tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-109086262024-03-08T17:20:48.716-05:00The Libes LibationWhy I love Comcast, Verizon, the FCC, and everyone else.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.comBlogger112125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-64976619759270039722012-05-11T13:37:00.009-04:002012-05-21T00:04:18.841-04:00Too Soon?Hooray. Verizon removed their line from my lawn and my neighbor's lawn. Comcast stopped demanding I return their equipment and instead sent me a check for the money they owed me. Wow. Everyone's finally doing the right thing. All it took was some public complaining.<br /><br />In addition, a reader pointed out that Verizon's battery backup unit has a Silence Alarm button on it. I knew that already. But it seemed to have no effect. What I didn't know is that the button only worked when there was no power to the unit. Actually, I'm not even certain that's the real explanation because the button gives no feedback. I pushed it a lot - with power on, power off, holding it in for awhile, etc. Not sure what was important but the alarms have stopped. I suppose I'll have to wait a year to find out whether the alarm still works when the battery dies.<br /><br />I also figured out how to cut short Verizon's regular sales pitch. Every time I called, the Verizon representatives would end with "<i>I noticed you haven't signed up for TV service. Can I make you an offer?</i>" Unfortunately even saying "<i>Unless the offer is free service, no thanks</i>" wouldn't stop these people from their scripted interaction. One representative willing to deviate slightly even said to me "<i>It's at this point in the conversation that I'm supposed to ask if I can give you a deal on TV service.</i>" To several representatives, I tried explaining my true feelings - that I would willingly pay for TV shows but only <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cable_television_in_the_United_States#A_la_carte_cable">a la carte</a>, only without commercials, and only if I couldn't already get them from <a href="http://www.hulu.com/">Hulu</a>, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/video/ontv/start">Amazon</a>, or <a href="http://netflix.com/">Netflix</a>.<br /><br />In this day and age, I consider it absurd to pay Verizon (and the erstwhile Comcast) for TV shows and accompanying commercials that I don't care about. But explaining that never cut the conversation short. My rhetoric only moved the representatives somewhere else in their script. Finally, I figured out the correct response: "<i>I don't watch TV.</i>" The statement is not true but at least it ends their scripted pitch. Now if only I could stop the paper flyers for Verizon services that still flood my mailbox!<br /><br />Technically, I have no complaints about Verizon's internet service. It hasn't gone down at all so far. With Comcast, I used to get glitches - the service would come to a crawl or stop outright for ten minutes to an hour several times a week. This no longer happens. Verizon's service appears to be very consistent. But the registration, website, and many of the interactions I've had with Verizon personnel were awful. A lot of people wrote to me privately offering similar stories.<div><br /></div><div>Now that I've been a customer for a month, there's one last part to my welcome to the world of Verizon: Reading that Verizon has just announced new price hikes. (Too soon?) As a <a href="http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/Verizon-Says-FiOS-Rate-Hikes-Coming-119574">dslreport report</a> put it, Verizon "<i>feels it can charge a premium for the service, and start doing away with some of the more aggressive pricing promotions.</i>" This might make sense and it might not. Price conscious consumers have a lot of alternatives: dropping to a slower tier, dropping or finding a cheaper provider for TV and phone, and, at least where I live, switching to Comcast. Personally, I am willing to pay a premium for quality internet service. A year from now I'll have a better idea of whether that means sticking with Verizon, even with higher prices, or not.</div><div><br /></div><div>Coincidentally with the final part of Verizon's welcome, I received the final part of Comcast's goodbye. I missed their call two days ago. No message was left but a number was recorded on my answering machine. I googled it and found that many people were reporting the number as a service calling on behalf of Comcast to ask if customers were satisfied. But now? After I have left? This has to be the ultimate punch line to years of bad service.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><br /><br /></div>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-369920651811618082012-05-02T01:36:00.009-04:002012-05-11T10:13:59.153-04:00Mow CarefullyIt's been over a month now since <a href="http://libeslibation.blogspot.com/2012/03/fios-arrives.html">I switched from Comcast to Verizon</a> and I've learned a few things.<br /><br /><b>Mow Carefully</b><br /><br />Verizon's line is still laying over my lawn and my neighbor's lawn. The line is thin and hard to see so it is both a trip hazard (lawsuit anyone?) and likely to be cut. I like to think I mow carefully but I do have to constantly remember that line is laying hidden like a snake in the grass. I cannot imagine why Verizon isn't being responsible on this issue.<br /><br /><b>Battery Backup Beeps</b><br /><br />I still haven't come up with a way to silence the battery backup unit. As I <a href="http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=10908626">mentioned previously</a>, it's inappropriate to have the unit beep every time the electricity goes out. I'm not talking about the 6 to 24 hour outages that strike once or twice a year. I mean the two or three second glitches that occur repeatedly, sometimes several times in an hour. It's crazy to be woken up for that.<br /><br />I googled for "<i>silence Verizon battery backup</i>" and, not surprisingly, found many pages where people described how to silence the unit completely by physically disabling the beeper. However I want the unit to alert me when the battery needs replacing, not when the power fails. Verizon - help me out here!<br /><br /><b>Bill</b><br /><br />Got my first Verizon bill. It contained two surprises.<br /><br />The first was that I found no tax or additional fees. As I mentioned previously, before signing up, Verizon could not tell me what the taxes or additional fees would be. I contacted many people including Verizon's own billing department. They only gave estimates with very large ranges.<br /><br />After signing up, the computer generated a specific number. However it didn't match what was on my real bill. I repeat: there were no taxes or fees on my bill. How can this be? After all, Comcast has been charging me taxes for years. Am I going to be surprised next month or next year when Verizon recomputes the bill? Is anyone else getting internet-only FiOS with no taxes?<br /><br />The second surprise is that my bill said "<i>Make check payable to Verizon.</i>" But <a href="http://libeslibation.blogspot.com/2012/03/hello-fios.html">when I signed up</a>, the Verizon website insisted I had to provide a credit card. Look at the picture below. It says "<i>Your Bill Info (required)</i>" and "<i>Please provide your credit card details for your order.</i>" It even highlights "<i>required</i>" in orange.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/donlibes/7134607971/" title="fios-credit-card-reqd by donlibes, on Flickr"><img alt="fios-credit-card-reqd" height="487" src="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7117/7134607971_61d26740f1_o.png" width="468" /></a><br /><br />And before signing up, I did some google searches ("<i>Why does Verizon require a credit card?</i>") and found many people all pointing out the same thing - that Verizon requires credit card payment for FiOS internet-only. And I double checked this with the Verizon rep through their Live Chat service. I took a snapshot of the discussion to show the confusion of the representative. In the pic below, first she said the credit card is related to fraud and equipment. But when I asked outright if the bill will go to my credit card, she said:<br /><br />Holly : <i>Yes, if you are ordering FiOS Internet service alone, the monthly charges would be credited from your card.</i><br /><br />Here's a picture so you can see my question in context.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/donlibes/7134607943/" title="fios-credit-card-will-be-charged by donlibes, on Flickr"><img alt="fios-credit-card-will-be-charged" height="450" src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8148/7134607943_d1d35e8744_o.png" width="522" /></a><br /><br />Needless to say, when I got my bill, I didn't pay it, assuming I'd see the charge on my credit card statement. But after a week, it occurred to me I should be sure. I called Verizon and spoke to a representative who told me the opposite - that I should write a check.<br /><br />I felt uncertain but wrote a check anyway. (I assume Verizon will refund my money or apply my payment to my next bill if appropriate.)<br /><br />Is it possible that when <a href="http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=10908626">I changed from paperless to paper bills</a>, that shifted my payments back to check as well? If so, that certainly wasn't clear from Verizon's website. I'd go back and get some screenshots of those descriptions but at this point, I don't trust the website to leave me with paper bills. It appears that just trying to read those screens automatically shifts you to paperless billing.<br /><br /><b>Authentication</b><br /><br />To date, I've called Verizon by telephone a number of times - perhaps 6 or 7. Each time is a struggle. Getting through the phone tree is not so bad. It asks for my phone number, zip code, TV vs internet, home vs business, etc. Finally, I end up speaking to a person who asks who I am. Wait - didn't you get all the stuff I just entered? <i>No, please give me the phone number on your account.</i><br /><br />I already know what's going to happen next. The Verizon rep will say <i>Sorry, we don't have that number in the system.</i> After this happened on several calls, a rep finally explained <i>We can only look phone numbers up if they're Verizon phone numbers.</i> Well, that's idiotic. And it's even more idiotic to ask for a phone number if there's a good chance the info won't be usable. But why won't Verizon use my phone number?<br /><br />Last week when I called, I figured I'd save time and told the rep I had no phone number. <i>Ok, what's your name.</i> I give him my name. <i>Sorry, I cannot find that in the system.</i> <i>Then can I give you my account number?</i> <i>Sure, go ahead.</i> Upon giving him my account number, he couldn't find that either. He then asked for a callback number. I told him there was no point since my number isn't in the system. Instead, I asked if he could try looking my up by my address. <i>Ok, what's your address?</i> I gave him my address and finally, he found my account.<br /><br />I then asked him what was the most expedient way of authenticating myself to Verizon. He said: <i>Just tell us to look you up by your emergency contact number. It doesn't have to be a Verizon number. And we have it in your account.</i><br /><br />So when I next called up, I offered my "<i>emergency contact number</i>" as I had been instructed. The rep said he never heard of such a thing. I explained why I offered it and he said it made no sense to him that another rep had said such a thing. I asked him the most expedient way to identify myself and he said they fall back to looking people up by name. So I gave him my name. <i>Sorry, can't find you. What's your street address? State? City?</i><br /><br />I pointed out to the representative that not only had I entered my phone number but I had already entered my zip code. So while I understood the Verizon phone tree was throwing away my phone number, why did he have to ask for my state and city when that should be evident from my zip? Answer: Verizon only uses the zip code to confirm a Verizon phone number! So since the number wasn't recognized, the zip I had entered was discarded too. I asked him if there's a way to bypass the computer voice that asks for my phone and zip? Yes he said <i>Next time you call, say 'agent' and that will get you right to a person. Then when a person answers and asks for your phone number, tell them you should be looked up by your address.</i><br /><br />So I dialed Verizon again and when the computer voice asked for my phone number, I said "<i>Agent</i>". It didn't work.<br /><br />Why does Verizon have such a hard time authenticating people? And why do the representatives give completely different instructions for dealing with Verizon? And why don't any of their instructions work? Are they just making this stuff up as they go along?<br /><br /><b>Thanks for Choosing</b><br /><br />But Verizon isn't the only one having a hard time believing me. Comcast has now contacted me about my cable modem. Several times. A week or so after I dropped Comcast, a woman called me to tell me to I return the modem. I told her I had. Her records indicated I had not. I told her I had (again). I didn't have the receipt handy but I described the whole visit to Comcast, the date, etc. She seemed satisfied and said she'd correct the error. Then a week later, I got a letter telling me that I would be charged $500 if I didn't return the modem. I figured the letter hadn't caught up with the earlier correction so I ignored it. A week after that, I got a phone call from a collections agency! I googled the number and found many people had complained about Comcast "arranging" for this collections agency.<br /><br />I called up Comcast to complain. I started out by saying "<i>I have the receipt.</i>" The fellow I spoke to asked me to fax the receipt "<i>to help in my investigation.</i>" I told him that first of all, I had no fax machine and secondly, Comcast should not ask me to to do their work for them. If Comcast has such a crappy record-keeping system, it's not my responsibility to make up for it. He backed down and suggested it might be sufficient if I could just tell him the number on the receipt. Sure, I could do that - if only there was a number on the receipt! That's right - there's no receipt number. There's no way for Comcast to authenticate their own receipt! So Comcast can not tell if a person just made up their own! (And it doesn't help that the signature on the receipt is completely illegible.)<br /><br />So at this point Comcast owes me a refund (based on my last prepayment - since Comcast bills in advance) while at the same time asserting that I owe them $500 or their equipment.<br /><br />At the end of this most recent phone call to Comcast, a company with which I have chosen not to continue service, I was amused to hear the representative end the call with the customary "<i>Thank you for choosing Comcast!</i>"<br /><br /><b>Verizon (Again)</b><br /><br />Now about that line laying on the lawn. I reported the line to Verizon and the representative said <i>It's been laying on the ground for a month? That should never happen.</i> He said he would file an emergency request to get it removed. I pointed out that it was not an emergency per se - they didn't need to come fix it on the weekend, it had already been out there for a month so I could live with it over the weekend. But he said it's illegal to leave cables laying on the ground. Plus he said his screen gave him no other way to report the problem but as an emergency and I would get a call back the following morning (i.e., Saturday) prior to someone coming out to fix it.<br /><br />In the meantime he suggested I receive a credit for all my trouble. That sounded good so I said "<i>Great!</i>" but then he transferred me to the billing department. So I had to wait on the phone for another 10 minutes - and then re-authenticate myself to yet another person. (In contrast, Comcast representatives can resolve technical issues and issue credits themselves. What? Is it possible that I miss Comcast?)<br /><br />So I had to explain the problem yet again to the representative in the billing department. He didn't argue. With no hesitation he issued me a credit for the entire amount of my first month's bill. The way he took my story in stride made me wonder: Was he just a very generous person or just tired of hearing similar stories?<br /><br />The following morning, I waited for the call promised by the previous representative. No call. No call the remainder of the day or the following day. In fact, it's now been five days since Verizon asserted my line to be illegal and its removal an emergency. And five weeks total that the line has lain across my lawn and my neighbor's lawn.<br /><br />I am left to conclude that this last rep, like the others that I mentioned, is just making stuff up. All of these statements from the various Verizon reps give me an idea for a new TV show. Coming over your FiOS TV connection soon:<br /><i><a href="http://www.racialicious.com/2012/01/19/exploring-the-problematic-and-subversive-shit-people-say-meme-ology/">Shit Verizon Reps Say</a></i>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-47194186312255610512012-03-29T22:09:00.008-04:002012-04-01T14:08:20.250-04:00FiOS ArrivesMy <a href="http://libeslibation.blogspot.com/2012/03/hello-fios.html">previous post</a> left people hanging. This will conclude the story. I hope.<br /><br />The good news is that I got my FiOS service. Works as advertised. A test from my home in Montgomery County, MD to a well-regarded speed testing server in NJ showed Verizon exceeded the promised 15/5 speed. (See pic below.) And this was at 10pm in the evening, a prime-time for internet usage.<br /><br /> <a href="http://speedtest.dslreports.com"><img border=0 src="http://www.dslreports.com/im/101403551/17529.png"></a><br /><br />Of course, I cannot end without mentioning a few annoying things:<br /><br />- While the technician showed up on time, the fiber did not! So the technician pulled out a spare coil and laid it across my neighbor's front yard. (Fortunately, we're on good speaking terms.) As the tech was finishing up, the contractor showed up to lay the fiber. This required 400' of hand trenching so the tech declined to stick around and said he would come back to finish up and remove the fiber laying on the ground. (Note: it's now been 3 days and my connection is still using the unburied fiber rather than the buried fiber. Google for "<i>cable across lawn</i>" to read many complaints about subscribers who had cable left on their lawns; some people report cables draped across their lawn for 6 months!) I suppose I should say I appreciate Verizon being willing to pay for two truck rolls. But this is not a good sign. Can't Verizon coordinate scheduling with their contractors?<br /><br />- The promised install window that expanded from 4 hours to 8 hours and finally 10 hours was absurd. The tech finished up in 2.5 hours, primarily because all I required was internet. The technician agreed that the scheduling software gave me a window as large as might be necessary for triple play service but should have been smart enough to know that wasn't happening. And the scheduler should have known that I was the first visit in the technician's day. So why give me a 4-hour arrival window? Because of that I ended up rescheduling the Verizon visit unnecessarily.<br /><br />- While the technician was friendly and happily answered all my questions, he did overlook one thing. Only as he was showing me his completed work and we were exiting the room did I turn out the lights - and kill the network! Yes, he had wired the battery backup to a socket controlled by a wall switch - a switch next to another for the room lights. Well at least we verified the battery backup worked. Speaking of which, I really do NOT want to hear an alarm. (Pepco's electric service is much too unreliable for me to want to hear an alarm every time the power goes out.) Is there a way to silence it for good? There's an Alarm Silence button on the unit but that does not silence the outage alarm. Back to the original issue - clearly, the technician should have tested the socket beforehand. I didn't like the final arrangement but told him I could live with it. He offered me some electrical tape to cover the switch, sigh. I told him I would pay the $2 for a <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Amertac-Westek-Dimmers-Incandescent-Screw-In-Plug-In/dp/B001H1LSGQ">switch guard</a> - made for this very purpose. He remarked that he had never heard of such things!<br /><br />- Verizon continues to be confirmation crazy. At the <a href="http://www.verizon.net">Verizon portal</a>, it offers to save my id and password but only for two weeks. Why just two weeks? And each time I use the e-chat at verizon.com, the representatives at the other end start by insisting I re-enter my name, address, and phone "<i>just to confirm it is you</i>" even though I already had to enter my username and password to get as far as the e-chat link! Indeed, the e-chat starts by providing my authenticated identification to the representative - why do they insist I enter it again each time? What was the point of offering to save my username and password for two weeks if the representatives are ignoring this info every time?<br /><br />- Every time I log in to Verizon's web portal, I am presented with ads. As if that's not annoying to begin with, the ads are animated so while I'm trying to focus on one part of the page, I see these things constantly moving out of the corner of my eye making for a distracted experience. (I'm paying for service and <i>still</i> have to receive ads?!) I tried the "customize" link and attempted to disable everything. Yet Verizon still presents me with ads and "features" that I've specifically declined.<br /><br />- I tried to use Verizon's TV Online but found it restricted to TV customers. I'm not trying to get something for free. Rather, I already watch TV through sites like Hulu. It would be cheaper for Verizon to provide the same content to me directly (to reduce their internet bandwidth) plus Verizon would show me its commercials rather than letting Hulu's commercials appear. Indeed, Comcast allowed me to view their online TV services so it's surprising that Verizon does not. Back to Hulu for me.<br /><br />- There are bugs and misfeatures in their website. (After 6 years?) Look at the snapshot below and what do you see? <br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/donlibes/6882748540/" title="Brand Spankin' Fail by donlibes, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6224/6882748540_f0c11487e6_o.png" width="334" height="846" alt="Brand Spankin' Fail"></a><br /><br />First, there's an obvious bug being reported at the bottom of the pic. But it's a server bug so it makes no sense to report it to me. Don't Verizon's website programmers know the basics of error reporting? (And the diagnostic is cut off mid-character exactly the way it appears here!) But there's another issue - look at the top of the picture. It's showing information for both new customers and old customers. Why? The system knows which kind I am - it shouldn't offer me a choice for something that can't possibly apply to me. I'm tempted to make a joke here about programmers not knowing about programmability but this is probably more the fault of the website designer. Taken together with the ads, the whole experience of the portal is simply horrid. Fortunately, I believe I have everything set up so I should never need to revisit it.