Despite demand, DSL industry
struggles
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — Not long ago, the
prophets of our digital future were touting DSL as one of the
hottest tickets to a broadband revolution that would utterly
transform telecommunications.
Homes and businesses would have
hassle-free, always-on, affordable and speedy Internet access.
And DSL was not just for Web surfing: Interactive television,
telephones and kitchen appliances — all connected — were
supposedly just around the corner.
Digital Subscriber Line technology, which
runs over regular copper phone wire, was also supposed to be a
powerful vehicle for ending regional telephone companies'
domination over local service.
But for independent DSL providers, the
reality has fallen far short of the promise. Wall Street lost
confidence. Plans to create nationwide networks were scaled
back. Many independents are going broke.
Emerging dominant now in the DSL market
are the century-old phone companies against whom complaints
had piled up for shoddy service and long installation
waits.
The independents accuse the regional
Bells of anticompetitive behavior, of locking them out of the
neighborhood switching offices that link phone lines, the
telephone network and the Internet — of violating the spirit
of the 1996 Telecommunications Act, which promised more choice
and better service.
"We're on the precipice of disaster, and
it's not clear our industry is going to survive," says John
Windhausen, president of the Association for Local
Telecommunications Services, a trade group for competitive
carriers that offer voice and data lines including DSL.
Victims in the DSL drama include bankrupt
NorthPoint Communications, which last month sold most of its
assets — but not its customers — to AT&T for $135 million;
Rhythms NetConnections, whose chief executive quit and whose
auditors question its viability; Covad Communications, which
laid off 800 people and scaled back.
Now, tens of thousands of customers are
scrambling for alternative providers or returning to slow
dial-up modems.
"It's really tough for me to be giving
this up," says John Margarone, a Buffalo, N.Y., computer
consultant about to lose his DSL at his home where he invested
$10,000 in equipment. "This aspect of my business is dead
right now."
The crisis of the upstart DSL providers
would seem paradoxical. Demand has never been stronger — and
the major phone companies are now reporting fewer installation
troubles.
Last year, U.S. subscribers of DSL shot
up by 500,000 to 2.4 million, according to TeleChoice, a
research firm. That number is expected to swell to 5.7 million
this year but still fall behind the numbers posted by the
cable companies' competing services.
Most new DSL business is expected to fall
to regional Bell companies including Verizon, SBC
Communications, Qwest Communications and BellSouth, which
claim 76% of all subscribers.
For residential customers, cable or DSL
service costs as little as $39.95 a month. That price is
difficult for independents to match after they pay the phone
company to use its lines.
Under the Telecommunications Act,
leased-line charges are negotiated under a formula set by the
Federal Communications Commission. If no deal can be reached,
state regulators step in.
In the end, charges vary widely — but the
independents say the regional Bells game the system to their
advantage. The phone companies say fees should be higher.
Monthly leases for single lines that
share both voice and data can cost independent providers as
much as $15. New lines cost them as much as $30 each. Plus,
the phone companies charge for leasing space, line testing,
security and air conditioning.
"It turns out it was a faulty business
model," said Michael Goodman, a Yankee Group analyst. "Was it
someone else's fault that they built their business model at a
competitive disadvantage?"
The DSL buildup began in earnest in 1999,
as the stock markets boomed and plentiful venture capital
emboldened DSL companies to embark on nationwide rollouts.
Internet Service Providers, which worked with pure DSL
providers as retail partners, also spent furiously in a quest
to grow.
"They were giving away close to a
thousand dollars to acquire that customer," said Joe Plotkin
of the U.S. ISP Alliance.
Last year, the cash spigot closed as Wall
Street stopped prizing growth over profits. ISPs stopped
paying their bills just as their DSL partners were deep in the
capital-intensive network deployments.
The Bells leveraged what Epoch Partners
analyst Mark Langner called their "huge natural advantage,"
heavily advertising their own DSL service.
