5G Roll-out: FCC Corruption & One of the Largest Accounting Scandals in U.S. History
One of Largest Accounting Scandals in History: Bruce Kushnick and The IRREGULATORS Expose FCC Corruption on 5G and More
By B.N. Frank
Bruce Kushnick is no stranger to exposing how the FCC has enabled the Telecom Industry to take advantage of the American people for almost 20 years and for billions of dollars. His latest article divulges even more corruption and reasons to get pissed – including the planned discontinuation of more reliable copper landlines.
The good news is that he and his team, The IRREGULATORS, are taking on the bad guys before it gets any worse: “IRREGULATORS vs. FCC: Exposing One of the Largest Accounting Scandals in American History.”
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The IRREGULATORS are planning on appealing a recent FCC decision that tries to bury one of the largest accounting scandals in American history. It is directly tied to AT&T, Verizon and CenturyLink’s state-based utilities.
This is probably one of the most bizarre cases you ever heard of. Unbelievably, the FCC, (with the help of AT&T, Verizon and Centurylink) ‘froze’ the cost accounting rules that are supposed to divide up the expenses of the different lines of business that use the state-based telecommunications infrastructure, the state-based utilities, to reflect the year 2000 –19 years ago.
AT&T et al. figured out that they could use these FCC rules, (which no one has a clue exists), to put the majority of all expenses into local service and it made the entire wired telecommunications networks in America appear to be unprofitable. At the same time, all of the other subsidiaries and lines of business using the same networks got a free ride.
Most people don’t know that there are still state utilities, like Verizon NY or MA or AT&T California. Moreover, no one knows that these utilities are not just the copper wires but appear to be almost all of wires within the state; copper and fiber. And this scheme diverted billions of dollars of construction budgets per state to pay for the FiOS video, fiber to the home service, or AT&T’s U-Verse, as well as the wires used for the wireless networks, even the special access wires, also known as “back haul” or business data service
And, if you want sneaky? Verizon was able to convince the state commissions to not only grant rate increases to fund these fiber networks, but they allowed Verizon to claim that these were “Title II”, common carrier, and part of the existing state utility! This quote is from a Verizon franchise for FiOS; this language is almost identical in every state.
This is the same “Title II” that is part of the Net Neutrality battle, but this has been ignored. Verizon, elsewhere, has claimed that Title II harmed investment; here it shows that Title II was used to charge local customers for broadband upgrades using the state utility construction budgets.
In December 2018, the FCC extended this freeze for 6 more years, through 2024. Unbelievably, for almost 2 decades the FCC never audited the books. But what is most surprising is — this has been going on for almost 2 decades and it has been completely under the radar.
This Freeze:
Created the Digital Divide. In almost every state, Verizon et al. had agreements, which started in the 1990’s, to upgrade their entire state territory; rural, urban and suburban areas were to be done equally. In fact, in most states, the state laws were changed to charge local phone customers rate increases for this work. Instead, the companies left much of the rural areas to deteriorate claiming they were ‘unprofitable’; even many of the inner-cities weren’t upgraded, especially in low income areas. But this was just part of this artificial financial shell game.
Customers were Overcharged Billions of Dollars for Wireless. This is not chump change. With this cross-subsidy scheme, local phone customers in most states were illegally charged billions to pay for the build outs of fiber optic networks that are used for wireless. On top of this, the Wireless service has been paying a fraction of the market prices and expenses that it should be paying for using the utility networks.
Tax Benefits from Artificial Losses. With local wired networks paying the majority of expenses — (even though the costs were not incurred to offer the service), the companies lost billions a year, and these were used by the companies for tax benefits.
Shut Off the Copper; Dismantle the State Utilities. Making the local service networks appear unprofitable is now used as part of the claim that the companies should be allowed to ‘shut off the copper’ and force-march customers onto wireless (because it makes them more money). And to help AT&T et al., the FCC’s current plan is to dismantle the utilities, handing them over to the wireless company as private property for private use. This is done in conjunction with ALEC, the American Legislative Exchange Council, who creates model legislation (paid for by AT&T et al.) to work in concert with the FCC’s plan.
Pissed yet? Unfortunately, the article provides even more evidence on how Americans were ripped off. It also explains how the forced installation of harmful 5G technology throughout American communities (See 1, 2, 3, 4, 5) — despite opposition and risk — is part of the corruption:
Fourth, 5G Is a Bait and Switch. This is just another play to remove all regulations, preempt state laws and charge more money. Anyone who thinks that these companies are going to put in fiber optics for a small cell wireless service, with a range of 1–2 city blocks — is delusional. Moreover, in-region, it appears that these wires are being cross-subsidized and charged to local phone customers via the utility construction budgets.
The Telecom Industry won’t even say that 5G is safe – biologically or environmentally and plenty of research has already determined that it’s not. That’s definitely another reason to get pissed.
According to the IRREGULATORS, this corruption will continue and will be more difficult to reverse the FCC’s decisions later. The U.S. Day of Action against 5G is on May 15. Will you be there?
Image credit: Pixabay