<br /><br />- I have now received two emails thanking me for enrolling in Verizon Paper Free Billing. Only problem is: I didn't sign up. I recall seeing a checkbox for it earlier that I carefully unchecked. Either Verizon ignored my checkbox or snuck another into one of these many confirmation screens they have been throwing at me. It took some puzzling to figure out to how to <i>de-enroll</i> (in Verizon-speak) from Paper Free Billing; Verizon certainly didn't make it easy to do. The last step was to say <i>why</i> I wanted to de-enroll. My answer would be longer than the one-line entry field Verizon's form allows. For starters, Paper Free Billing only keeps a record of 2 years of billing. I want more. With paper, I get control over how long to retain the bills. Plus, I know the bills can't change format or content. Yes, I can save them and even print them out each month but why should I have to? Why can't Verizon give me both electronic and paper? (Even Pepco does that.) Having both would allow me to compare the bills (electronic vs paper), the billing cycles, the ease of access, and so on for awhile. Perhaps Verizon could convince me that I can rely on their electronic records. But for now, I don't trust them and they're not giving me an opportunity to earn that trust. (That they sent two emails alarms me too. Is their email system that unreliable?) So for now, no paper-free billing.<br /><br />Lastly, yes, I did call Comcast to stop service. I was startled to hear the representative ask if I would like a better rate. It's a little late for that. Maybe next year.<br/><br/>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-822994135885698312012-03-26T22:08:00.011-04:002012-03-28T09:41:40.604-04:00Hello FiOSThe day has come. I am switching from Comcast to Verizon FiOS.<br /><br />You may be surprised to find I still use Comcast given that I've written so much about Comcast problems. After all, it's been roughly 6 years now that FiOS has been available.<br /><br />So why do I still have Comcast? For many years, Comcast was the only game in town. But after FiOS arrived, Comcast had to improve. Many people in my neighborhood wasted no time in switching. I wondered if Comcast technicians had no one else to serve but me. Bandwidth - all mine!<br /><br />Yes, Comcast's service improved dramatically. Speed was good, latency was good, and customer service was, well, not so bad for a change. While the people on the phones still lived by their dismal scripts, at least the number of times I had to deal with them decreased. I only had to call once in 2011 and so far once in 2012. But I'll never get used to the technicians saying "<i>I fixed the problem. But the guy who was here before me obviously didn't know what he was doing.</i>"<br /><br />But through it all, Comcast rates have always been less than Verizon's. Admittedly, it's hard to compare exactly. The speeds don't match up. And while reports suggest that Verizon's service is significantly more reliable, as I mentioned earlier, Comcast has been reliable enough. Which leaves price. And Verizon's price is high. And I'm price sensitive. Indeed, I dropped my Comcast TV service entirely several years ago when I could no longer justify the expense.<br /><br />But recently, I opened my Comcast statement to find out that my price for their Blast internet service went up from $63 to $80. That's a 26% hike. While the percentage is impressive, the old rate was already high. Every so often I checked Verizon's prices but Comcast's $80 was significantly higher than previous quotes I got from Verizon.<br /><br />So I headed over to verizon.com and found it as confusing as I remembered. I finally engaged the e-chat feature and a representative guided me to the rate of $55/month for 12 months for 15/5 with no installation charges. Gee, that sounds pretty good!<br /><br />You may claim Verizon's $55 rate is a promotion but that is rather misleading. I've been on Comcast's promotional rates for years. In my book, any rate that lasts a year or more is not a promotion but the real rate. As an aside, you can be on a Comcast promo and have the price increase. I've had that happen personally. Obviously, <i>promotion</i> can be a very misleading word.<br /><br /><b>Signing Up For FiOS</b><br /><br />The rest of this post will cover the Verizon signup process. It's only worth mentioning because it was awful and conceivably someone just needs to shame them enough to get them to make some changes. At one point I was so disgusted, I closed the browser window and gave up for the day. Here are the problems I encountered:<br /><br />- Verizon cannot quote bottom line prices. They refuse to state what "tax and surcharges" will be, only promising that you'll see on your first bill and can cancel the service at that time. Now obviously, this pledge of ignorance is silly. Nor is it new. I've tried to find out this info in the past and ended up being transferred from one department to another and even to supervisors. Even the billing department swore they couldn't tell me. Are they not privy to their own billing system? In fact, this inability to see the true cost was a disincentive for me in the past. If a company has no respect for the potential customer, why would they have any once you've handed over your money?<br /><br />- Even though I haven't had Verizon service at my home address for at least 10 years, the Verizon website insisted I did and asked me questions that I wasn't sure weren't going to lead to more trouble. (Example: "<i>Do you want to terminate service for this address or open a 2nd account for this address?</i>" Huh?)<br /><br />- Verizon only bills through credit cards. (This may have something to do with not having Verizon phone service but if so, it still doesn't make sense.) I hate recurring charges to my credit card! I'm not worried about unauthorized charges (since legally I'm protected). But using a credit card for a recurring charge makes it problematic when I close a credit card, either because the # has been discovered by hackers or I'm just switching to a different card. If they could just send me a bill like every other company, I wouldn't have to go out of my way to contact them just to tell them I changed card numbers.<br /><br />- Verizon's web page has a required credit check section with a confusing collection of form elements that let me decline the credit report, decline to give my SSN, etc. Yet when I declined everything, the page refused to let me continue and wouldn't explain why. Here's a pic showing only that the section has been outlined in orange. That seems to be Verizon's way of saying I wasn't being cooperative.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/donlibes/7023038647/"><img src="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7209/7023038647_08155eb550_z.jpg" width="533" height="640" alt="Screen shot 2012-03-24 at 3.54 PM"></a><br /><br />I won't go through everything but I will focus on the Social Security Number (SSN) as a specific problem. Verizon's website claimed that turning over my SSN to them was for my benefit - to confirm it was really me placing the order. But unless Verizon has my SSN already, which I doubt, this makes no sense.<br /><br />Why do I care about releasing my SSN? Having your SSN leaked is even worse than having it happen to your credit card #. At least with your credit card #, you're protected from unauthorized charges plus you'll find out with your next statement. But using your SSN, someone can open a credit card number in your name and you may not find out until years later when it is very hard to repair your credit history. Here's a story from someone more persistent than me who <a href="http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1690827,00.html">tried to get Verizon service without turning over a SSN</a>. The whole story is worth reading but the irony is at the end:<br /><blockquote><i><br />The irony is that Verizon, like many companies, pretends to care deeply about the issue of identity theft. One of the many times I was on hold waiting for a Verizon operator to pick up during my hour-and-a-half ordeal, I did some Googling to entertain myself. In doing so, I came across a Verizon web site that advised consumers on various frauds and scams. Identity theft was one of them. This is the way Verizon frames the problem: "People will use a variety of methods to convince you to give up personal information such as Social Security number, credit card numbers, calling card numbers, bank account numbers, etc. Using this information, criminals can pose as you and commit a number of crimes. This will cost you a considerable amount of money and time as you try to restore your credit rating and damaged financial situation." And this is part of how they suggest you protect yourself: "In general, closely guard all of your personal information."<br /><br />Unless, it seems, you are trying to guard it from the phone company.<br /></i></blockquote> <br /><br /><b>Back To Verizon's Problems</b><br /><br />- I finally got to "<i>select a 4-hour installation window</i>" and did so. Then another confirmation button which I dutifully clicked. But only after getting the last (or so I thought) confirmation screen did it finally make clear that the choice of a 4-hour window was totally misleading - it was actually specifying an <b><i>arrival</i></b> window and 4 hours would be required for an installation. In other words, I might have to remain home for 8 hours if the tech showed up at the end of the window. An entire business day! Needless to say, I immediately had to reschedule - which I couldn't do from the confirmation screen - it wouldn't let me.<br /><br />I tried to go back to the e-chat - but the chat link that had been plastered at the top of every screen earlier was now gone. Even going to the original verizon.com URL was unproductive because as soon as I clicked on any of the obvious choices - such as Support - it told me I had an order pending again with no chat link. Alternatively, it offered to let me log in but since I had not yet been assigned a login (I was told later that I would receive this info at installation) this went nowhere. After trying many links, I noticed a contact link in the footer that let me re-open a chat and I was able to get help.<br /><br />The new chat rep agreed that I should reschedule my appointment to allow for more time. However, the earliest he could schedule me was for 9 days later. But moments earlier, the website had shown me that the entire week was available. So I asked if he could cancel my order and I would just reorder again through the web. "<i>Don't do that!</i>" he said. He provided another URL for me to try (why couldn't he try it?) and I was able to get another appointment the following day. He was pretty annoyed that I could see appointments an entire week earlier than he could and he said he would report this.<br /><br />Later in the day, I got an email with a confirmation of the whole process. This email demonstrated yet more Verizon cluelessness:<br /> <br />- The email had the tax and surcharges that all my other contacts at Verizon claimed they were unable to provide. Why is it that the moment I signed their contract, they were suddenly able to give this info but not before? Alas, there's no breakdown so all I can tell is that my "taxes, fees, and other charges" will be $1.65. That's a bit mystifying because Comcast's "tax, surcharges, and fees" for an $80 bill were only $0.42. Something doesn't add up here but evidently I'll have to wait for a real bill to find out.<br /><br />- The email noted I should remove its return address from my spam blocker. But obviously, it should have said that at the website earlier, not in the very email that would never be seen if I had to take the very action suggested.<br /><br />- The email insisted I click a link to confirm my installation appointment. Huh? Given all the hoops I had jumped through to fill out the forms at verizon's website, surely it was painfully obvious that I had already confirmed I wanted service, no? I began to wonder how many more ways Verizon would come up with to confirm that I was confirming my confirmation. Indeed, when I was later able to sign up for a userid, it asked me to confirm with my zip code. Why yet another confirmation? (And a zip code as confirmation? Huh?) Then it wanted yet more personal info, this time for <i>recovery</i> purposes. (Name of best friend. Name of first pet. Etc.) This is way, way, way past the bounds of common sense. And it's definitely not necessary. (It's one thing for Facebook to need recovery info - they have no proof who I am. But Verizon has my home address! My credit card #! And now my SSN. There is no need to for more. Much less is sufficient.<br /><br />As if to confirm my imagination, I then got not one but three robocalls (including one the following morning that woke me up) on my home phone telling me to call a phone number to confirm my installation. (Another confirmation?!) Even more maddening, the robocalls explained that an install could last not 4 hours as earlier promised but 6 hours.<br /><br /><b>In Conclusion</b><br /><br />So far, my experience with Verizon has been poor. It has been a never-ending stream of confirmations and "Prove you're you" by requesting more and more personal info and more and more admissions of information. Why Verizon cannot be open about this info (taxes, install windows, etc.) I cannot imagine. Surely, it only costs them more money when customers have to reschedule or cancel service due to finding out things later that should have been taken into account.<br /><br />Yet another communication from Verizon has asked me to prepare for the installation by selecting a place in my house for their equipment. So I embarked on another e-chat with one of their representatives to find out their requirements. Another exercise in frustration. For example, the representative could tell me the width and height of their Optical Network Terminal that would be installed but not its depth. After 30 minutes of similar questions that resulted in confusing answers, she admitted that the technician would figure out how best to do the installation when he arrived. In other words, we had just both wasted 30 minutes. <br /><br />I won't repeat all the unfruitful parts of our conversation but I invite Verizon, which surely has a record of the conversation to find it, study it, and help their representatives do a better job. And I invite Verizon to fix the other problems I've described in this post. If you're trying to figure out why you're not getting more customers, perhaps it's because they can't make it through this unnecessarily difficult and annoying set of interactions.<br /><br /><b>Should I Be Worried?</b><br /><br />Earlier today, I received a flyer telling me that a contractor (Lambert Cable) would be running the fiber optic cable. (Verizon is still using contractors?) This flyer was handed to me by yet another contractor (UtiliQuest) who showed up to mark the utility lines and suggest a routing for Verizon's fiber optic run. He was wearing a Comcast shirt.<br/><br/>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-27496553454955936682012-03-16T17:51:00.005-04:002012-03-23T15:34:34.164-04:00Got Opinion?In <a href="http://libeslibation.blogspot.com/2012/03/comcast-franchise-renewal.html">my previous post</a>, I described how the county was looking for input to the Comcast franchise renewal. I explained why you should be interested even if you are not a Comcast subscriber.<br /><br />If this whets your appetite for more, consider serving on Montgomery County's Cable and Comunications Advisory Committee. The CCAC meets once a month to hear and discuss issues of relevance to the franchises, PEGs, the cable office, and other telecommunication related topics. The committee gets an opportunity to meet with the Executive and the Council on occasion to provide advice and insights.<br /><br />It's a volunteer position but if you feel strongly about improving telecommunications in Montgomery County, it may be a good opportunity for you. The county has a <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/mcgtmpl.asp?url=/content/cableOffice/ccac.asp">web page on the CCAC</a> which provides a bit more information. And I've <a href="http://libeslibation.blogspot.com/search?q=CCAC">written about my own service on the CCAC many times</a> - you'll likely find this more revealing as I pull no punches. (I found my time on the CCAC to be valuable but it had its frustrations as well.) Please volunteer - both for the CCAC and to give input on the Comcast franchise renewal. Thanks!<br /><br />[Followup added 3/23/2012] Deadline for applications is 4/6/2012. Here is a link to the county's <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/apps/exec/vacancies/PR_details.asp?PrID=8335">original vacancy announcement</a>.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-10343636999543988322012-03-01T16:15:00.007-05:002012-03-12T19:21:38.628-04:00Comcast Franchise Renewal<div><br /></div><div><br /></div>Comcast's franchise with Montgomery County was signed in 1998 to last a period of 15 years. I've never been through a renewal before but it's my understanding that in some sense, this is an opportunity to start from scratch. Anything in the prior agreement can be changed (except what is required by law).<div><br /></div><div>In contrast, during the franchise, things that should be changed often don't get changed but there's little incentive for both sides to agree. We've seen this in the past with wording that turned out to be unclear such as the time it takes to reach a Comcast customer service representative by phone.</div><div><br /></div><div>But that's just the tip of the iceberg. For example, it is unclear how the franchise applies to internet service. Although the franchise does mention internet service, it is with no specificity and current interpretation is that all the promises in the franchise apply only to video service. But that's absurd given that both run over the same cable. If your cable drop is severed, should you get a faster repair date if you're a video subscriber but not if you're internet-only?</div><div><br /></div><div>Although the county has managed to push through a few fixes to the franchise, now is the time to do substantial rewrites. The county is inviting citizens to participate in focus groups from March 19-24. Here's what the county's announcement says:</div><div><blockquote><span class="Apple-style-span" style=" ;font-family:arial, helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:13px;"><div class="yiv1504247376MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;"><span style=" ;font-family:Arial;font-size:10pt;">Each focus group lasts two hours and refreshments will be provided. The focus groups are organized to encourage people with like interests to attend the same meeting to facilitate brainstorming, but anyone may attend any focus group. The same presentation and same questions will be asked at each focus group. You <b><span style="font-weight: bold; ">DO NOT</span></b> have to be a Comcast customer to participate.</span></span></div><div class="yiv1504247376MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;"><span style=" ;font-family:Arial;font-size:10pt;"> </span></span></div><ul type="circle" style="margin-top: 0pt; "><li class="yiv1504247376MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;"><span style=" ;font-family:Arial;font-size:10pt;">Brainstorm about the future of Montgomery County Communications</span></span><span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;"><span style=" ;font-family:Arial;font-size:10pt;"></span></span></li><li class="yiv1504247376MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;"><span style=" ;font-family:Arial;font-size:10pt;">Learn about the cable system, media communications and new cable and broadband technologies</span></span><span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;"><span style=" ;font-family:Arial;font-size:10pt;"></span></span></li><li class="yiv1504247376MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;"><span style=" ;font-family:Arial;font-size:10pt;">Complete a questionnaire and help shape our future</span></span></li></ul></span></div></blockquote><div> You may wonder why it says you do not have to be a Comcast customer. There are several reasons for this. First, Comcast uses our rights-of-way so even if you're not a Comcast subscriber, you may be impacted by their use of the ROWs. (Imagine finding your lawn or driveway has been ripped up. Shouldn't you have some protections?) Second, the franchise generates money that is used by the county to fund other things. So you may benefit from these even if you don't pay any cable "taxes". Finally, if you have another provider such as Verizon, it's almost certain that when your provider's franchise is renewed, it will incorporate the same new terms.</div><div><br /></div><div>To get more information on how to participate, go to <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/govtmpl.asp?url=/content/cableOffice/index.asp">Montgomery County's cable page</a>.</div><div><br /></div><div>Unfortunately, the county has organized its focus groups around organizations (neighborhood groups, religious groups, government agencies, etc.) so I suspect this will shape the ability to raise certain topics. And I mean that in a bad way.</div><div><br /></div><div>Be prepared to hear a litany of "the county needs this" and "my organization deserves that" but also keep in mind that everything we ask for will ultimately come out of our pockets - just with an extra layer of provider profit grease in there as well. So I encourage you to ask for things to be cut back at the same time.</div><div><br /></div><div>While I'm all for community, some of the expenditures that come out of the franchise are unjustifiable in my opinion. For instance, why do <a href="http://www.watchlocaltv.org/">PEG channels</a> require dedicated video channels when they can be streamed less expensively and accessed more conveniently over the web? And even if you find some of these "benefits" justifiable, ask whether it would be cheaper to pay for them explicitly rather than bury the costs behind layers of plans that make them difficult to control. </div><div><br /></div><div>This bundling phenomenon is analogous to the question of who benefits from TV plans of 200 channels when we only watch 10 of them. (Answer: Not you.) What kind of pressure is needed to change this and other problems with our providers? Can we do it in the renewal or is it just a pro forma rubber stamp with a few goodies to fool citizens in to feeling they are getting something for nothing?</div><div><br /></div><div>Lastly, while the county is controlling the participation process, there will be other opportunities. For example, there will be hearings and you can always contact the county council directly. The council itself must ultimately approve the franchise and council members can have a lot of influence in making changes to the franchise.</div><div><br /></div><div>Let me know how you intend to participate (which focus groups) or any other ideas you may have for the renewal process.</div>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-37456269202430768862011-08-21T00:47:00.003-04:002011-08-21T02:18:26.511-04:00Pepco ProlongsIt's been almost three months since I last posted a description of some of the <a href="http://libeslibation.blogspot.com/2011/05/pepco-lowers-bar.html">things that had gone wrong with my thermostats</a> provided through Pepco's <a href="https://energywiserewards.pepco.com/">Energy Wise Rewards</a> (EWR) program. So where are we now? Still having problems.