Some DSL companies claim the Baby Bells
did their best to hinder competitors — denying access to
equipment, losing paperwork and slowing repairs. Such
complaints were the basis of antitrust lawsuits Covad filed
against Verizon, BellSouth and SBC.
In some cases, would-be DSL customers
were told by regional Bells that service provided by an
independent was impossible at their address, only to learn
later that they could obtain the phone company's retail DSL at
the very same location.
When computer programmer Terje Oseberg
tried to order service from a competitive DSL carrier, he was
told by Pacific Bell that his line would not qualify. A few
days later, his roommate called and was told PacBell's retail
DSL would work.
The DSL imbroglio might be best
understood in light of the billions in profits to be made in a
transformed communications market. DSL lines can carry
digitally rendered voice and television service.
That threatens the Bells' decades-old
cash cow.
"We're introducing a new technology that
threatens the rich revenue stream that they've enjoyed as a
monopoly for the last 100 years," said Sal Cinquegrani of New
Edge Networks, a competitive carrier.
The regional Bells insist they are being
true to the 1996 telecom act, which specified that they cede
monopoly control over phone lines as a condition of being
allowed to enter the long distance market.
"We have every incentive to provide
nondiscriminatory access and indeed do so," said Saralee
Boteler, an SBC spokeswoman.
The confusing relationship between the
upstart competitors, their partner ISPs and the regional phone
company also created headaches, said Claire Beth Nogay, a vice
president at Verizon.
"It's very difficult for the end user to
get a clean picture of what's going on," she said. "That's
just the nature of the industry as it stands today. Nobody
really wants it this way, but that's the way it evolved."
Critics say there's more to the story —
that the Baby Bells have deliberately encumbered
competition.
"I believe the Bells didn't do the
training. They didn't hire enough staff to handle the
problem," said Bruce Kushnick of the New Networks Institute, a
telecom public advocacy group.
"Basically, the rollout has been
atrocious," said Kushnick, a telecommunications
consultant.
Regulators have occasionally fined
regional phone companies. The issue is most hotly debated when
the Bells' applications to enter long distance are
considered.
In December, during SBC's push to sell
long-distance in Kansas and Oklahoma, the Justice Department
urged closer scrutiny of competition and access prices. In
January, the FCC approved the application.
In Pennsylvania last month, regulators
ordered Verizon to split its retail and network operations but
stopped short of ordering new separate companies. Florida,
Illinois, New Jersey and other states are considering some
form of separation.
Both sides have been blaming each other
for DSL problems for years, said Ken Johnson, a spokesman for
Louisiana Republican Rep. Billy Tauzin, who chairs the House
Commerce Committee.
Less, not more, regulation is the answer,
he said.
"Frankly, there's plenty of enough blame
to spread around," Johnson said. "Let the marketplace
determine who is telling the truth."
FCC Chairman Michael Powell appears
intent on doing that.
"We will shift from constantly expanding
the bevy of permissive regulations to strong and effective
enforcement of truly necessary ones," he told Congress last
month.
Not all independent DSL providers blame
the phone companies for their financial woes.
Those who stay in business will learn to
anticipate slow service and other glitches, said Keith
Markley, president of DSL.net, a combined competitive carrier
and ISP that focuses solely on small and medium-size
businesses. The structure makes for higher profit margins and
easier problem-solving, he said.
Because it is nearly impossible to
compete on price, survival may depend on whether they offer
products and service that established phone companies do not.
New Edge Networks, for instance, focuses on businesses in
cities with fewer than 250,000 people.
Covad, which settled its suit against
SBC, now sells directly to small businesses and maintains
partnerships with solvent ISPs.
Chuck McMinn, Covad's chairman and
co-founder, says demand for faster connections will overcome
all the odds.
"The customers love it when they get up
and operational," he said. "If you went to them and said we're
going to take your broadband connection, you'd better duck
because you're going to get hit with something."
Copyright 2001 The Associated Press.
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