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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!news.acns.nwu.edu!telecom-request
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 92 10:53:36 EDT
- From: Jerry Leichter <leichter@lrw.com>
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
- Subject: SNET Rate Request
- Message-ID: <telecom12.928.1@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Organization: TELECOM Digest
- Sender: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Approved: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Submissions-To: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Administrivia-To: telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Telecom-Digest: Volume 12, Issue 928, Message 1 of 13
- Lines: 106
-
- SNET, which serves most of Connecticut (and little bits of New York -
- some of the LATA lines here don't match the state borders) has filed
- for a new rate plan with "$160 million in new telephone rates
- [whatever that means] to be phased in over three years". The most
- interesting part of the new rates is that they actually ENCOURAGE flat
- rate calling.
-
- Currently, phone rates are based on three dimensions:
-
- - Exchange class I-III (depending on the size of the exchange).
- Class II is about 10% more expensive than Class I; Class III
- about 10% more than that.
-
- - Residence or Business line. Business line rates are almost exactly
- three times the corresponding residence rates.
-
- - Flat rate, message rate (30/90 free calls (residential/business),
- then 12 cents/call), or Select-a-Call (measured: 1-2 cents
- per minute after an initial 3-5 cents, depending on distance).
- Select-a-Call has a fixed rate independent of exchange class.
-
- Under the new scheme, we have:
-
- - Exchange classes I-V, and some of the inter-class differences are
- larger (up to 20%). (The difference between the smallest and
- largest class was about 30%; it's now about 60%.)
-
- - Residence, Business, or a new Home Business category. Business
- base rates are uniformally double the corresponding Residence
- rates. Home Business rates are uniformally 1.5 times the
- Residence rates.
-
- - Message rate disappears. Select-a-call becomes "per call" (should
- really be called "measured") and is now uniformally 5 cents
- per minute, within the Extended Calling Area. Flat rate
- splits into two possibilities: Home Calling Area or Extended
- Calling Area. The difference is in the number of exchanges
- included in the flat rate. If you have HCA, calls to the
- Extended area are the same 5 cents/minute as for "per call"
- service. Only ECA rates vary with exchange class.
-
- Home Business lines MUST have HCA service.
-
- Needless to say, overall rates are up. To take my home town of
- Stamford (in exchange class II) as an example, current residence rates
- are: Flat $11.19, Message $7.59, and Select-a-Call $6.00. New rates
- (now exchange class III) will be: HCA $15.00, ECA $25.65, and Per Call
- $10.00.
-
- It's unclear how the current Flat Rate area (which generally includes
- your own town and physically adjacent ones) compares to the new HCA's
- and ECA's, though SNET claims that for "most customers" the new ECA is
- larger than the current Flat Rate area.
-
- It looks as if ECA is the service SNET will try to get most customers
- to take. It's the most expensive base rate -- but it's also a flat
- rate service. For people who want to save money, the $5 difference
- between Per Call and HCA is rarely going to make much difference --
- with a break-even point of 100 minutes of even local calls per month,
- it's not a very good deal in most cases.
-
- The Home Business classification is an interesting innovation. It
- entitles you to a business white pages and DA listing, and you can buy
- a Yellow Pages listing. (Business service includes a free YP
- listing.)
-
- In the past, it's been officially impossible for different lines at
- the same address to have different classes of service. (In practice,
- SNET *asks* you if you have another line, and what its class of
- service is; they never seem to check what you tell them.) It'll be
- interesting to see whether they will allow you to mix Residence with
- Home Business lines. If not, the Home Business lines may be much less
- attractive.
-
- Intra-state LD also sees major changes. SNET wants a uniform 22
- cent/minute rate anywhere in the state. (There are steep after-hours
- discounts.) This is a decrease for most longer calls, but a
- significant increase for some shorter ones. My table of phone rates
- of some nearby towns (about a 50 mile radius) ranges from 10 to 25
- cents/minute. It's not clear which of these might be included in the
- new ECA; the only one I'd bet on is the 10 cent/minute one. (This one
- will hit me, since my most common intra-state call is to Danbury,
- about 35 miles and several towns away. Calls there are currently 32
- cents plus 18 cents/minute.)
-
- Various charges like line connections go up ($35.73 to $45.00 for
- residence, for example). Centrex lines go up by up to almost 50%.
- Pay phones go from a flat ten cents to 25 cents for five minutes plus
- five cents for an additional three, a major increase. One of my
- favorites, non-listed phone number (note: NOT non-published;
- non-listed IS available from DA, they just have to leave it off the
- yearly list they send to the printers) goes from $1.00/month to
- $2.00/month. I'd love to see the salaries for the people who must go
- through and pull the non-listed numbers out by hand; nothing else can
- justify that kind of charge. (Before you say, well, non-listed
- numbers generate more DA calls: DA calls go from 24 to 40 cents, plus
- they go from first 5/3 free for residence/business to 3/0 free.)
-
- These are all proposals to the DPUC. I don't recall the local DPUC
- being particularly active around here, so I expect this stuff to go
- through pretty much as it stands.
-
-
- Jerry
-
-