange providers within 9 months of enactment, review of state’s service quality standards within 12 months of enactment. Bill would establish state universal service fund for high-cost areas. Another new Assembly bill (A-3103) would allow Board of Public Utilities to suspend payment of dividend distributions by any operating unit of an energy or telecom utility if board found company was providing inadequate service or was guilty of other major rule violations. Measure would allow company to place dividend payments in escrow pending finding that it had remedied problem. Bill is similar to Ohio law that state regulators last year used against Ameritech because of company’s inadequate service. Both N.J. bills are before Assembly’s Telecom & Utilities Committee.
Ohio PUC found Ameritech Mobile and AirTouch Cellular guilty of violating regulatory requirements that they separate their wholesale and retail operations and offer their wholesale services on nondiscriminatory basis to all cellular resellers. PUC in case 93-1758-RC-CSS ruled on complaint by wireless reseller Cellnet alleging Ameritech and AirTouch had provided their retail reseller affiliates with favorable rates and terms that they denied to unaffiliated resellers, allowing affiliates to unfairly undercut Cellnet in retail markets. PUC in 99-page order dismissed companies’ multiple defenses and held them guilty of discriminating against Cellnet. Agency acted after determining it had jurisdiction because case involved rate discriminatory conduct, not rate challenge. PUC ordered companies to cease unlawful conduct, but since this was companies’ first offense it declined to impose any penalties. In another matter, PUC set Feb. 7 hearing to collect public comment on whether customers in Columbus 614 area code preferred geographic split or overlay for code relief. Split plan would put Columbus and its outer suburbs into separate area codes. Current code is projected to run out of numbers in fall 2002.
Women in Cable & Telecom (WICT) expressed concern about FCC’s recent report showing that women held fewer jobs in cable industry than year ago (CD Jan 18 p10). Of 2,752 overall jobs lost in cable 1998-1999, group said women lost “a startling 2,025, or 74%.” WICT called it “even more troubling” that women made up “just 34.4% of officials and managers for cable operators” in 1999, down from 35.2% in 1998 and 36% in 1997. Group warned again that if trend continued, “it would begin to cripple” cable industry as it competed with other industries for top talent. It urged cable operators to “make the fundamental changes that will address these employment issues” and provide women with more female role models, more opportunities for advancement and greater recognition of company contributions.