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<br />I do finally have my two thermostats showing on the Pepco web page. So in theory, I could program them through the web. Alas, the website labels both thermostats "First Floor". While there are secondary user-settable labels, without the correct primary labels, I would have to spend time experimenting to see which thermostat responds and is the <i>real</i> first floor. However, I'd rather Pepco fix their labels - for two reasons: First, because of all the time delays and lack of feedback throughout the system, it's a hassle of unknown duration for me to do the experimenting. For Pepco to do it should be a trivial database update. Second, the lack of proper labels causes problems for Pepco already. When I call Pepco with a problem, Pepco wants to know the identification number of the thermostat. They don't know what thermostat I mean when I say "thermostat on the 2nd floor". So why doesn't Pepco put the identification numbers right there on its own web page?
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<br />Since reporting this to Comverge (Pepco's EWR contractor), they have yet to fix it - a change that should be trivial for them. In my most recent phone call, the Comverge representatives finally gave up and told me that they couldn't fix it, that only Pepco could and that I had to place the call. What? Comverge cannot call Pepco? So I called Pepco. That turned out to be a challenge just because Pepco's phone is answered with a phone tree that asks if you want to report an outage, pay a bill, and so on. As far as I could tell, all of these were automated. No choice was offered to reach a person. And none of the choices seemed relevant. Telephone tree hell.
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<br />At some point, I figured out that saying "<i>representative</i>" would break through the wall of automation and I was able to speak to a living, breathing human at Pepco. Of course, she started out by telling me to call the EWR number. After I explained that EWR referred me to Pepco, she said she would look into the problem. She also discovered that I hadn't been receiving the promised credits for participating in the program and she would investigate that as well. As long as she was so optimistic, I mentioned another problem I had noticed - that one of the thermostats didn't run the fan in the On position - a useful function when the temp is not high enough to run the AC for extended periods.
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<br /><div>At least Pepco has been calling me back. Their most recent phone call informed me that my problems had been escalated. But why tell me this? I don't care what their internal procedures are. Just tell me when it's fixed or give me a date when it will be fixed. Vague assertions are of no value, waste my time, and only tell me that Pepco doesn't see things from the customer viewpoint - if that wasn't already painfully obvious.
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<br />So that's where we are now. I have to take time off for yet another appointment this week for a Pepco technician to visit the house, the web page still doesn't explain which thermostat is which, I declined to program the thermostat through its physical interface (as I explained previously), and Pepco still owes me for months of promised rebates.
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<br />When will this nonsense end?
<br /></div>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-3336719592558479002011-05-30T19:46:00.018-04:002011-06-06T23:17:36.899-04:00Pepco Lowers the BarMany people have asked me why I haven't posted anything recently about Pepco's <a href="https://energywiserewards.pepco.com/">Energy Wise Rewards</a> (EWR) program. The answer is in two parts: futility and futility.<br /><br />First, it felt pointless to describe all the things that were going wrong with the EWR program because Pepco has been getting much more pressure over their inability to deliver reliable electricity service. If they can't even do the basics, why bother complaining about anything else? (According to <a href="http://www.gazette.net/stories/06032011/polinew194909_32542.php">the most recent issue of the Gazette</a>, a new government study found that "<i>Pepco is the worst electric service provider in the region</i>" and performance "<i>has steadily declined since 2004.</i>")<br /><br />Second, it felt pointless to try and get Pepco to respond to the problems with their EWR program because they apparently have set a very low bar for success. The rest of this post will justify that assertion.<br /><br />I've had many conversations about the EWR program with Pepco and almost every one of them has included false, inaccurate, or unhelpful information. For example, last year Pepco discovered that the thermostat "could pose a potential fire hazard if the batteries leaked onto printed circuit boards" according to court documents. I received a robocall telling me to remove the batteries from my thermostat and I naturally called Pepco back for more detail. The representative responded that Pepco had made no such calls and I should leave the batteries in.<br /><br />Later I read in the newspaper that the thermostats Pepco provided were recalled so I'm a bit surprised that Pepco never came around to replace them. Perhaps pulling the batteries is sufficient. But then why are there batteries in the first place? A Pepco representative told me that the only reason for the batteries was so that the thermostat could still display a clock when there is a power outage. People check their thermostats for the time during an outage? Huh? The batteries must be there for some other purpose - presumably to maintain the settings through such a power outage. A Pepco representative assured me that the thermostats hold the settings even without the batteries. However, my own experiments showed that to be a misleading answer because while literally true, without a battery, the thermostat fails to update its clock. So after an outage, the thermostat will continue with the right settings but at the wrong times. Another Pepco representative finally admitted to me that it could take up to 24 hours for the thermostat to get back the correct time.<br /><br />Pepco continues to install the thermostats and sign people up for the EWR program. A Pepco representative told me that they have changed to a new brand of thermostat but I think the bulk of the problems are with the program and how Pepco administers it, not the thermostat. In fact, what originally sold me on the program was that I wouldn't ever have to deal with my physical thermostat. Sadly, this is not the case.<br /><br /><b>Recap</b><br /><br />These are solely my own comments. You can find other people's experiences in the comments at the end of this post and earlier posts on this blog. I highly recommend perusing the comments.<br /><br />To recap my own experiences, the first episode should have been an omen. The installer came to my house, installed the hardware and, as he was leaving, I asked if he could verify that the web interface worked. "<i>No, we don't want to have any security problems like seeing your password. Just visit the website after I leave.</i>" After he left, I visited the website and found nothing. After a number of phone calls, I found that the web interface wouldn't be available for another 3 months. A lie in a stretch of many lies. (I got jerked around for only 3 months, but I know other people who signed up even earlier. Pepco first claimed the thermostat was web programmable 9 months before it was.) <br /><br />That meant reprogramming all the settings into the new thermostat from its front panel, not a fun job since the interface requires hundreds of button pushes. It's hard to describe how bad it is. For example, to get to the first day's settings, you press the PGM key 10 times. (No, I am not rounding up.) To raise the temp from its default by 6 degrees requires another 6 button pushes. Now imagine doing stuff like this for each of 4 time periods for 7 days. Double it for heating and cooling. Double it again if you have a 2nd thermostat. (I have a two zone system.) Very painful.<br /><br />I never did program it because Pepco kept making statements (some of which were forwarded to me by the <a href="http://webapp.psc.state.md.us/Intranet">Maryland PSC</a>) that the internet access was coming "soon". Rather than put up with the physical interface, I just put the thermostat on hold - for 3 months. Now I'm thinking that Pepco owes me the difference comparable to what I would've saved had I stayed with my previous smart thermostats for 3 months. And Pepco owes me another week's worth plus several hours that I had to take off from work. Why? Because it took Pepco that much time to get my thermostats working. Apart from all the web problems, Pepco decided that one of the thermostats was defective (no connectivity) and replaced it. Then they replaced my other thermostat (I'll mention why later).<br /><br /><b>Web Interface</b><br /><br />Pepco did eventually get the web interface running. And it is better than standing in front of the physical thermostat. But not by much.<br /><br />The web interface shows 8 settings for a single day for a single thermostat. Here's what it looks like. I've trimmed it down to just showing the "heat<br />mode" so we're just looking at the 4 settings on Monday.<br /><br /><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3384/5785047628_a1e837c265_o.png" width="739" height="218" alt="heat mode"><br /><br />The first problem is that you cannot compare days. That is, you cannot show Monday and Tuesday at the same time because of that "Select a Day" pulldown. The next problem is … oh never mind, I won't go through the rest of it. I will merely summarize that it is outrageously bad design - as if someone wanted to show off their prowess with HTML by having lots of separate form elements, tabs, pulldowns, and so on.<br /><br />A simple spreadsheet of all the settings in a single table would be much simpler. Indeed, Pepco's own documentation agrees and provides a spreadsheet template. But it's not even an Excel file. It's embedded in a non-editable PDF so all you can do is print it out. The worst kind of spreadsheet (paper) which then has to be laboriously rekeyed into the worst kind of user interface!<br /><br /><b>Verification</b><br /><br />Assuming you get through the web interface, the next question is: How do you verify that it's working? Any changes made through the web interface end with the following popup:<br /><br /><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2366/5785047504_30b5491132_o.png" width="420" height="132" alt="wait 5 minutes"><br /><br />This delay makes verification and debugging a very cumbersome process. After the 5 minute wait, it's made even more cumbersome because there's no short button sequence to check a setting on the physical thermostat. In my case, I use the 7-day settings and I first have to push-button my way through all the other settings I'm <i>not</i> using. And even then, there's no way to be sure that the thermostat is using the right mode (1-day, weekend/weekday, 7-day). The thermostat knows which mode it is in but won't reveal that to the front panel. So there's no way to directly confirm that the web programming worked. Between the delays, the lack of info, and the absurd number of button pushes to do anything, the system is a horror.<br /><br />The reverse problem exists too. The web page won't show what the settings of the physical thermostat. There's no way to query the thermostat from the web. Of course, that didn't stop a Pepco representative from telling me that the web page <i>does</i> reflect changes at the physical thermostat but he couldn't explain how to do it. Another representative told me it was impossible.<br /><br />It does seem like the website knows when it is wrong however. I occasionally see the message "<i>Warning! This web page is not synchronized with your thermostat. Please choose your desired settings, then click SAVE to synchronize the settings with your thermostat.</i>" So the website is getting data from the thermostat - but not doing anything useful with it.<br /><br />I called Pepco and asked what was the most expedient way to confirm the thermostat had the right settings. No one to whom I spoke could tell me although they all agreed it was a reasonable request.<br /><br />I still don't understand the reason for the 5-minute delay in the web interface but surely it's an artificial delay and Pepco can bypass it during testing. So I called and asked: <i>Could Pepco talk directly to the thermostat to confirm it was working?</i> After many phone transfers, I ultimately found that there was one guy at Pepco (to be precise, at a contractor to Pepco) who could actually do such confirmation. During successive phone calls, I was informed that he was out of the office, on vacation, would return my call, etc. I was never able to reach him and he certainly didn't reach me. But what's the point? I don't want to have to call Pepco to confirm my settings. I want to do it myself. Unbelievably frustrating that their interface doesn't allow this.<br /><br />I've done enough research at this point to realize that the hardware they've deployed supports it; Pepco simply doesn't make it available to the customer. Why not?<br /><br />Other feedback elements are also missing. Pepco may be able to chart my temp and my energy consumption throughout the day. But they won't let me have it. Instead, their web page shows a generic explanation of my energy use by the month. But since they're not monitoring individual appliances, it's all hypothetical estimates based on a typical homeowner, not me. They had me fill out a survey of the number of TVs, computers, fridges, etc. So that narrows it down. But there is no connection to actual usage. <br /><br />There are companies that offer products that will do this kind of monitoring for you; But Pepco seems content reporting inaccurate figures on my personal account page that have little relation to reality.<br /><br /><b>No Way</b><br /><br />For now, I'd settle for a way to verify the programming. But according to Pepco representatives, there is <b>no way</b> for me to do it. There is <b>no way</b> to test a variety of potential connectives issues. There's <b>no way</b> to test signal strength. (The thermostat is wireless so if there's an issue with walls or transient problems with your microwave oven, it could be very difficult to solve. There's <b>no way</b> to test their router. (Pepco requires its own router; the thermostat cannot use an IP-style router that is traditionally used for internet service.) There's <b>no way</b> to open a direct connection to the thermostat via telnet or ssh. There's no user port to plug into. It's a black box.<br /><br />This need for verification is not imagined. Twice I've found the settings in the physical thermostat to be different than what I set them to from the website. Is it a failure of the thermostat? communications glitch? web interface problem? It's impossible for me to find out.<br /><br />The thermostat gives an indication of when it is communicating but it's just a simple icon on the display saying there is or isn't connectivity but it's unclear whether it's to the web or, more likely, just the router. And it's not even possible to see when the thermostat received its last update.<br /><br />Of course, I've been told exactly the opposite of many things I've discovered through trial and error. Some of the conversations I've had could have been right out of Kafka. The responses from representatives warmly embrace their own dysfunctional design as if was the most natural thing. And if denying reality or making up info or passing on incorrect info seems helpful, why not?<br /><br /><b>Unreliable</b><br /><br />As if the representatives aren't problem enough, the web interface is unreliable. I already described how ghastly it is - and that's when it's working. But I've encountered too many times when it doesn't work at all. Here are some example screen shots - the first shows that sometimes the site simply becomes unaccessible:<br /><br /><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2592/5784491751_daed8764b1_o.png" width="489" height="192" alt="page not found"><br />The next shows something strange happening. It comes and goes and I've learned that I can "fix" it by deleting all the pepco cookies in my browser - until it returns some time later:<br /><br /><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3602/5785047584_beba3f64d5_o.png" width="682" height="150" alt="too many redirects"><br /><br />Yet another problem occurs if you let the thermostat window idle too long. In that case, the session times out. However, it doesn't give an explicit timeout. Rather, after having spent a lot of time updating the configuration and then clicking Save to submit the new settings, the server throws them away and puts up the following screen. And, alas, it doesn't save your settings for when you log back in. In fact, you <b>can't</b> log in - because this login screen goes to some other page that doesn't know anything about you, hence the "Invalid Password" message. You'll get more and more frustrated because you'll never successfully log in to a page that looks like the regular Pepco login page but isn't.<br /><br /><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3431/5784491941_05f6f64548_o.png" width="392" height="275" alt="invalid password"><br /><br />I reported that timeout and bogus login page to a Pepco representative who confirmed the problem and said it appeared to be a maintenance screen that the public was not supposed to see. He said he would make sure it was fixed. That was last year. It's still not fixed 6 months later.<br /><br />Here's another response I got from the server:<br /><blockquote>Internal Server Error<br /><br />The server encountered an internal error or misconfiguration and was unable to complete your request.<br />Please contact the server administrator, you@your.address and inform them of the time the error occurred, and anything you might have done that may have caused the error.<br /><br />More information about this error may be available in the server error log.<br /><br />Oracle-Application-Server-10g/10.1.2.4.0 Oracle-HTTP-Server Server at tao.pepcoholdings.biz Port 7777<br /></blockquote><br />Ok, I'm getting tired of describing the various bizarre symptoms of an unreliable web service. So I'll switch gears to some lessons learned . . .<br /><br /><b>Lesson Learned 1</b><br /><br />Some of the Pepco thermostats are excessively noisy. Naturally, the one installed in my bedroom was one of these. Why would a digital thermostat make noise? No idea. But every few seconds, it would make clicking and grinding noises. Pepco came to the house, confirmed the noise, and swapped it out with a thermostat that made no noise. Let's hope they don't give my noisy old one to the next customer.<br /><br /><b>Lesson Learned 2</b><br /><br />Guests are guaranteed some interesting times at my house. My parents like to drop in for the holidays and stay over. This requires that I change the settings. It would be useful if there was a way to program alternate settings into the thermostat. <i>Several</i> such alternate settings would be nice. But no, the EWR website doesn't offer this. You have to laboriously revisit 7x4x2x2 settings and then when the parental units leave, you have to laboriously reset everything.<br /><br />Of course, you could just put the thermostat on hold. Wasteful of energy but easier on the button pushing. The EWR website has a <i>Vacation Mode</i> which lets you set a temp for a given amount of time. The first time I used this, I ran into problems. Since I knew when my parents were leaving my house, I plugged that in as the Stop Date. For the Start Date, I set it for the current time. Well, I tried. The website only deals in half-hour increments so I entered the previous half hour. And promptly got an error:<br /><br /><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2748/5784491717_351f374934_o.png" width="860" height="590" alt="start date must be greater than the current date"><br /><br />Now it may seem like common sense that you cannot go back in time but what's the alternative? The website doesn't offer "Now" as a starting time; I was forced to pick a time a half hour later. It's crazy that the system doesn't let you change the temp for an entire half hour. My father watched as I made this discovery. He recommended returning the thermostats.<br /><br /><b>Lesson Learned 3</b><br /><br />Pepco doesn't always answer their phones. And when they do answer their phones, you may not get the service you hope for. Here's a conversation I made notes from this past Memorial Day weekend. I didn't record it but the quotes are pretty close to what was said:<br /><br />5/26/2011<br />9:30pm - Called Pepco.<br />Pepco: "<i>This is after-hours service.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>I need help with my Energy Wise Rewards Thermostat.</i>"<br />Pepco: "<i>That department is closed. Call back tomorrow between 8am and 8pm.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>Wait, you don't have after hours service?</i>"<br />Pepco: "<i>Yes, this is after-hours service. We handle things like AC or heat not working.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>Well, my AC isn't working!</i>"<br />Pepco: "<i>Oh, ok, well, let me see if I can find a tech to help you. I'll call you back.</i>"<br /><br />10:23pm Pepco called.