Lifeline for landlines.
Winter, Mary
AARP Pennsylvania is going to bat for landline phone users who
worry they're being shoved aside by the wireless crowd. AARP
opposes a bill in Pennsylvania to deregulate phone service, arguing it
removes too many consumer protections for landline users, including
guards against unfettered rate increases.
In 2011, 23 percent of Pennsylvania households had only wireless
phones, compared with 34 percent of U.S. households. The percentage of
Pennsylvanians with landline phones only (10 percent) matched the U.S.
average, according to the National Health Interview Survey, conducted by
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Landline providers, including Verizon and AT&T, say they are at
a disadvantage because their competitors--the new wireless,
voice-over-Interact and cable phone services--are largely free of
traditional oversight. Bill sponsor Representative Warren Kampf (R) said
deregulation would "level the playing field" for all phone
companies, adding that at least 20 states have similar measures. He and
Verizon officials argue less government oversight leads to more
competition, which results in better service for consumers because
companies are eager to win and keep their business.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Deregulation opponents disagree. "H.B. 1608 proposes sweeping
changes to the current regulatory framework that would severely limit
the role of the Public Utility Commission to protect consumers,"
said AARP Pennsylvania State Director Bill Johnston-Walsh. Under
deregulation, phone companies could replace landlines with wireless
technology and abandon landlines altogether after 2018 where the cost of
maintaining them is high, critics argue. They add that in many rural
areas cell phone reception is spotty.
Johnston-Walsh said a recent AARP survey of Pennsylvanians age 50
and older showed 94 percent were satisfied with their landline service,
80 percent said they were unlikely to cancel their landline service and
replace it with a cell phone, and 74 percent strongly opposed
legislation that would allow landline providers to end service in rural
areas.
Who's calling? By the numbers.
38%
U.S. homes with wireless phones only
2.4%
Increase in wireless-only homes from first half to last half of
2012
45%
Idaho adults with wireless only, the highest in the nation
1 in 6
U.S. homes that received all or almost all calls on wireless phones
despite also having a landline phone
45%
Children whose homes have only wireless telephones
2%
Households with no telephone
62%
Adults aged 25-29 with only wireless phones
57%
Adults 30-34 with only wireless phones
51%
Hispanic adults living in households with only wireless phones
33%
White adults living in households with only wireless phones
39%
Black adults living in households with only wireless phones
41%
Adults in Midwest with wireless phones only, followed by South
(40%), West (38%) and Northeast (24%)
Source: July-December 2012 National Health Interview Survey,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention