Way to go Bellsouth....

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MD-2389
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Way to go Bellsouth....

Post by MD-2389 »

Slashdot article
Free Wi-fi Prompts BellSouth to Withdraw Donation
Posted by Zonk on Monday December 05, @12:40AM
from the a-bit-petty dept.
Wireless Networking Businesses Politics
turbosaab writes "Shortly after learning of the New Orleans plan for free city-wide wireless internet, Bellsouth Corp. withdrew an offer to donate a damaged building to be used for police headquarters. According to the Washington Post, 'Bill Oliver, angrily rescinded the offer of the building in a conversation with New Orleans homeland security director Terry Ebbert.'"
WP article
Angry BellSouth Withdrew Donation, New Orleans Says

By Jonathan Krim
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, December 3, 2005; Page D01

Hours after New Orleans officials announced Tuesday that they would deploy a city-owned, wireless Internet network in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, regional phone giant BellSouth Corp. withdrew an offer to donate one of its damaged buildings that would have housed new police headquarters, city officials said yesterday.

According to the officials, the head of BellSouth's Louisiana operations, Bill Oliver, angrily rescinded the offer of the building in a conversation with New Orleans homeland security director Terry Ebbert, who oversees the roughly 1,650-member police force.

City officials said BellSouth was upset about the plan to bring high-speed Internet access for free to homes and businesses to help stimulate resettlement and relocation to the devastated city. Around the country, large telephone companies have aggressively lobbied against localities launching their own Internet networks, arguing that they amount to taxpayer-funded competition. Some states have laws prohibiting them.

BellSouth spokesman Jeff Battcher disputed the city's version of events.

"Our willingness to work with the mayor and the city is still on the table," Battcher said. "We've been working for over two months on this building . . . we are a little surprised by these comments."

Battcher said Oliver spoke directly with the mayor on Tuesday after the WiFi announcement and told him they needed to continue to work through issues regarding the building. He said BellSouth is awaiting the mayor's response.

The police have been scattered in hotels, precinct stations and other makeshift locations since the headquarters was ruined in the hurricane and had been preparing to move to the building after months of discussions with the phone company, city officials said.

The building suffered basement flooding and needs some repairs but has 250,000 usable square feet of space.

Greg Meffert, the city's chief technology officer and a deputy mayor, said he is saddened that BellSouth finds the city's network so objectionable.

"It's a once-in-a-century opportunity to truly show the entire world what can be, instead of just what is, and help write future history in the process," Meffert said. "It's a damn shame they don't see that."

The wireless network covers the central business district and the French Quarter, and the city plans to expand it as the people return.

The network also is used by law enforcement and other city agencies to help speed recovery. Eventually, the city intends to outsource operation of the network's business and consumer services to a private firm, officials said.
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Post by Dedman »

This doesn't surprise me one bit. I dropped BellSloth as a vendor a few years back because I can't stand the way they treat customers. This just help reafirm my opinion that they are a terrible company.
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roid
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Post by roid »

the free internet thing seemed to really take Bellsouth by surprise.

from a corporate standpoint i can see why this seems like a surprise betrayal from Bellsouth's perspective - so i don't really fault them too much.

It'd be like the RIAA withdrawing their support when they discovered that New Orleans was going to share digital music for free or something.

But free internet is just too cool to passup. Good idea New Orleans 8)
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