<br />Pepco: "<i>Sorry but all the technicians are busy. Can you call back tomorrow and make an appointment?</i>"<br />Me: "<i>Well, you're not giving me any other choice, are you?</i>"<br />Pepco: "<i>No, sorry.</i>"<br /><br />Following day…<br /><br />5/27/2011<br />9:32am Called Pepco and described problem.<br />Pepco: "<i>I know there have been sporadic problems. I will escalate this. Don't be surprised if they're calling you back very shortly.</i>"<br />11:40 I gave up waiting. Left house to go to work.<br /><br />5/28/2011<br />6:00am Power out. My uninterruptible power supplies are all beeping so after ten minutes of hoping it will stop, I haul myself out of bed and power everything down.<br />11:28am After checking with the neighbors, I determine that only my house was out. So I called Pepco and registered an outage with their automated service.<br />4:00pm Several hours have gone by and I've eaten all the melting ice cream. Called Pepco for an update.<br />Pepco: "<i>Expect service back by 7pm.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>Thanks.</i>"<br />Pepco: "<i>Have a nice holiday weekend.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>I'll try.</i>"<br />Pepco:<br /><br />7pm The technician said a squirrel shorted out a high-voltage line at the pole. (The dead squirrel at the base of the pole was a big hint.) He replaced an enormous fuse at the top of the pole and power returned to the house. Total outage: 12 hours. Time for Pepco to respond: 6 hours. Not bad for a single house. However, I'm still amazed that our electricity infrastructure is so fragile that a mere squirrel can bring it down.<br /><br />As I write this, it's been a week and, although power is just fine, the website is still not allowing me to program my 2nd floor thermostat. So today, I called Pepco and asked what's going on.<br /><br />After battling through their phone tree once again (and why does it have to ask me <i>twice</i> in Spanish to push numero uno at different levels in the tree?), I finally reached a representative who put me on hold for 15 minutes and then told me that Deea would speak to me now.<br /><br />Deea:<br /><br />Ok, so Deea wasn't there. I hung up, redialed, went through it all over again and finally insisted the representative hear both my voice and Deea's voice at the same time before clicking off. Thankfully, she got us both on the telephone.<br /><br />I described the problem.<br /><br />Deea: "<i>Our records indicate that your 2nd thermostat was removed in October of 2010.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>Yes, because it was defective. And you installed a replacement thermostat.</i>"<br />Deea: "<i>Not according to our records.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>So can you fix your records?</i>"<br />Deea: "<i>Are you calling from home?</i>"<br />Me: "<i>No.</i>"<br />Deea: "<i>Ok, then let's send a tech out to your house.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>Why? You just need to fix your records.</i>"<br />Deea: "<i>We need to get the # of the thermostat. That's why I asked if you were calling from home.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>No problem. When I go home this evening, I'll call it in.</i>"<br />Deea: "<i>That won't work. The office closes shortly. However, the technician can call it in because he doesn't have to through the office.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>So the tech works later than the office?</i>"<br />Deea: "<i>Yes. The office closes at 5pm. The techs work till 9pm. Otherwise, you'll have to wait until Monday.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>Ok, send the technician.</i>"<br />Deea: "<i>What time is good?</i>"<br />Me: "<i>8pm.</i>"<br />Deea: "<i>Ok, 8pm. The tech will call your home phone 15 minutes before arrival.</i>"<br />Me: "<i>Ok.</i>"<br /><br />We had this conversation around 4pm. I was home by 7pm. By 9pm, no one had showed. I checked my email and voice mail. Sure enough, I <i>had</i> received a call at 5:30pm.<br /><br />Technician: "<i>I'll be there in 15 minutes.</i>"<br /><br />To make this clear, a Pepco representative had assured me a technician would show up at a specific time. I was there an hour early but the technician was there 2 hours early. He didn't wait. And all for the unnecessary reason that Pepco wanted to send a person out to read some numbers because 1) they couldn't keep track of their own records for work they had done and 2) their offices are open at different times then their technicians work.<br /><br /><Insert scream here.><br /><br /><b>Conclusion</b><br /><br />Although I've hung in with Pepco on this Energy Wise Rewards program for a long time, I'm run out of patience. Pepco isn't giving this program the support that it needs. It's just not a priority for Pepco no matter what it claims to the contrary.<br /><br />Thus, I strongly recommend customers considering the Energy Wise Rewards program to avoid it at all costs. While there is a financial reward tied to participation, it clearly is not worth it. And while the internet programming feature is attractive, I suspect that an independent provider would offer better support and better experience. Please let me know in the comments area if you've experimented with any other solutions for remote thermostat monitoring and control and whether or not you are satisfied.<br /><br />PS: As of 6/4/2011, my 2nd floor thermostat is still inaccessible from the Pepco website. The thermostat remains on hold.<br/><br/>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-6143543032809481532010-06-25T23:51:00.010-04:002010-07-16T00:12:45.357-04:00Advice WantedInterested in serving on the CCAC of Montgomery County, MD? There's an opening and you have <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/apps/exec/vacancies/PR_details.asp?PrID=6678">until July 9 to apply</a>.<br /><br />If you're not familiar with the Cable and Communications Advisory Committee, it advises the County Executive and Council on cable and telecommunications issues. This includes cable TV franchises, <a href="http://pegs.MontgomeryCountyMD.gov/index.html">PEGs</a>, and maybe even internet thermostats (<a href="http://libeslibation.blogspot.com/2010/05/energy-unwise.html">sigh</a>).<br /><br />If you are selected, your first task can be to get the committee's online records up-to-date. Their <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/mcgtmpl.asp?url=/content/cableoffice/meeting.asp">records</a> haven't been updated for three months.<br /><br />Here is a link to the <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/mcgtmpl.asp?url=/content/cableOffice/ccac.asp">current members of the committee</a>. Mmm, perhaps I should say <i>last known</i> members, since that page is likely out-of-date as well.<br /><br />In theory anyway, these are your representatives. Feel free to contact them to ask what their experience serving on the committee is like. Or ask them about communication-related issues of concern to you. Oh, you can't figure out how to contact them? Their names aren't linked to an email address? There's no phone number? How about that! (Your second task: Make the members more accessible to the citizens who they are supposed to represent!)<br /><br />PS: I couldn't get the web page (above) for the PEGs to respond either. It is the correct link though. One more thing for you to look into.<br /></br><br /></br>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-1173234485963522392010-06-13T01:09:00.007-04:002010-06-14T01:01:00.101-04:00Pepco Ignores<div><div><div>Since my <a href="http://libeslibation.blogspot.com/2010/05/energy-unwise.html">earlier post about Pepco's Energy Wise program</a>, many people have emailed me with stories similar to mine. The only difference is that some are even worse.</div><div><br /></div><div>Here are some of the additional complaints:</div><div><ul></ul></div><div><li>Thermostats not working, even from the front panel.</li></div><div><li>Thermostats not installed correctly.</li></div><div><li>Thermostats making frequent clicking noises.</li></div><div><li>Full manuals for thermostats unavailable.</li></div><div></div><div><br /></div><div>That's apart from my earlier complaints:</div><div><ul></ul></div><div><li>Installers shortened wires unnecessarily.</li></div><div><li>Installers used wrong tools.</li></div><div><li>Installers showed up late.</li></div><div><li>Website control is unavailable.</li></div><div><li>Website requires another browser.</li></div><div><li>Thermostat needs an additional router port.</li></div><div></div><div><br /></div><div>After repeated calls to Pepco, I was able to speak to the manager of the thermostat installations, Craig Snedeker. If this name is not familiar to you, you may like to read some of my posts about Comcast. Here's an excerpt from <a href="http://libeslibation.blogspot.com/2005/08/comcast-blasts-holes-in-itself.html">Comcast Blasts Holes In Itself</a> in 2004:</div><blockquote><div><i>Comcast GM Craig Snedeker was brought in last year [2003] to fix all the problems in MC MD, yet there is little evidence of him doing so. Complaint levels are higher than ever (3x last year's!) and communication between the county and Comcast appears to be broken, much like the "walled garden" in which Comcast placed my cable modem a few weeks back for no reason at all.</i></div><div><i><br /></i></div><div><i>Comcast is a powerful company with real strengths. Yet they appear to be throwing it all away. The blame-Verizon strategy isn't working. Comcast had a huge advantage as the de facto monopoly in MC. But if they keep running their system into the ground, it's hard to imagine why customers will continue to put up with their abusive service.</i></div><div></div></blockquote><div>Craig resigned in 2005, at which time I wrote <a href="http://libeslibation.blogspot.com/2005/09/comcast-general-manager-resigns_15.html">another post</a>. An excerpt:</div><div></div><blockquote><div><i>The most senior official in charge of Comcast in Montgomery County has resigned. After only 2 years on the job, General Manager and VP Craig Snedeker resigned for "personal" reasons according to company spokesman Jim Gorden in this week's Gazette.</i></div><div><i><br /></i></div><div><i><b>Why Am I Not Surprised</b></i></div><div><i><br /></i></div><div><i>Snedeker arrived on the heels of the disasterous period 2 years ago when performance was so bad that the county flexed its muscle by establishing cable modem regulations and further extending regulations for all customers (both HSI and TV) with the creation of the Cable Compliance Commission. This had to have been a huge wakeup call to Comcast Corporate. God forbid, other franchises should follow MC's lead.</i></div><div><i><br /></i></div><div><i>So Comcast dumped the GM at the time (Sue Reinhold) and brought in GM-extraordinaire Snedeker. What did he do? Well, a few things did improve such as adding redundant hardware in places. But as far as I could tell, customer service was a non-priority while the company aimed at higher-margin products, specifically, the high-end video products such as digital TV and HDTV. Apart from that emphasis on higher profit, Snedeker spent time rubbing elbows with politicos and continuing Comcast's tradition of corporate largesse to pacify community groups - but what about the customers? You guessed it - plenty of customers have continued to be unhappy with Comcast service.</i></div><div><i><br /></i></div><div><i>Complaint levels filed with county regulators are now higher than we've ever seen. Part of this is no doubt due to Verizon installers inadvertently cutting Comcast lines. But, as I personally testified at a county hearing last month, many complaints could not possibly be the cause of Verizon. Comcast must shoulder the blame. I don't know if Comcast has been cutting costs on training or squeezing out money elsewhere, but quality seems to be disappearing as well. And with that go the customers.</i></div><div></div></blockquote><div><b>Back to the Present</b></div><div><br /></div><div>I'm not blaming Pepco's problems solely on Craig here. Clearly Pepco has plenty of blame to spread around. Yet no one I spoke to at Pepco seemed to think their behavior was a problem. And although each representative was happy to give me their supervisor's name and number, none of the representatives was willing to take any action personally.</div><div><br /></div><div>I can thank Craig for one thing. He gave me the person at Pepco to whom he reports. He said Avolon Joseph is in charge of the project. A search on the web turned up her title as Manager of Strategic Planning & Initiatives.</div><div><br /></div><div>So I called Avalon and left a message with my phone number and email address. Perhaps she was on vacation so I waited a few days. And a few days more. After a week and half, I called again. This time I reached her in person:</div><div><br /></div><div>Me: <i>Can I ask you some questions about Energy Wise program?</i></div><div>Avolon: <i>Yes but I'm in a meeting right now. Can I call you right back?</i></div><div>Me: <i>Yes.</i></div><div>Avolon: <i>Ok.</i></div><div>Me: <i>Bye.</i></div><div>Avolon: <i>Bye.</i></div><div><br /></div><div>If you're expecting more, you'll be disappointed. I waited for the rest of the day. The rest of the week. And the following week.</div><div><br /></div><div>At this point, I feel totally frustrated. I've already filed a complaint with the <a href="http://webapp.psc.state.md.us/Intranet/home.cfm">MD Public Service Commission</a>. No word back from them either. I attached the earlier blog post to it. I'm thinking that I'll attach this one to an additional complaint.</div><div><br /></div><div>In addition, I gave Craig the URL to the blog so he could read it himself. Doubtless he won't be pleased but perhaps he will take some action.</div><div><br /></div><div>As for Avolon: You may choose not to return my calls but you are making for very unhappy customers. And just like any service provider, we will look for all possible ways to avoid dealing with bad ones. I've already switched my electricity generation and transmission services to a <a href="http://webapp.psc.state.md.us/intranet/supplierinfo/electricsupplier_new.cfm">competitor</a>. And I encourage others to switch, to file complaints with the MD PSC, and to testify at hearings involving Pepco services. You leave customers no other choice.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div></div></div>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-47635217409078553942010-05-23T16:55:00.005-04:002010-05-25T23:57:00.929-04:00Energy Unwise<div><div><div><div><div>Amidst the blizzard of advertising I receive each week for Verizon FIOS, I have also been receiving ads from <a href="http://pepco.com/">Pepco</a> for their <a href="https://energywiserewards.pepco.com/">Energy Wise Rewards</a> program.</div><div><br /></div><div>If you live in Montgomery County, Maryland, you've probably been getting these letters, too. Part of Pepco's offer is for a free internet-capable thermostat. Yes, free. Free installation and free service, too. Gosh, it's hard to ignore free service. I'm used to anything to do with my heat pump either requiring a $100 minimum service call or me spending oodles of time staring at my current programmable thermostat which tells me everything but why the heating system isn't doing what the thermostat says it is.</div><div><br /></div><div>Why would Pepco make this offer? Remember that Pepco sold off their generation facilities so now they have to buy electricity. My bet is that Pepco has a sliding scale determining how much they pay for energy. Anything over a certain amount costs Pepco significantly more than it is able to charge its customers (who buy electricity at a fixed rate). So Pepco wants to sell us lots of energy but not too much.</div><div><br /></div><div>How does Pepco plan to get customers to consume less? Rather than using rebates to encourage voluntary conservation as other jurisdictions are doing, Pepco is offering to be a bit more heavy-handed with rebates. The thermostats Pepco provide have a remote cutoff so Pepco can turn off customer AC or heat pumps remotely during periods of high energy use. This is fine for people who don't work at home during the middle of the day - exactly when Pepco is likely to cut the AC. Pepco assured me that it happens very rarely and there are ways to override the cutoff in the rare event that it is necessary. It all sounded good to me.</div><div><br /></div><div>Long-time Washingtonians may recall Pepco's Kilowatchers program. Pepco installed radio-controlled cutoffs on major electrical appliances in the home. For reasons unknown to me, Pepco suspended Kilowatchers many years ago. But the essence is reborn in the Energy Wise program. And if you don't want Pepco messing with your thermostat, Pepco will happily put an old-style dumb cutoff on your AC or heat pump. You don't even have to be home. Pepco says that reason alone explains why most people are opting for the dumb cutoff over the internet thermostat.</div><div><br /></div><div>But I liked the idea of the internet thermostat. Pepco promised better energy statistics, better usability (imagine having the house at the right temp upon getting back from vacation and yet saving money at the same time), and more. The best part was the idea of sitting at my desk and being able to see a week's worth of thermostat settings at a glance. That sounds so much better than what I have to do now - manually push buttons to see 4 settings x 7 days x 2 seasons! Besides the 56 different periods, each period can then require many button presses to adjust the temp and time. So we're talking a couple hundred button clicks! Ack! Admittedly, my thermostat lets me copy days that have a common schedule - but my family's schedule is different almost every day of the week so I cannot use that feature very much.</div><div><br /></div><div>By comparison, Pepco representatives repeatedly told me that the web interface would show a simple list that would be simple. Simple. Simple. Simple. How hard could it be to screw this up? Even a simple spreadsheet would be easier than all those damn button clicks required by a physical thermostat.</div><div><br /></div><div>So after contemplating this for awhile (and throwing away many months worth of Pepco mailings), I finally made the call. Sign me up!</div><div><br /></div><div><b>Pepco Shows . . . Late</b></div><div><br /></div><div>I accepted an appointment for Tuesday morning. I was told that I could have a window from 8am-11am. You can probably guess where this is going.</div><div><br /></div><div>I took the whole morning off from work. At 10:30am, I started to worry and called Pepco. The representative assured me that the technician merely needed to arrive inside the window and could complete the work outside the window. I sure wasn't told anything like that when I originally set up the appointment. Sure enough, the technician and showed up at 11:00am. Grrr.</div><div><br /></div><div>The technician brought along a trainee to watch and assist. So I asked if I could watch too. No problem, I was told.</div><div><br /></div><div>First, the technician installed a wireless networking device on my router. To control the thermostat, Pepco uses a home-area network system called <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZigBee">Zigbee</a>. The Zigbee controller is an Ethernet device that is supposed to plug in to the homeowner's router. And although I have a router, it didn't have a spare port. Why didn't Pepco tell me about this in advance? I had assumed the thermostat would be a WiFi device. Alas no. So I temporarily unplugged something else from my router in order to plug in the Zigbee and get the thermostat working. My advice to others: Customers without spare ports should ask Pepco in advance whether they need to buy an Ethernet hub or Pepco will provide one.</div><div><br /></div><div>I have two heat pumps with separate thermostats so the technician replaced my thermostats with two new ones. I was a little annoyed that he clipped off the wires rather than unscrewed them. There's not a lot of slack left in my thermostat cables. It would only have taken another minute to unscrew them. But I had already pointed out that he was using the wrong kind of screwdriver to remove the old thermostat from the wall. Nor did he have a wire stripper. Why don't these guys come with the right tools? The hell with professionalism. I could not believe this guy was training people. In the interest of expediency, I kept my mouth shut.</div><div><br /></div><div><img src="http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4014/4638132434_fa99118a6d.jpg" /></div><div><br /></div><div>When he was done, I asked him to show me Pepco's website to control the thermostats. "<i>We leave homeowners to do that on their own.</i>" He made reference to people not being comfortable with Pepco personnel knowing their password. That made no sense - after all, it's Pepco's system. Pepco has complete control over it. It hardly matters that whether Pepco personnel know my password or not - Pepco can still control my thermostat. I pressed him on this and finally he said he just didn't have the time - he had other appointments. Since he showed up late for mine, I could hardly argue with him over that point. Although both thermostats were turned off, I let him go.</div><div><br /></div><div><b>At The Computer</b></div><div><br /></div><div>I surfed over to the url he had given me to register an account at <a href="http://pepco.com/rewards">pepco.com/rewards</a>. Forgive me if I drag you through the details but I must. They deserve a thorough airing if only to show website designers what to avoid.