Fleeing customers haunt phone co. in New England

Mar 12, 2009  3:40 PM (ET)

By CLARKE CANFIELD
Associated Press

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20090312/D96SMABG0.html



PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - Phone companies fear that customers will 
increasingly switch off their landlines in favor of wireless phones or 
phone service from cable TV providers. So the last thing FairPoint 
Communications Inc. needed was to send subscribers fleeing with a botched 
technical transfer.

Now the company is trying to delay a debt payment and has seen its stock 
crater.

It all began when FairPoint swallowed an enormous acquisition.

North Carolina-based FairPoint owns and operates 32 phone companies in 18 
states, with a total of 1.9 million access lines. Most of those came when 
FairPoint paid $2.3 billion a year ago for Verizon Communications Inc.'s 
1.5 million phone and Internet lines in northern New England.

Many subscribers were already getting itchy last year. FairPoint lost 12 
percent of its residential and business lines - more than 152,000 of them - 
in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont in 2008, a much higher rate than the 
nationwide peer average of 7 percent.

Now more subscribers are heading for the doors after experiencing e-mail, 
Internet and customer service problems in recent weeks after FairPoint took 
total control of the Verizon system.

Last week, Norm Marsh of Augusta switched his bundled phone, Internet and 
TV service from FairPoint to Time Warner Cable Inc.

The 71-year-old disabled veteran said it was hard to get through to 
FairPoint's call centers - even when he called at 2 or 3 in the morning - 
to report e-mail and Internet problems. When he did get through, he was put 
on hold for long waits and customer service agents often couldn't help him, 
he said.

"Enough is enough," he said. "I am so annoyed at these people because they 
messed me up."

The losses eat into precious revenue; FairPoint's 2008 revenue was about 
$1.3 billion. In November, Standard & Poor's revised FairPoint's bond 
rating outlook to negative because of FairPoint's high level of customer 
defections.

Fairpoint CEO Gene Johnson said the decline in subscribers has been 
moderating. And its count of high-speed Internet customers rose in the 
final quarter for the first time since FairPoint's purchase of the Verizon 
assets was completed last March 31.

At the same time, Johnson conceded it's reasonable to assume more customers 
will leave after the glitches that occurred when FairPoint fully took over 
Verizon's computer systems at the end of January. During the "cutover" 
process, when FairPoint transferred millions of pieces of data from 
Verizon's computer networks to FairPoint's, thousands of customers lost 
services.

Many people lost e-mail messages, or couldn't access their e-mail for a 
couple of weeks. Some customers still haven't received their February bills.

The Maine Public Utilities Commission has received an estimated 1,200 calls 
from unhappy customers since late January.

Steve Hirshon, vice president of Maine Securities Corp. in Portland, said 
it's no surprise the company has been losing customers, not only because of 
the recent problems but because of the migration of customers to wireless 
phones, a trend besetting all providers of landline service.

Investors clearly don't like what they've seen.

The stock price fell 65 percent last Friday alone, the day after FairPoint 
reported a quarterly loss of $76.1 million and announced it was suspending 
its dividend. In recent days, a share of FairPoint stock has been cheaper 
than the cost of a call on one of its pay phones. It traded as high as $11 
in the past year.

FairPoint has filed a petition with regulators in the three states seeking 
to defer a $11.25 million quarterly debt payment toward its purchase of 
Verizon's operations in northern New England. It is proposing to push back 
the March 31 payment to June 30.

The company said the change would help it manage its cash flow, which has 
been hurt by the loss of $30 million in credit with the bankruptcy of 
Lehman Brothers Inc. and deteriorating economic conditions.

In response to the petition, New Hampshire Consumer Advocate Meredith 
Hatfield questioned whether FairPoint will have the liquidity to keep 
meeting its obligations.

But Johnson insisted the company does not have liquidity problems and filed 
the petition to keep it that way. Johnson said he expects to win back some 
customers in the months ahead when the transition is complete.

"I don't expect the first quarter to be a very pretty quarter, but I expect 
things to look better in the second quarter," he said.

He believes the company's shares are undervalued, and he's backing that up. 
On Tuesday, he bought 200,000 shares of FairPoint at prices ranging between 
38 and 42 cents a share, according to U.S. Securities and Exchange 
Commission filings.


=================================================
George Antunes                    Voice (713) 743-3923
Associate Professor               Fax   (713) 743-3927
Political Science                    Internet: antunes at uh dot edu
University of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-3011         

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