You still use a landline? FCC voting on new phone rules
But the alternatives have drawbacks, including an inability to withstand power outages. The federal government is considering rules Thursday to make sure Americans aren’t caught off guard in emergencies if they switch.
Many people already scoff at the idea of a landline. About 45 percent of U.S. households just use cellphones. But outside of cities, cell service can be poor.
Yet even among households with wired phone service, according to a government study last year, about half of them have already ditched copper-based landlines for an Internet-based phone service sold by phone and cable companies and typically packaged with TV and Internet services. That’s expected to continue.
Fiber and cable networks come with big benefits, such as faster Internet service and expected improvements in 911, including the ability to send texts and photos.
But a home phone that relies on the Internet will go out when the power does. With copper networks, the phone line delivers its own power source and will continue to work — as long as the phone isn’t a cordless one needing separate power.
In addition, many home burglar alarms and medical alert systems run on the copper network, so people need time to get replacements.
“One of the concerns we all have is people don’t understand the difference in these kinds of phone service. They see a phone is a phone is a phone,” said
The march away from copper appears inevitable.
“There will be so few people on the network that it won’t be economical to maintain it,” said
On Thursday, the
Phone and cable companies would also have to warn customers with newer technologies that the phone will go out with the power, so people have time to get replacement alarms and backup batteries if necessary.
“If you mess with people’s phone systems without explaining what’s going on, you have real issues,” said
He estimates that about 80 million people as well as several million small businesses still have traditional copper-based phone service.
Some customers, consumer advocates and the telephone-workers union accuse the phone companies of not repairing copper networks that they want to shut down. The new rules would prohibit companies from retiring a copper network through neglect. If it wants to abandon copper, it would need to tell customers.
In
Consumer advocates have particular concerns about remote areas. They worry that copper will be replaced there with wireless services that don’t do as much.
They point to what happened on the western part of
After complaints,
But some people, even in big cities, just want to keep their copper phone line.
“I’m on the 40th floor of an elevator building,” said
The
Under the
While the notifications requirements would take effect in a few months, if they get approved Thursday, the standards on service quality will take longer.
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