</div><div><br /></div><div>The website starting by asking me for 3 pieces of personal information. Let's call it <i>pseudo-information</i> because it was all from my monthly statement. How stupid - if you open someone's mailbox and take their bill, you have all the personal information needed to masquerade as them! If you're going to get all the information from a bill, it doesn't matter whether you ask for 3 pieces of information or 100.</div><div><br /></div><div>Next, Pepco required completion of a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAPTCHA">captcha</a> (distorted bits of text you are required to type in). Captcha's don't identify people - they merely prove it's not a robot filling out the form. But that's pointless given that the form just asked for information that could only have come from one person's statement. Whoever decided on their security measures didn't know the basics. Or was overridden by bad corporate policy.</div><div><br /></div><div>The next web page asked for <i>really</i> personal information just in case I forgot my password in the future. No doubt you've encountered this before. I was presented with a choice of things like mother's maiden name, name of first pet, and so on. This design is a disaster. By insisting on information <i>that only you know</i>, it immediately becomes information that <i>not only you know</i>. Because now Pepco knows it. And since these same questions are used for password recovery by many financial institutions, access to your money and identity has been granted yet another way to be compromised.</div><div><br /></div><div>Sadly, I have found that people really do see my personal information. My most convincing encounter with this reality came when I was telecommuting one day and found that my password wasn't working. I phoned the computer support staff at my own place of employment and they proceeded to ask me my personal questions, listen to my answers, and confirm the answers matched those on file. In other words, other people were seeing things that only I should know. Fortunately, I had planned ahead and read back the answers I had given years earlier. The name of my elementary school: <i>a</i>. My first pet's name: <i>ab</i>. My favorite sport: <i>abc</i>. And so on.</div><div><br /></div><div>You may not like my solution. You may complain that it's impossible to memorize and recall this information if it's completely artificial. Correct. But it's a fair tradeoff for true security (not to mention personal privacy). And even if you answer the questions seriously, recalling the correct answers may be difficult. Consider that one of Pepco's security questions was "<i>What is the earliest phone number you can remember?</i>" The problem with this kind of question is that it is likely to change over time. It is a near certainty that there will come a time when my answer is different. Memory fades after all. In fact, many of the questions were of that type. <i>Favorite fruit? Favorite color?</i> And so on. How many people have the same favorites for the rest of their lives? (The alternative is to ask questions of fact but that has problems, too, as Sarah Palin found out when her yahoo account was compromised thanks to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah_Palin_email_hack">questions easily answered from her Wikipedia page</a>.)</div><div><br /></div><div>Sorry for that digression but I've never read a thorough explanation of all the problems with this type of password recovery system so I thought I'd put it down for the record. I resisted sharing it with the Pepco representative even though, by this time, I had already phoned Pepco for help. In fact, I called earlier, having failed at the first step - getting the pseudo-personal info from my statement. Evidently, my statement didn't square with their view of it.</div><div><br /></div><div>The representative was happy to stay on the line as I completed the remainder of the page, the next page, and so on. Finally, I got to the fifth and last page. Whew! But instead of a welcome screen, I got: <i>The system is unable to process your request at this time. Please contact a Pepco representative if you continue to have trouble.</i></div><div><br /></div><div>Since I was already on the phone with just such a representative, contacting one was a snap. (The first thing that went easily that day.) She couldn't explained what had gone wrong but decided it was because I was using the wrong browser. ("<i>We don't support Safari or Chrome.</i>") I doubted that was an issue because the pages were just simple forms and, after all, I had successfully completed four of them. The diagnostic smelled to me like an issue on their end.</div><div><br /></div><div>However, a quick look at the source showed me that their service was Microsoft-based so, yes, compatibility could be an issue. She told me to use Internet Explorer. I told her "<i>I'm on a Mac; there is no IE for MacOS.</i>" She then assured me that Firefox was supported. So I went through their signup pages again. Again: <i>There is a problem with the system. Please contact a Pepco representative for assistance.</i></div><div><br /></div><div>This may not have been the exact message (I didn't bother to copy it down) but it was definitely different than the previous one. (What's the point of more than one type of uselessly vague error messages?)</div><div><br /></div><div>At this point, the Pepco representative did something on her end and I was able to log in. Only to be showered with new forms. The system wanted me to fill out a detailed questionnaire regarding my house - size, construction, windows, etc. After getting out of this rat's nest, the representative told me how to get to the page to pay your bill and set up Auto Bill Pay.</div><div><br /></div><div>Me: <i>But I don't want to pay my bill or set up Auto Bill Pay!</i></div><div>Pepco 1: <i>You don't? Isn't that why you called?</i></div><div>Me: <i>I called so I could get access to my Pepco-provided internet thermostat.</i></div><div>Pepco 1: <i>Oh, you want a different number.</i></div><div>Me: <i>Are you sure? I dialed the number I was given and got to you.</i></div><div>Pepco 1: <i>Yes, I'm sure.</i></div><div>Me: <i>Ok, what's the number.</i></div><div>Pepco 1: <i>866 353-5798</i></div><div>Me: <i>That's the number I dialed to get you. Please transfer me - don't make me call a number that will bring me right back to you.</i></div><div>Pepco 1: <i>Uh, hold on.</i></div><div><br /></div><div>Finally, I was transferred to a different person:</div><div><br /></div><div>Pepco 2: <i>What can I do for you, sir?</i></div><div>Me: <i>I'd like to know how to access my Pepco-provided internet thermostat.</i></div><div>Pepco 2: <i>I'd be happy to redirect you to a person who can take your request to have a thermostat installed.</i></div><div><br /></div><div>It took a while but finally I convinced her that I already had the thermostat installed and just needed the url to the page to control it. She then broke the bad news. "<i>That feature is not available yet.</i>"</div><div><br /></div><div><b>How Could This Be</b></div><div><br /></div><div>I'll skip the lengthy discussion that ensued. Suffice to say, after I was certain that she had to be confused or misinformed, I spoke to her supervisor, Dave Boyer, who explained that the functionality was still being tested by Pepco employees who had the thermostat in their homes.</div><div><br /></div><div>What? How could this be? Wasn't it tested <b>before</b> being advertised? And hadn't it been advertised for months? (I have an email pointing out that it was advertised to be available in the summer of 2009!) The supervisor had no good explanation.</div><div><br /></div><div>He didn't understand why I was unhappy, so I explained about the hundreds of button pushes that would be required to program the new thermostat. (Wait, multiply by two because I have two of them!) And I would have to learn how to use the thermostat - a thermostat with a tiny screen and just a few buttons, each overloaded with lots of modes and functions. Ugh. All in all, an experience I really didn't want. And certainly not the one I had been promised.</div><div><br /></div><div>The supervisor offered to send out a technician to uninstall the new thermostats and reinstall the old ones - no charge. I thanked him for the offer while pointing out that based on my past experience, it would require me to sacrifice another half day off from work to do the reinstall and possibly another half day to re-reinstall the new one. He said that the technician could call me at work so that I could leave in time to meet him at my house - and that this courtesy was always available. But why wasn't I told this before?</div><div><br /></div><div>I also expressed my displeasure over a number of other things - such as the way the program was advertised. Had I known Pepco was not ready, I would have waited. Pepco shouldn't have advertised at all. At the very least, Pepco should have explained the true state of the customer experience. Before signing up originally, I spoke to a Pepco rep who very clearly extolled how easy it was to use the system. How could this be if it wasn't even available? I asked the supervisor whether he had one of the Pepco thermostats. Answer: No. "<i>Not available in my area.</i>"</div><div><br /></div><div>I told the supervisor that I now faced a decision. Should I make another appointment for a Pepco technician to come reinstall my old thermostat? Or should I wait for Pepco to finish their testing betting that the outdoor temp wouldn't get too cold or too hot in the meantime. I asked the supervisor when the web interface would be available. He thought sometime in June. I asked him to find the person who knew for sure - surely someone must be in charge there - and get a real answer.</div><div><br /></div><div>After placing me on hold for awhile, the supervisor came back on the phone and admitted that he couldn't get hold of the project manager but that the manager was due to show up in two days and he would get me a clear answer then. (What? No one can get a hold of the project manager for two days?) That was five days ago. I have not received any word from anyone at Pepco since.</div><div><br /></div><div>At this point, I've filed a complaint with the <a href="http://webapp.psc.state.md.us/Intranet/home.cfm">Maryland Public Service Commission</a> which regulates Pepco.</div><div><br /></div><div>Needless to say, Pepco needs to do more than just testing. It needs to fix: its web interfaces, its privacy and security practices, its installation practices, its advertising, and finally, how it communicates with customers. If customers are so badly misled, Pepco shouldn't expect customers to sign up for its programs, no matter how good they turn out be.</div><div><br /></div><div>Indeed, I related this story to several people and each one had a Pepco tale of woe. One of my friends said that he filed a complaint with the MD PSC <i>last year</i> about the same program. It seems that Pepco had advertised the program would be available last summer and it wasn't available. I've also found Pepco's blog which has lots of people <a href="http://pepcoconnect.wordpress.com/2010/03/09/top-3-issues-with-new-online-billing/">complaining about the web billing system</a>. I am experienced enough to avoid Auto Bill Pay systems but how naive was I to have signed up for the internet thermostat?</div><div><br /></div><div>Several of the people I spoke to asked why I would trust Pepco to have control over my thermostat. Now I'm wondering what could I have been thinking when I agreed to this. </div><div><br /></div><div>More importantly, my house is cold.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div></div></div></div></div>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com53tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-19523915831815382072010-05-17T13:11:00.005-04:002010-05-19T12:59:47.471-04:00Phone Tax IncreaseFaced with close to a billion dollar shortfall (and continuing deficits for years to come), Montgomery County, Maryland is struggling with tax hikes and service cuts. I won't summarize all the cuts and tax hikes but I will mention one that falls in the area of interest to readers of this blog.<br /><br />The county council is considering a <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/content/council/pdf/agenda/cm/2010/100518/20100518_MFP1.pdf">resolution</a> to increase the county tax on telephones from $2 to $3. That's per phone - so total up your family's cell phones and your house phone and multiply by 3 to get the amount you'll be paying to MC (Montgomery County). If we're lucky, they won't raise it even higher.<br /><br />Oh, also add MC's 911 tax. That's another .75 per phone. At least, that's what I see on my bill.<br /><br /><b>On My Bill</b><br /><br />I threw in the <i>on my bill</i> in the previous sentence because I wouldn't be surprised if you see something different on your bill. Indeed, I don't see the $2 charge on my bill although I do see the 911 charge. And one of my neighbors tells me that his MC 911 charge is $1. Is my phone provider doing the computation incorrectly? Or are the computations just maddeningly complex?<br /><br />I wouldn't be surprised if complexity is an issue. For instance, my phone is VOIP and although I have an MC billing address, the actual phone number doesn't look like an MC number. But <a href="http://libeslibation.blogspot.com/2005/02/testing-e911-in-montgomery-county-md.html">I made sure that the 911 service is working</a> so perhaps how <i>MCness</i> is determined depends on which department is doing the determining. Another neighbor of mine notes that she has a 202 (Washington DC) number with a Montgomery County billing address that <b>is</b> assessed the $2 tax so there's yet another explanation needed.<br /><br />Yet another scenario is exhibited with my cell phone. It has a NJ number with a NJ billing address but the phone stays in MC 99% of the time. Although the phone company knows this, I am not assessed the $2 tax.<br /><br />And, of course, I use Skype and other free video services. Needless to say, I don't pay the $2 for Skype.<br /><br />How are we supposed to deal with this morass? More specifically, how can we know which tax computations are correct? How can we predict how this pending resolution may actually affect us if we cannot even understand the current implementation?<br /><br /><b>Justified</b><br /><br />So back to the original issue. Is MC justified in increasing the tax? The county could have offered a rationale. For instance, regulation costs more than it used to. But that's not what the council staff notes say. And they also don't say that MC collects taxes for telephone service in other ways, such as charging for access to rights of way or charging other business taxes. In fact, no rationale whatsoever is offered.<br /><br />Surely, the real reason is that MC <i>needs</i> more revenue and they've figured out that this tax is one to which people are relatively insensitive. I would argue both of these points. (I'll skip the first point - surely it goes without saying that MC has many unnecessary expenditures.)<br /><br />The real reason people <i>seem</i> insensitive to telephone taxes is more likely that few people understand their phone bills. They are laden with taxes from various levels of government (local, state, and federal taxes appear on mine) as well as charges from telephone providers that aren't taxes but are designed to sound like they are so customers won't question them. The <i>regulatory cost recovery charge</i> and <i>administrative charges</i> that appear on my Verizon Wireless bill are good examples of such, uh, taxes. [Although phone providers are careful not to use the word <i>tax</i> on any of their charges, the government is fairly loose with how they use <i>tax</i>, <i>fee</i>, and <i>surcharge</i>. For simplicity here, I'm calling all these extras <i>taxes</i>.]<br /><br />So, in my view, the phone companies and government(s) are doing exactly the same thing (taking advantage of telephone users), albeit in different ways.<br /><br /><b>What To Do</b><br /><br />I suspect it is fruitless to complain to the council. But I encourage you to do it anyway. If enough people do so, it may make a difference. The council will be holding a hearing on Tuesday May 18 before the <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/content/council/pdf/agenda/cm/2010/100518/20100518_AG.pdf">regular meeting of the MFP committee</a>. [<a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/csltmpl.asp?url=/Content/council/about/procedures.asp">How to give public testimony.</a>]<br /><br />Or you can do what I did the last time the council raised the phone tax. I switched my service to a jurisdiction with a lower taxes. It is surprising that taxes vary widely between jurisdictions. MC is far from being the lowest. But it is also far from being the highest.<br /><br />I mentioned earlier having a NJ cell phone. That was a no brainer - since I have some relatives in NJ, I simply asked if I could piggyback on their family plan. I checked with Verizon Wireless as well and they had no problem with the phone being out of the area.<br /><br />I ultimately reduced my payments to Verizon significantly and my payments to MC went to zero. Having an out-of-state area code doesn't seem to be the problem that it might have been a decade ago. Now, most people have plans where interstate calls cost the same as local calls. So for the phone on my family plan, I pay $12.99 for wireless access. That includes all taxes and fees.<br /><br />I also transferred my landline to VOIP. This also reduced my payments to MC and my payments to Verizon went to zero. For VOIP, I pay $18.07. That includes all taxes and fees.<br /><br />If you do write that letter to the council, mention that higher taxes will be counterproductive - and that you intend to transfer your phone service to a jurisdiction with lower telephone taxes. The county predicts they're going to reap a windfall of $11.85 million from higher taxes. But they're going to have to do it without us.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-35061493070999356872009-10-23T04:53:00.007-04:002009-10-23T15:44:52.371-04:00Cut CCMOn the <a href="http://maryland-politics.blogspot.com/2009/10/cut-county-cable-montgomery.html">Maryland Politics Watch blog</a>, Adam Pagnucco has posted an essay in response to our elected leaders asking what can be cut from the Montgomery County budget. Adam's suggestion: <i>Cut County Cable Montgomery</i>.<br /><br />According to viewership numbers, very few people watch CCM. Since so few people watch it, I have to assume most readers of this blog don't even know what it is I will provide an explanation. In a nutshell, CCM is the C-SPAN of Montgomery County. CCM provides live coverage of council sessions, press conferences, and public affairs programming. CCM is delivered as a cable channel and many shows are available from the <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/apps/cable/site/index.asp">county website</a> or <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/montgomerycountymd">youtube</a>.<br /><br />Adam observes that the CCM budget has grown substantially: 16.9% in FY07, 13.9% in FY08, and an amazing 22.9% in FY09. That is breathtaking, especially considering the cuts that have taken place elsewhere in the budget.<br /><br />Adam's explanation about the CCM program and its budget growth? <i>Incumbent protection</i>. Adam explains:<br /><blockquote><i>All too many of these programs seem to have a common primary purpose: making the incumbent office holders look good. Over and over again, politicians are shown prancing at press conferences, smiling to their adoring admirers and explaining why Montgomery County is such a wonderful place to live – under their leadership, of course. County Report, CCM’s flagship weekly program, is little more than a parade of such political frolicking.</i></blockquote>I won't repeat Adam's other observations but I encourage you to read his essay. I agree with most of his points. However ...<br /><br />It is important to understand that the CCM is not funded out of the county's general revenues. Rather, CCM is part of a separate budget (the "cable communications plan") that is funded primarily by franchise fees which are paid by everyone subscribing to cable TV. Pull out your bill and take a look. It may seem small on your bill (well, maybe not) but it adds up. The current budget calls for franchise fees of roughly $10.6 million. Revenues from some smaller sources bring the total income to $15.8 million for all things cable.<br /><br />The cable revenues are not to be used for items outside the cable budget (although the county has been known to borrow from it occasionally). But the bottom line is that cutting CCM is not a useful response when our elected leaders ask what we would sacrifice to help balance the budget.<br /><br />That said, cutting CCM might be useful for a number of other reasons. For example, our political leaders have better things to do with their time than do interviews that are watched by almost no one. The FY09 CCM budget is roughly $2.5 million. Of that, the Public Information Office (the source of the most pointless of such shows) is $720 thousand, about 29% of the CCM budget. (Would it be too much to ask that some of that be used to make CCM work on Apple Macs?)<br /><br />In my opinion, many of the other shows produced by or distributed on CCM are also of little value. Most of them are just filler between county council sessions. What is missing is more valuable video such as council work sessions and committee and commission meetings. These videos would provide citizens with a much more useful understanding of what the county government does than pablum produced by a public information office. (Note that the county has an even larger budget for "public information" that <b>does</b> come from general revenues. And which should also be cut.)<br /><br />In the past, I have recommended that we give up the channel entirely (presumably getting something valuable in return) and instead provide streams and archives over the web for the videos that are truly vital to informing the citizenry of their government. I recommend that for most of the channels in the <a href="http://pegs.montgomerycountymd.gov/index.html">PEG network</a>.<br /><br />As I write this, I have turned on CCM to see what is being broadcast. It's Councilmember Nancy Floreen holding her dog and talking about her family ("<i>Lady is a rescue schnoodle ...</i>") and showing family photos of her travels around the world. Very entertaining. But how is this a justifiable use of taxpayer funds?<br /><br /><img src="http://libes.com/don/blog/img/floreen_on_ccm.jpg"><br /><br />Note: The county will deny that franchise fees are a tax. Call them what you will.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-78225295953876502852009-08-20T02:34:00.007-04:002009-08-21T00:27:04.154-04:00Strange Sense of SecurityMCPS recently announced it wants a security system for the elementary schools. RFP (Request for Proposals) 4248.1 "<i>Elementary Schools Access Control Systems</i>" is publicly available at the Parents Coalition web site in an article by Louis Wilen.<br /><br /><a href="http://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2009/08/mcps-releases-rfp-for-super-security.html">http://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2009/08/mcps-releases-rfp-for-super-security.html</a><br /><br />I decided I'd have a look. What I found was astonishing.<br /><br />The RFP starts out reasonably. The request sketches out the idea of doors that use access-control cards. As a past elementary-school parent myself, I could see this makes sense for school staff who are regularly going in and out. The kids themselves don't need access cards because they're only using the doors during brief periods (i.e., school day begins, recess, etc.) when an adult is stationed at the door.<br /><br />But after hours, I would regularly encounter doors propped open with a rock or chair so that parents could enter. And sometimes I would encounter a locked door and a crowd of angry parents banging on the door, unsuccessfully trying to raise the attention of a school staffer.<br /><br />The MCPS proposal provides for cameras so conceivably a parent could get the attention of someone in the office to have the door opened remotely. Indeed, the cameras could be viewed offsite so it wouldn't even be necessary to have someone watching them in the school itself. They could be viewed at MCPS HQ or anywhere on the internet.<br /><br />Sounds good so far. So what's the problem?<br /><br /><b>The Problem</b><br /><br />For starters, there's a lot in the RFP that's unnecessary. Consider this section:<br /><blockquote><i> 2.2.4.m The EAC/SMS System shall have a fully integrated Environment Security Module (ESM) with the capability of detection and identification of toxic gases, Chemical Warfare Agents including Soman, Sarin, VX, Mustard, and Lewisite. The Environmental Security Module shall include a suite of sensors integrated with the EAC/SMS System capable of detecting over 1,000 chemical and gas compounds with ...</i></blockquote>Is this for real? Since when do we need chemical warfare detection systems in our elementary schools? (Answer: We don't.)<br /><br />I'm thinking that this RFP was written with the idea of applying for grant support from some federal security program. That seems to be the way half of these new security policies are justified these days - because there's money waiting for them. (The other half? Hyperbole-driven paranoia.)<br /><br />Speaking of paranoia, how come there are no metal detectors? How is the system supposed to stop people entering with guns? Knives? (Atomic weapons?) How are we supposed to sleep at night? Seriously - why such a weird focus?<br /><br /><b>Next Problem</b><br /><br />Another class of problem is that the specs are a hodgepodge. Plenty of the requirements have no thought to functionality but dwell obsessively on irrelevant technical detail. For example:<br /><blockquote><i>3.6 ... shall incorporate a 32-bit 100 MHz RISC processor ...</i></blockquote>Besides the unnecessary use of the vague term RISC, why would someone specify a <b>maximum</b> speed? Normally, if you have a specific processor in mind, you'd say <i>100 MHz or faster</i> but this spec means faster chips aren't acceptable. That's absurd. But realistically, so is the idea of even giving processor speeds for a security system. Function is what counts, not processor speed. An example of a functional spec: <i>System must recognize a face 95% of the time within 2 seconds.</i> Who cares how fast the underlying processor is?<br /><br />So why might someone write specs this way? Answer: When they have a prior arrangement with someone looking to dump a bunch of obsolete equipment on some sucker.<br /><br />The circle was closed once I reached section 5.2 which referenced James Gompers as the consultant to the project. Gompers has been a security consultant for MCPS before. Writing in the Parents Coalition Blog, Louis Wilen says (<a href="http://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2009/04/gompers-inc-or-gompers-not.html">May 1 2009</a>):<br /><blockquote><i>[MCPS] Security Director Hellmuth was so impressed by Gompers that he hired him to select millions of dollars of video cameras and computer-based visitor tracking systems for our schools. Hellmuth had so much confidence in Gompers that he even disregarded the MCPS procurement procedures and state laws that require that competitive bids must be solicited for large purchases. Even the selection of Gompers, Inc. as the security consulting firm was made on a "no-bid" basis by Hellmuth.</i></blockquote>The PC Blog raises a number of concerns regarding Gompers, his business practices, his relationship to MCPS and the disregard for their own policies that MCPS appears to be taking in this relationship. I encourage you to read their blog for more details.<br /><br /><b>More Problems?</b><br /><br />Building on the Gompers relationship, I'll mention just one more peculiar technical aspect of this spec. First note that one of Gompers' achievements was selecting a particular line as the standard for MCPS security cameras. According to <a href="http://www.scribd.com/doc/12383767/Mcps-Case-Study">the press release</a> of the company (<a href="http://www.iqeye.com">IQinVision</a>) whose products (IQeye cameras) were selected, Bob Helmuth (Directory of School Safety and Security for MCPS) said:<br /><blockquote><i>For what we wanted to accomplish at MCPS, the IQeye cameras was the best choice for us. We would go with nothing less than megapixel cameras both for image quality and for coverage.</i></blockquote>Sure enough, the RFP does specify IQeye cameras just as MCPS standardized on. However, the RFP says:<br /><blockquote><i>8.3.14 The video will be 640x480 resolution<br />8.3.15 The video will be at up to 2 images/second</i></blockquote>But 640x480 is much less (roughly 70% less) than the "megapixel" cameras that MCPS Security Directory Helmuth said are now required. (Remember: "<i>We could go with nothing less than megapixel cameras.</i>") And the particular model IQeye732) isn't even listed in the IQeye website <a href="http://www.iqeye.com/iqeye-comparison-matrix.html">product line-up</a>. (Nor could I find it anywhere on the web with google.) Presuming it's an unannounced upcoming model, if it follows the IQeye naming conventions, the 732 will be a 2-megapixel model. But because of the way the RFP is written, it's a waste of money because the video will be at 640x480. No more, no less.<br /><br />Oh, and the video will be at "<i>up to 2 images/second.</i>" Again, a really strange way of phrasing because it specifies a maximum rather than a minimum. And again, that's a fraction of the camera's ability. So once more, it's wasted money to buy such a camera. And frankly, 2 images/second really sucks. Even the cheapest IQeye cameras can do 30 images/second. (And the Gompers-specified cameras are far from the cheapest.)<br /><br />And that MCPS standard (for which MCPS paid Gompers) for IQeye cameras and their megapixel cameras? That was a waste of money too. I don't know how much MCPS paid Gompers but it wouldn't surprise me if it was in the range of $50K - $100K.<br /><br />By the way, according to MCPS Superintendent Jerry Weast, "<i> All of our technology partners know they are not permitted to use MCPS testimonials in advertising.</i>" This is a quote from a <a href="http://pubinfo.googlegroups.com/web/PJ09.pdf?gda=HzglVToAAAB25MbjOXDjp3pBwhGWILYCWU1ogNP1svZFyFmPAzB7zAP7jmj8srTTTRntpj2dwHf97daDQaep90o7AOpSKHW0&hl=en">January 2009 memo of his (see answer #9)</a>. This is otherwise known as <a href="http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/policy/pdf/bbb.pdf">MCPS Policy BBB</a>. As can be seen with the press release from IQeye, this policy is clearly being ignored. Writing in the Parents Coalition Blog, Janis Sartucci <a href="http://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2009/08/mcps-endorsement-used-in-milk.html">described this in detail along with several other failures of the policy</a>. It is an eye-opening read.<br /><br /><b>Bottom Line</b><br /><br />Although I've picked out just a few examples, the entire proposal has more. Some of them are harder to explain but equally laughable. Browsing the proposal is not for the faint-of-heart but if have a bit of technical expertise, give it a read. Post a comment describing the absurdities that you find. (Here's one to get you started: Search for Linux and Windows.)<br /><br />So what's this going to cost? Because it sounds incredibly expensive. Add up all paraphenalia in the RFP (chemical warefare detectors?!), new software (that we get to debug), labor costs (one-time, maintenance, training), etc., and we're talking millions of dollars. And that's for a system that has no functional guarantees that it will actually stop anyone from entering the school and, for that matter, even detect a knife or gun.<br /><br />At my own workplace, we have card-based entry systems that are regularly bypassed. Two people approach the door at the same time, the first swipes the card. The second walks through while the door is still open. So much for million-dollar security. We could spend less (and lower the unemployment rate) by employing people to stand at the doors all day. Better yet, let's pay these people to stay home. It would be an equally effective system and a whole lot cheaper.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-21837231302279613082009-08-09T10:51:00.006-04:002009-08-09T12:12:07.902-04:00FIOS schedule for Rockville and GaithersburgVerizon's construction schedule has expanded significantly from the last time I checked it. Their <a href="http://www22.verizon.com/about/community/md/files/vzmd_fttp_080309.pdf">Maryland FIOS schedule</a> suggests that Verizon is cruising through Rockville. Gaithersburg, too. Gaithersburg approved its franchise this past May and predicting complete coverage by the end of 2009. Bets, anyone?<br /><br />Both Rockville and Gaithersburg have information pages on their individual websites for cable TV and telecommunications (<a href="http://www.rockvillemd.gov/cabletv-telecom/index.html">Rockville</a>, <a href="http://www.gaithersburgmd.gov/poi/default.asp?POI_ID=385&TOC=107;81;88;385;">Gaithersburg</a>) but they are pretty skimpy - and in the case of schedules, just referring the reader back to the companies. Don't hesitate to contact your local officials if you have questions.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-12968547994179887592009-03-24T01:12:00.002-04:002009-03-24T01:22:20.953-04:00Email OwnershipI've <a href="http://libes.com/don/blog/2006/12/avoid-free-email.html">written previously</a> about ISP-provided email addresses and how risky they are. To recap, you're at the mercy of your ISP when you use an address such as don@comcast.net or don@verizon.net. Numerous people at <a href="http://www.broadbandreports.com">broadbandreports.com</a> have reported problems with their Comcast email. The only common factor seems to be that Comcast's system is too complex. Because your email address is tied to your account which is tied to every other service Comcast offers, people have found their emails locked due to anything from late payments to installation of phone service.<br /><br />Previously, I mentioned another concern: Switch providers and you must leave your address behind. Few ISPs providers let you keep your address or offer to forward your email.<br /><br />As if to prove me wrong, one of my friends found himself in this very situation when he switched from Comcast to Verizon a year ago. He had long been using a comcast.net address, had given it out to many people, and had subscribed to various mailing lists with it. And he figured the address would stop working when he left Comcast.<br /><br />But the comcast.net address continued working. So he continued using it.<br /><br />Curiously, Comcast didn't turn it off or ask for it back. Until...<br /><br />About a year later, he decided he didn't like Verizon and wanted to go back to Comcast. Even I couldn't have guessed what would happen next: As soon as he opened a new account with Comcast, his old Comcast email address stopped working!<br /><br />After calls to the local office proved unhelpful, he called Comcast's corporate headquarters in Philadelphia, each time being referred to an <i>Executive Response Team</i> member who would vow to fix the problem. After weeks of getting nowhere, he tracked down a technician who seemed to understand - but lacked the immediate access to make the needed changes. But enough badgering and finally someone got through and my friend got his email account back. It only took my friend hours of time on the phone spread over 60 days - for a fix that shouldn't have taken more than 10 minutes.<br /><br />You may want to put that in the "just asking for trouble" category. After all, my friend did continue using a Comcast service (an email address) despite no longer being a customer. But I think you're at significant risk even if you are a Comcast customer in good standing. Case in point: A poster (userid: <i>baffled</i>) on dslreports.com <a href="http://www.dslreports.com/forum/remark,21951743">described</a> that an email address he had used for 4 1/2 years recently stopped working. When he called, Comcast told him that that another customer with the same name in Texas closed his Comcast account and the email address was "owned" by the Texan. (Clearly Comcast's idea of "ownership" is pretty weak if you can "own" it one day and "not own" it the next.) Anyway, since Mr. Texas was the "legal owner" of the email address, Comcast said there was nothing they could do.<br /><br />In addition, <i>baffled</i> found that his sub-account email addresses were inoperative as well including one that he used as a business address. Fortunately, Comcast was able to resolve his problem in just 24 hours. It was just an accident! Our bad!<br /><br />Ultimately, he got his accounts back along with his emails. But I would've bet against it. It is apparent from these and other stories that Comcast is not concerned with the way they handle email addresses.<br /><br />If anyone can show me an ISP that provides any kind of guarantees on their mail service, I'd love to see it. Until then, I restate my earlier advice: Using ISP-provided email addresses is just too risky. And using them for business is insane.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-20885936819896933632009-02-23T01:19:00.003-05:002009-02-23T01:38:10.482-05:00Can We CallIs it too much to hope that I could get through a year without loss of service? Made it to February anyway. I guess that's something.<br /><br /><b>Thursday, Feb 20, 2009</b><br /><br />I woke to find my internet service wasn't working. I confirmed it wasn't my equipment. The lights on the cable modem acknowledged the problem to be at the modem or beyond it. So I called Comcast.<br /><br />Ricardo answered. I explained the problem and said it showed the same symptoms as <a href="http://libes.com/don/blog/2008/08/comcast-film-fest.html">the previous outage I had back in July</a>. I mentioned this because the tech who visited me then promised that someone would come back and complete the fix or else the problem would recur.<br /><br /><b>Me</b>: (paraphrase) <i>That was in July. And no one ever came back.</i><br /><b>Ricardo</b>: (paraphrase) <i>According to my records, someone did come out and fix it.</i><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>They may have fixed something but it wasn't the right thing. The splitter on the pole wasn't touched and it was supposed to be removed. Could you send someone who can do the right job?</i><br /><b>Ricardo</b>: <i>I can give you an appointment for a technician to come to your home on Saturday between 8-11am.</i><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>Thank you.</i><br /><b>Ricardo</b>: <i>Do you have a phone number for the technician to call before he comes over?</i><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>I have VOIP, so without internet service, he won't be able to reach me.</i><br /><b>Ricardo</b>: <i>How about a cell phone number?</i><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>Cell service is unreliable. Just have the tech come without calling. I'll be here.</i><br /><b>Ricardo</b>: <i>Ok, I'll write that on the ticket. He'll come without calling. But I have to warn you that if he's running late, he'll have no way to contact you.</i><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>I understand.</i><br /><br />Here's a picture of the splitter in question - installed by Comcast.<br /><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3100/2743485446_8ca6e15d14.jpg"></img><br /><br /><b>Friday</b><br /><br />Late Friday, I found the internet connection was active. But I still wanted the tech to come out and fix the connectors so I looked forward to Saturday morning.<br /><br /><b>Saturday</b><br /><br />8-11am. No one showed. When 11am came, I assumed the tech was running late so I didn't worry.<br /><br />At 3pm, I figured there's no way a tech could be running this far behind but I had to leave the house to run an errand so I called Comcast just to make sure the tech wouldn't waste his time trying to visit me even this late.<br /><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>It's 3pm. What happened to the technician?</i><br /><b>Anika</b>: <i>The appointment was cancelled because there was no phone number to call.</i><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>Are you sure? I specifically told Ricardo that I had no working phone and just to come over. Ricardo said he was writing down that there was no phone and the tech should come over without calling. Are you sure there are no notes to that effect?</i><br /><b>Anika</b>: <i>There is no such note. </i><br /><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>Can we get Ricardo on the phone? Let's clear this up right now.</i><br /><b>Anika</b>: <i>Ok, just tell me his extension.</i><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>You want me to tell you his extension?</i><br /><b>Anika</b>: <i>Yes, that's the only way I can get in touch with other people here.</i><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>He gave me his name. That's not enough?</i><br /><b>Anika</b>: <i>The call center is very large, sir. I cannot do anything with just his name.</i><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>Can I speak to a supervisor? I'd like to formally complain about Ricardo or find out what's going on.</i><br /><b>Anika</b>: <i>There are no supervisors here on Saturday. Call back during the week.</i><br /><br />Anika offered to credit me $20 for the missed appointment and offered to reschedule the appointment. <br /><br /><b>Anika</b>: <i>Can I reschedule you now? I might be able to send someone there later today.</i><br /><b>Me</b>: <i>No thank you. I can't wait here any longer.</i><br /><br />We ended the phone call and I left the house at that point.<br /><br />7pm. I returned later that evening and found a note from a Comcast technician on my front door. The technician noted that the "Scheduled Work Date and Time" for the job was 2-5pm. He noted that he arrived at 4:38pm.<br /><br />A couple of observations can be drawn from this episode. The first is that either someone is lying or Comcast's system for taking notes isn't working. In fact, this isn't the first time I've encountered this problem.<br /><br />Second, there's no explanation for how a technician would summarily cancel an appointment on his own. Just because there's no phone number isn't a useful reason. (Even a non-answering number isn't a good reason as I explained in a <a href="http://libes.com/don/blog/2008/09/adventures-in-billing.html">previous posting</a>.)<br /><br />Third, there's no explanation for the 2-5pm appointment. Where did it come from? It couldn't have been Anika because I told her I couldn't wait at the house any longer. I specifically told her not to send a technician later in the day. Could the technician just have decided on his own? Without even contacting the customer? What kind of communication is there between the people answering the phone and the techs in the field? Or rather why is it so bad? Here's a more <a href="http://libes.com/don/blog/2008/08/comcast-film-fest.html">detailed reminder</a>.<br /><br />Lastly, I have now learned that just because a Comcast representative gives me a name, I should also ask for a phone number. I've never heard of this nonsense before but ok, I'll play along if that's what it takes.<br /><br />I will file a <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/mcgtmpl.asp?url=/content/cableOffice/compctm.asp">formal complaint</a> with Montgomery County. Not only is something seriously broken with Comcast's customer support but my connection is still problematic - and it's been this way for 8 months.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-89507033118128539622009-02-19T14:12:00.005-05:002009-02-19T14:38:47.491-05:00Transparency Not EitherI <a href="http://libes.com/don/blog/2009/02/transparency-not.html">recently described</a> a state bill to create a website that would enable the public to see <a href="http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/">MCPS</a> purchases - and my testimony at Annapolis requesting to remove the $10K threshold. To recap, the legislators didn't seem interested in the removal idea. I have since found out that they did exactly the opposite! Yes, they <i>raised</i> the threshold to $25K.<br /><br />My only thought: We must vote these people out of office at the next opportunity. Let me know if you have better suggestions.<br /><br /><b>Montgomery County's Turn</b><br /><br />Now Montgomery County is considering a similar bill for county purchases, Council Bill 1-09. Curiously, it has the same problem - the bill only requires transparency for purchases $25K or higher. What is with these people that they cannot think of amounts less than $25K?<br /><br />The county council is scheduled to take action on this bill next week (Feb 24 2009) so you still have several days to weigh in. I submitted essentially the same letter that I did to the state but this time focusing more clearly on the limit, even going so far as to put my thrust in the subtitle in English that even a 5th grader would understand. Here it is:<blockquote><br /><center><h3>Comments On Bill 1-09 Finance - Spending Disclosure</h3><br /><b>Summary: Good bill but would be better if the $25,000 limit was removed.</b><br /><br />Don Libes<br />February 5, 2009</center><br />I strongly support the intent of Bill 1-09 - to provide transparency of county purchases. But while thousand dollar purchases need disclosure, so do smaller ones. Many inappropriate purchases are less than a thousand dollars or even a hundred dollars - exorbitant lunches and gifts, unjustifiable travel, and so on. Limits, whether $25,000 or $10,000, are easy to avoid. It’s not hard to break up a million-dollar purchase of electronic whiteboards or computers in to groups of purchases that fall below the limit. It requires little effort to do - a few more clicks of the mouse.<br /><br />So pass the bill but without dollar limits and without qualifying words such as “aggregate” that could delay disclosure. Rather, the website should report any purchase that the county tracks using its existing financial management system. The cost of this change would be negligible given that the purchases are already in an existing database. And disk space is cheap. $100 buys enough space to hold decades worth of purchase information.<br /><br />We should take a cue from our new president. On his first day of office, President Obama issued a memorandum indicating that, <i>unless there is a justifiable reason to withhold information, records must be public by default</i>. If there is a justifiable reason for the $25K limit, I have yet to hear it. Disclosure should not have to wait for specific requests from the public.<br /><br />I close with the following words from Obama's memorandum. Accountability is in the interest of the government as well as the citizenry. As Justice Louis Brandeis wrote, “<i>Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants.</i>”<br /></blockquote>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-59715834499868891812009-02-05T03:21:00.010-05:002009-02-05T10:48:39.517-05:00Transparency? Not.Transparency is sweeping the land. Or is it?<br /><br />The federal government has established a website to let you see what the government is spending your money on (<a href="http://www.USASpending.gov">www.USASpending.gov</a>) and Maryland has created a similar spending website for state purchases (<a href="http://www.spending.dbm.maryland.gov">www.spending.dbm.maryland.gov</a>).<br /><br /><a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/content/council/pdf/agenda/col/2009/090203/20090203_10.pdf">Council Bill 1-09</a> has been drafted to create a similar website at the county level, sponsored by Councilmembers Andrews and Berliner.<br /><br />Unfortunately, the school system (<a href="http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/">MCPS</a>) has fallen through the cracks. County lawyers assert that MCPS does not have to yield its data to the state or the country websites. So another bill has been drafted to force the creation of a website specifically for MCPS. This bill is <a href="http://maryland18.blogspot.com/2009/01/transparency-for-public-school-spending.html">MC 930-09</a>, sponsored by <a href="http://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/06hse/html/msa14770.html">Delegate Alfred Carr</a>. (Carr's connection to telecomm issues? He succeeded <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Lawton">Jane Lawton</a>, the past MC Cable Administrator whose untimely passing left the seat available. Carr's previous job? A manager at Verizon!)<br /><br />Unfortunately, all of these bills share one common problem. The reporting levels are too high. The state website and proposed county website only require reporting of purchases $25K or higher. Carr's MCPS bill has a level of $10K or higher.<br /><br />I believe the level should be much less. The bill's author explained to me that the $10K limit was simply chosen as a reflection of the smaller budget of MCPS compared to the state. The state's $25K limit was based on a figure used to require additional signatures during purchasing. But just because purchases require less oversight doesn't mean they shouldn't be public. To the contrary, the smallest purchases are made with the least oversight. Obviously, they need public disclosure as much as big purchases, just for a different reason.<br /><br />And it should be easy extend the proposed website to smaller purchases. (How hard is it to remove the limit from an SQL query? Sigh.) And what would it cost? At 1TB for $100, we could fit the entire MCPS purchase history on a single disk. It is my understanding that the data is already tracked internally by MCPS in a single database. Periodic copies to an external mirror should be trivial. And since the website would be read-only, security risks are minimal.<br /><br />With that in mind, I encourage you to contact your <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/csltmpl.asp?url=/content/council/mem/members.asp">county councilmembers</a> and <a href="http://www.montgomerycountydelegation.com/contact.html">state delegates</a> and request that they lower the dollar limits on these bills.<br /><br />Here is the text of my own testimony that I presented at Annapolis at a public hearing on the measure. (Yes, it is short! Individuals are limited to two minutes.)<blockquote>Testimony on MC 930-09<br />Funding Accountability and Transparency Act<br />Don Libes<br />January 30, 2009<br /><br />My name is Don Libes. I’m representing myself, a typical taxpayer and parent with a child in public school. I thank you for the opportunity to testify on this legislation.<br /><br />I strongly support its intent - to provide transparency in the purchases by my public school system. I have been repeatedly dismayed at purchases that surely would not have occurred had the purchasers known that the public would immediately see such inappropriate expenditures.<br /><br />But many inappropriate purchases are less than a thousand dollars or even a hundred dollars - exorbitant lunches and gifts, unjustifiable travel, and so on. Such limits, whether $10,000 or $25,000, are easy to avoid. It’s not hard to break up a million-dollar purchase of electronic whiteboards or computers in to individual purchases that fall below the limit. It requires little<br />effort to do - a few more clicks of the mouse.<br /><br />So pass the bill but without limits and without qualifying words such as "aggregate" that could delay disclosure. The cost of this project is negligible given that the purchases are already in an existing database. And to remove the $10,000 limit requires no additional labor costs.<br /><br />We should take a cue from our new president. On his first day of office, President Obama issued a memorandum indicating that, unless there is a justifiable reason to withhold information, records must be public by default. Disclosure should not have to wait for specific requests from the public.<br /><br />I close with the following words from Obama's memorandum. Accountability is in the interest of the government as well as the citizenry. As Justice Louis Brandeis wrote, "<i>Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants.</i>"<br /></blockquote>Lest this sound like it ought to have been enough, it wasn't. After delivering my testimony to the MC Delegation, they continued discussion of the merits of the bill with the limit at $10K. Not a single delegate supported lowering the limit.<br /><br />Two other citizens testified as well. Louis Willen (<a href="http://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2009_01_25_archive.html">testimony</a>), representing the <a href="http://www.parentscoalitionmc.com/">Parents Coalition</a>, addressed the technical merits of the website and explained why it would cost much less than MCPS claims. More like $5K. As I mentioned, MCPS already has the data collected. It's just a matter of regularly copying it to a public repository with a query page exposed to the public. However MCPS started out saying that it would cost $200K and then lowered its estimate to "$40 to 50K". But it is apparent that they haven't done their homework and have no real idea of what's involved.<br /><br />Janis Sartucci also <a href="http://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2009/02/following-is-testimony-delivered-in.html">testified</a>, providing real-world examples of purchases that needed the kind of public airing such a website would provide. It's my understanding that when Janis has asked MCPS for data in the past, data that should be public in the first place, MCPS has told her that she must pay the cost of MCPS preparing the data for release. This is an idea right out of the dark ages. <br /><br />In the end, it may not matter much anyway. MCPS doesn't want to build it unless they are specifically offered new money. And the delegates are unlikely to give the county money for the purpose, instead just saying <i>build it on your own</i>. So if the bill passes without money attached, it's a useless result.<br /><br />Delegate Carr pointed out that MCPS should be happy to pay for it themselves. After all, it's likely that disclosure of MCPS purchases to the public would ultimately result in thousands of dollars of savings. And it would also reduce the cost of responding to information requests by parents for the purchasing data. Currently, it's all done manually. A parent makes a request and some MCPS staffer has to track down the data, explain how much it will cost to print it, send the estimate back to the parent (or deny the data exists), handle the reply (likely an argument), and so on.<br /><br />Bottom line: The bill is unlikely to have a useful impact even if passed. But with some simple changes, it has a future. However, the delegates and MCPS need to hear this from the voters.<br /><br />Final note: As the hearing began, the delegate chair noticed two people operating a professional videocamera. <a href="http://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/06hse/html/msa13991.html">Delegate Brian Feldman</a>, chair of the delegates, asked whether the people were recording audio and video or just taking still photos. After establishing that they were indeed recording both video and audio, the chair insisted they stop recording. None of the other delegates protested again the sad irony - that their own process of making transparency law itself would not be transparent to the public.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-84076854953624790432009-01-30T21:22:00.005-05:002009-01-30T21:46:56.971-05:00Your Mission, Should You Decide To Accept ItInterested in serving on the county's Cable and Communications Advisory Committee? The CCAC has four vacancies. Here is the<br /><a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/apps/exec/vacancies/PR_details.asp?PrID=5256">official announcement</a>.<br /><br />I've described the committee many times in the past but here is a link to perhaps the most in-depth description. I wrote it several years ago so it's no longer entirely accurate but it's still pretty close.<br /><br />Here is a link to the <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/mcgtmpl.asp?url=/content/cableOffice/ccac.asp">current members of the committee</a>. These are your representatives. Feel free to contact them to ask what their experience serving on the committee is like. Or ask them about communication-related issues of concern to you. Oh, you can't figure out how to contact them? Their names aren't linked to an email address? There's no phone number? How about that!<br /><br />You're got your first task then: Get on the committee and set about making the members more accessible to the citizens who they are supposed to represent!Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-9362054548209935142008-09-05T13:06:00.002-04:002008-09-05T17:59:52.368-04:00Adventures in BillingFollowup to <a href="http://libes.com/don/blog/2008/08/comcast-film-fest.html">last week's report</a> on the Film Fest aka My Latest Comcastic Adventure: Looking at my statement, I found that Comcast credited me $36 for the incident. But I had expected a credit of $47.86, composed of two $20 credits for the two failures of technicians to arrive within the promised windows and then another $7.86 for the pro-rated outage. The billing department representative said there was no explanation for the $36 in the notes. (How many times have I heard this?)<br /><br />I asked if she could correct the credit but the billing representative could not get her head around the issue. "<i>The tech didn't come to your house because he called but no one answered, so no one was home, so it's your fault no one showed.</i>" It didn't matter to her that my phone service didn't work so there was no way that technician could've called me. Nor did it matter that I had made sure the original service request included that my phone service didn't work and I had specifically instructed the tech not to call before coming. "<i>There is no explanation in the notes of that, sir.</i>"<br /><br />After a half hour on the phone, she gave up trying to understand and just gave me another $40 credit. I asked her if she could remove the $36 credit (now an over-credit) and lower it to $7.86 but she said, sorry no, "<i>I cannot remove the credit.</i>"<br /><br />I also discovered that Comcast put me on a different plan. The new plan <i>lowered</i> my monthly internet fee from $57.95 to $33.00 for 12 months. But I found this out only when I saw my statement, whereupon I immediately called Comcast to find out the details of the plan that had a 57% cut in price. Would there be a corresponding cut in speed? At first, the Comcast rep insisted my bill was wrong and there was no such plan was available. However, after some research, he came back on the phone and sheepishly admitted that, yes indeed, my plan existed and what's more, it had a higher speed than I was getting before at $57.95.<br /><br />So was I overpaying before, I asked. Without directly answering my question, he explained that the $33 plan is usually only provided by the marketing department or the retention department.<br /><br /><b>Retention</b><br /><br />I've been through this before. The retention department, like other parts of Comcast, appears to be unreliable. They get involved when you call to cancel your service. Sometimes Comcast will ask why you're cancelling. Sometimes they won't. If they do ask, presumably the answer is that you're switching to Verizon for faster, cheaper, and more reliable service.<br /><br />But, cheapskate that I am, I have stuck with Comcast due to their willingness to compete with Verizon purely on the basis of the price. I would really appreciate competition on speed and reliability too but I guess that's too much to ask for. And, clearly in my case, reliability - or lack thereof - doesn't seem to be a showstopper. I must enjoy being mistreated or having an unreliable connection. Why else would I stay? Laziness? Masochism?<br /><br />In contrast, my neighbors have switched to Verizon. My community surveyed everyone last year and again this year - everyone who responded asserted they had switched. If there are any Comcast subscribers left in the neighborhood besides me, I'm not aware of them.<br /><br />One neighbor did complain about problems with Verizon's billing, a problem I have seen with regularity at <a href="http://www.broadbandreports.com">broadbandreports.com</a>. But Comcast's billing department has a history of problems too and, if my experience is any indicator, it appears as if nothing has changed.<br /><br />One more thing that hasn't changed: The telephone pole in front of my house still has that <a href="http://libes.com/don/blog/2008/08/comcast-film-fest.html">malignant splitter</a> in my connection, more than a month after Comcast promised it would be removed.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-76573753403140447392008-08-17T12:10:00.006-04:002008-08-18T12:36:18.989-04:00Comcast Film FestThe <a href="http://www.filmfestnih.org/">Comcast Film Fest</a> started this weekend and runs through August 24, 2008. I am not going this year although I have in the past. It's quite enjoyable as long as too many people don't show up. Otherwise it can be a mob scene. (Avoid Friday and Saturday!)<br /><br />I also wouldn't recommend going to a movie at the Fest unless you've seen that particular movie before. The sound is just a bit too iffy. But the atmosphere is nice. Seeing a movie under the stars with family and friends is quite pleasant.<br /><br />The festival is also a benefit for the NIH - a worthy cause. But why should Comcast donate a portion of their customer's payments to charity? Wouldn't it make more sense to just lower the rates - and let their customers decide for themselves, to whom and how much to donate? By Comcast making the decision to donate, customers not only lose the decision-making power but customers lose the credit as well. That's just wrong.<br /><br />Personally, I want to donate a portion of my income; but here Comcast is using my hard-earned money to send two messages: 1) they don't need the money and 2) they care. I don't believe either is true. Don't get me wrong - I believe the employees themselves care; but the company? It's a business answerable to shareholders. And like the customers, the shareholders themselves are perfectly capable of donating themselves.<br /><br />As for whether Comcast needs the money they are donating, that's a more difficult question. But the impression I get is that they <i>might</i> benefit by spending more money in hopes of improving their service. After all, Comcast <a href="http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/94840">continues to have one of the worst reputations</a> in the industry.<br /><br />As if to drive the point home, my service went out recently. It began on a Thursday. The Comcast representative asked if I could be home on Sunday from 2-5pm. "<i>Yes, but I'm pretty sure I need an outdoor technician, not an indoor tech. Can you please send someone who can climb the pole?</i>"<br /><br />"<i>No, we need to send an indoor tech first. If he determines an outdoor tech is needed, we'll schedule one at that time.</i>" I explained in detail why I felt it was likely outside but the rep insisted I be scheduled for an indoor tech and that I had to be home.<br /><br />Sunday 2-5pm - You can probably already guess - the technician didn't show.<br /><br />At 5:05pm, I called Comcast. The message I heard was (paraphrase) "<i>We're sorry but the office is closed. Please call back during business hours.</i>" Turns out their business hours end at 5! Grrr.<br /><br />At that point, I called Comcast's national support number. (It's not advertised for local use but I use it as a backup for situations like this.) The rep who answered put me on hold while he checked why no one showed. Finally, I heard: "<i>Dispatch cannot get a hold of him. He's probably running late; just wait another hour.</i>" I waited two more hours and then called again. "<i>He was there - twice - and found no one home.</i>" The tech obviously never visited my house - I had my car in the driveway and garage doors wide open the entire time. The Comcast representative on the phone with me said "<i>I don't believe him either.</i>"<br /><br />So he rescheduled me for two days later. He also recommended I call Monday and said that Comcast holds back a few appointments for emergencies or gets same-day appointments as people cancel. I called on Monday - no appointments.<br /><br />I asked if I could pick up a replacement modem just to confirm that it wasn't a modem issue. So on my way home from work, I stopped by the local office and swapped modems. I asked if the new modem has been tested. "<i>Yes.</i>" Do I have to call you once I plug it in? "<i>Sir, it will work. Just take it home and plug it in.</i>"<br /><br />Plugged in directly to where the line entered my house, the new modem didn't work, confirming to myself that it was an outside problem.<br /><br />On Tuesday, I waited during my 11-2pm time slot. At 1pm, I decided I'd better make sure the tech was coming and so I called Comcast. "<i>We can't reach the technician but I'm sure he'll show.</i>" I explained that he didn't show the last time so I'd like some confirmation. I didn't get it.<br /><br />Tuesday 2:00pm - At the end of the time slot, I called Comcast. "<i>We cannot reach the technician - just give him another hour and a half.</i>" Huh? The rep gave me her extension so I could call her back directly if necessary and then assured me she'll be on duty until 6pm.<br /><br />Tuesday 3:30pm - The tech still hadn't shown but I saw the modem go online. No connectivity however. I called up and asked 1) where the tech was and 2) if the modem was in the <a href="http://www.broadbandreports.com/faq/13104"><i>walled garden</i></a>. It took her 10 minutes to confirm the walled garden. In other words, Comcast gave me a modem that their own service didn't recognize. Back from listening to Comcast's once-jazzy but now-disturbing hold music yet again, I heard her say "<i>Let me put you on hold again while I fix it.</i>" After 20 minutes, I gave up waiting and hung up.<br /><br />Tuesday 5:00pm - The modem still wasn't working. The technician still hadn't shown. Three hours had passed since the time slot ended. Using the number given to me by the previous rep, I called her back. Got her voice mail.<br /><br />At this point, I called the regular local support line and spoke to yet another rep. He assured me he'd look into the problem and call me back. While we were speaking I suddenly saw connectivity. I must have been out of my mind at this point because I suggested canceling the appointment for the tech. I should have realized there was still a problem but I suppose I was thinking out loud why I should continue waiting for a tech who would never show. The rep cancelled the appointment.<br /><br />Tuesday 6:43pm - The modem went offline. So I called Comcast again. While on the phone, the technician arrived. I told him I was amazed he showed up given that the appointment was cancelled. He said no one told him it was cancelled. (There's clearly a serious communication problem between techs in the field and their dispatcher.)<br /><br />Turns out that he was a contractor so it was critically important that he not be told. According to him, he wouldn't get paid if he was informed the appointment was cancelled.<br /><br />I asked him why he was so late - almost 5 hours past the window! He said that Comcast overschedules him - all the time. I could see why. He spent about an hour checking the connections and signal levels inside and outside the house. Finally, he narrowed it down to an outside problem. Someone had added a splitter 5' up the pole. Not only was that the problem but it was amateurishly done. He said he'd phone it in and someone would come out within 24 hours and give me a direct connection. He put on new connectors and, using electrical tape, rewrapped the splitter little better than the way he found it and left.<br /><br /><a href="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3100/2743485446_8ca6e15d14_b.jpg"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3100/2743485446_8ca6e15d14.jpg"></img></a><br /><br />It's now been three weeks since my 6-day outage and the splitter is still hanging on the pole just the way he left it. I figure it won't be long before my connection goes out again. But if it does, I guess I can go watch movies for <a href="http://www.libes.com/don/blog/2006/12/avoid-free-email.html"><i>free</i></a> at the Comcast Film Fest.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-29414314151047063352008-08-07T16:16:00.002-04:002008-08-07T16:28:54.517-04:00Rockville Gets FIOS TVThe City of Rockville has agreed to adopt the <a href="http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/content/cableOffice/pdf/20061128verizonfranchise.pdf">Verizon cable franchise held by Montgomery County</a>. This means that Rockville inhabitants will be able to get TV service as well as internet and phone service. Briana Gowing, Verizon VP of External Affairs said that Verizon hopes "<i>to begin construction in mid to late September, possibly selling FiOS bundles in limited areas before the end of the year.</i>" Verizon's <a href="http://newscenter.verizon.com/press-releases/verizon/2008/rockville-md-consumers-to.html">full press release</a> covers more detail about the new service.<br /><br />I imagine that Verizon will push service into Rockville very quickly. Verizon says that roughly 23,000 households will be eligible. The downside is that residents in other parts of MC may have to wait even longer to get FIOS. Here is Verizon's <a href="http://www22.verizon.com/about/community/md/files/MDFTTPAug08.pdf">list of roads where they're working during August 2008</a>.<br /><br />Rockville residents will soon enjoy the same thing that I enjoy - namely, advertisements many times a month for Verizon service bundles. As a reminder, service bundles (TV, internet, and phone) sound attractive. However, I feel obliged to remind you that bundles have their downsides. Here's a discussion from <a href="http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/75357">dslreports</a> as well as an earlier analysis that I made specifically about <a href="http://libes.com/don/blog/2006/06/best-deal-for-comcast-customers.html">Comcast's bundles</a>.<br /><br />To be fair, there are people for whom bundles make sense. I just don't think any of them would be reading my blog.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-89886251910327731652008-06-08T22:34:00.007-04:002008-08-07T16:36:29.330-04:00Rockville Goes FiOSIt appears that the Rockville Council will put an agreement to bed with Verizon, allowing FiOS service to provided to residents of the City of Rockville. The Council is set to approve the agreement this Monday, June 9, 2008. If you're interested in attending, the meeting is at 7pm, although the Verizon items are slated for 8:35pm.<br /><br />Reading between the lines of the <a href="http://rockmail.rockvillemd.gov:80/clerk/egenda.nsf/13fdf34ed8cca16a852571cc0057967a/bb89f4ab5f319afa8525745f0065cc63?OpenDocument">documentation that Rockville has made available</a>, it appears that Rockville backed down on their demands for Verizon to pay Rockville's standard utility permit fees. It looks like Rockville has saved face by outsourcing much of their work, thereby cutting down on their own bills. At the same time, Verizon got a much better deal that it originally faced; however, it is taking a certain gamble that Rockville's new contractors are more efficient and won't leave Verizon with problems. We'll know in a year or so if this made sense.<br /><br />The documentation is quite vague about when service can be expected. Rockville residents <i>might</i> see service as early as this year. And some will receive service no earlier than next year. King Farm is specifically mentioned because it is served out of Verizon's Gaithersburg central office and Verizon does not even expect approval from Gaithersburg before next year.Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10908626.post-11409897869914625352007-11-01T22:23:00.000-04:002007-11-02T17:18:00.669-04:00The Candidates Speak<a href="http://libes.com/don/blog/2007/10/rockville-debate.html">Previously, I mentioned</a> that I would ask each candidate for Mayor or Council of Rockville to provide a statement responding to the question:<blockquote><i>Please address why the city has been unable to come to terms with Verizon for FIOS internet and TV service and how your approach would differ.</i></blockquote>I am pleased to provide their responses here. Feel free to comment on them. (No mudslinging please!) I also encourage you to visit their websites so you can learn more about them. You may also want to contact the candidates individually for more information. I have provided the websites and email for each candidate below.<br /><br />I present them in the order that I received them, grouped by mayor and council. Do not stop reading after the first few! They're all worth studying closely.<br /><br />Some of the statements are a bit casual while others are more formal but in the end I felt that nicely reflected more of each candidate. But for that reason, I feel obliged to show exactly what I sent to each candidate originally.<blockquote>I write a blog (<a href="http://www.libes.com/don/blog">The Libes Libation</a>) that covers cable and telecommunication issues in Montgomery County and is read by many Rockville voters. I would appreciate if you could provide me with a statement explaining why the city has been unable to come to terms with Verizon for FIOS internet and TV service and whether you believe Rockville's position is correct or how your approach would differ.<br /><br />I will post your statement on my website along with those of all the other candidates. Please be as detailed as possible. Simply saying "<i>I intend to bring everyone to the table so that we can engage in open and productive negotations</i>" is not compelling. Indeed, there is no easy answer but you should at least be able to explain how you come down on the issues mentioned in this recent statement by the Mayor:<blockquote><i>Hopefully, if Verizon were to work with us in good faith, we could bring these matters to a close very soon.<br /><br />There have been numerous instances across the country of damage done by phone companies (in some instance, Verizon) when laying their new fiber. We also think it would be appropriate for Verizon to pay fees to the city government commensurate with the city government's additional cost of inspecting their work to make sure everything is done properly.<br /><br />An additional concern that we continue to have, which you need to be aware of, is that Verizon refuses to agree to have all Rockville homes wired within even five years. Even if the city government were to bring these matters to a close with Verizon tomorrow, you could potentially end up waiting another five years or more for Verizon to bring their FIOS service to your street.<br /><br />We have asked Verizon to agree to have all Rockville homes wired within two to three years, but they have thus far refused to agree to this. We also wanted to make sure that they do not purposefully first wire more affluent neighborhoods, and leave the least affluent for last. Verizon has thus far refused to address this potential concern as well.<br /><br />Larry</i></blockquote>You may also find it useful to browse my blog. Here is the address:<br /><a href="http://www.libes.com/don/blog">http://www.libes.com/don/blog</a><br /><br />I would appreciate a response by November 1. Feel free to email or call if you have any questions.<br /><br />Thanks<br />Don Libes</blockquote><br /><hr><br />So that was the email that each candidate received. Here are their responses.<br /><br /><hr><b>Candidates for Rockville City Mayor</b> <br /><hr><br /><b>Mark Pierzchala</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Mayor<br />Email: <a href="mailto:votepierzchala@cs.com">votepierzchala@cs.com</a><br />Web: <a href="http://www.votepierzchala.org">www.votepierzchala.org</a><br /><blockquote>Don,<br /><br />Here is my answer taken directly from my website.<br /><br />The FiOS technology is superb and would offer numerous benefits to residents for phone, television, and Internet access. However, Verizon has a mixed record of installation elsewhere in Montgomery County including cutting cables and damaging property. In addition, Verizon will not commit to a 2-year schedule for installation everywhere in Rockville (as requested by Mayor and Council), including for example, communities such as King Farm not getting the service for several years. Finally, it appears that Verizon wants a substantial discount on Right Of Way fees published by Rockville in 2003.<br /><br />I think Mayor and Council are correct to insist on standards for correct installation and to insist on payment of reasonable fees. The City will have numerous costs associated with the installation of the fiber cable including inspection and putting the grid on its GIS system (for maps). These City costs should be covered, otherwise it is a subsidy to a private company. I would not insist on the 2-year installation timeframe; there can be some accommodation here. Mayor and Council recently said that they're waiting for Verizon to come back to Rockville to start talking again. If elected Mayor, I would initiate the discussions and try to come to a reasonable deal.</blockquote><br /><hr><br /><b>Drew Powell</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Mayor<br />Email: <a href="mailto: drew@votepowell.org"> drew@votepowell.org</a><br />Web: <a href="http://www.votepowell.org/">www.votepowell.org</a><br /><blockquote>Dear Don, <br /><br />Thank you for contacting me on this important issue. <br /><br />As the only mayoral candidate in the telecommunications field, I feel strongly about this issue. It is imperative that Rockville move forward on this initiative with a great sense of urgency. <br /><br />In the very near future millions homes and businesses throughout the country and the globe will be directly connected to the world’s telecommunications infrastructure (Internet, phone, television, etc.) via high speed fiber optics. Rockville must be a participant in this global telecommunications Renaissance for the following reasons:<br /> <br />Rockville is truly an international city as it is a part of the Greater Metropolitan Washington, D.C. area. More than one third of all Rockville residents were born outside the U.S. and many more have international ties. How can Rockville expect to compete on the world market without the infrastructure necessary to do the job? How can we truly be a “world class” city attempting to “make do” with past centuries’ copper connectivity? <br /><br />Additionally, as gridlock increases on our roads, telecommuting becomes evermore important as a major component in ameliorating our traffic nightmares. The possibility that many office workers, consultants and entrepreneurs can stay off the roads in home offices is essential if we’re to get a handle on traffic and our environment. Keeping people connected and out of their cars can make a big dent in Rockville’s carbon footprint. With its extreme bandwidth capabilities, fiber optics is the one technology that will allow more telecommuting solutions than any copper-based scheme. Office workers would be able to virtually attend meetings anywhere in the world (real-time teleconferencing) and conduct business via network-based applications, while their families enjoy HD television, ultra-clear telephone conversations and high speed Internet. Eliminating commutes and keeping families together will greatly increase Rockville residents’ quality of life. <br /><br />Lastly, the U.S.A. was built on competition. Arbitrarily preventing competition has never been good for Wall Street, Main Street or your street. Artificially maintaining the status quo of the cable company’s monopoly for high speed access is not in Rockville’s collective and long term interests. Offering citizens high speed telecommunications options will inherently bring down prices and make even better technology solutions available in the future. <br /><br />It has been stated by my opponent that the current fiber optic provider (Verizon) has been unwilling to work with the City in the deployment of fiber optic solutions. I find this troubling in that most surrounding jurisdictions have had no such problems. As long as Verizon or any telecommunications provider can do its part in putting things back the way they were prior to the installation of fiber, we can move forward with little or no impact to Rockville’s commuters or taxpayers. <br /><br />There were many more obstacles in building Rockville’s new Town Center than there are in securing a win-win arrangement for the installation of citywide fiber optics. It takes only the will to get the job done. <br /><br />As Rockville’s Mayor, I will get the job done.<br /><br />Very sincerely, <br />Drew Powell <br /></blockquote><br /><hr><br /><b>Susan Hoffmann</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Mayor<br />Email: <a href="mailto: susan@susanhoffmann.com"> susan@susanhoffmann.com</a><br />Web: <a href="http://www.susanhoffmann.com/">www.susanhoffmann.com</a><br /><blockquote>Dear Mr. Libes,<br /><br />I am on record both in City Council meetings and during our candidate forums to be in strong support of competition for Comcast or any of the cable service providers that may come to Rockville. Regarding Verizon specifically, the City has made every attempt to work with Verizon to be a FIOS provider, as long as they agree to abide by the City's requirements as follows:<br /><br /> 1. to pay the same cost for the right to provide fiber in Rockville that others [Comcast] have paid<br /> 2. to sign our right-of-way agreement so that they will return any roads, sidewalks or private lawns to the condition in which they were found prior to beginning the installation of fiber or cable<br /> 3. that they will provide service in a fair and timely way to all of the residents of Rockville, including King Farm, Fallsgrove and our condominiums and apartments<br /><br />Verizon does not have the best record when it comes to their standards of work during and after cable installation. The work done in the County was often left uncovered at the end of the day, causing driving hazards and significant access difficulties for residents. Verizon has asked for a reduction of the per foot rate as compared to what Comcast paid. They have yet to provide a justification for this request. They won't have fiber to all of Rockville for at least five to seven years. And finally, they refuse to return to the table to continue the dialogue. This impasse has lasted for over a year.<br /><br />Two weeks ago, I saw the Verizon government relations representative at the Rockville Chamber of Commerce candidate forum. I asked her if I could count on her to meet with the City after the election. She agreed that she would. I am counting on her to keep her word and get the process moving again. I cannot over-emphasize how strongly I feel about the value of competition on the cost we are charged by Comcast for cable. I hope Verizon will be part of the solution.<br />Best, Susan Hoffmann<br /></blockquote><br /><hr><br /><hr><b>Candidates for Rockville City Council</b><br /><hr><br /><b>Brigitta Mullican</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Council<br />Mail: <a href="mailto:m4council@verizon.net">m4council@verizon.net</a><br />Web: <a href="http://www.mullican4council.com/">www.mullican4council.com</a><br /><blockquote>If elected to the Rockville City Council, I will want to get the complete details on why the deal with Verizon is not able to move forward. We should not keep Rockville residents as well as surrounding areas from benefiting from competition like Verizon.<br /><br /> If Rockville creates an unfair situation, it might be better for Montgomery County to negotiate for the entire Rockville area. I am concerned that the all the members of the Rockville Mayor and Council have not been provided the complete details on this request. As a Rockville council member, I will demand accurate information be provided to all council members. <br /><br />I am a strong proponent of competition and want to know why the same deal is not provided to Verizon that was given Comcast. I will listen to all sides of this issue and expect the entire Rockville City Council to have a vote in this decision, but not before all accurate information is provided.<br /><br />Thank you for asking for my view on the fiber-optic system being available to Rockville.<br /><br />Brigitta Mullican<br /></blockquote><br /><hr><br /><b>Phyllis Marcuccio</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Council<br />Mail: <a href="mailto:marcu@erols.com">marcu@erols.com</a><br />Web: <a href="http://www.phyllism.org/">www.phyllism.org</a><br /><blockquote>Dear Mr. Libes,<br /><br />Please see below the status of the City's issues with the Verizon wireless proposal. I asked our City Manager to give me the current disposition of our negotiating. You can see by the text that follows, we are trying to come to an agreement. I delayed responding to you until I had the facts. Thank you for your patience.<br /><br />Sincerely,<br />Phyllis Marcuccio<br /><br /><br />Phyllis,<br />Please see below in response to your call of earlier today. I sent this to Brad Roarke's blog.<br />Hope this helps.<br />-Scott<br /><br />Scott Ullery, City Manager<br />City of Rockville<br />111 Maryland Avenue<br />Rockville, MD 20850-2364<br />240-314-8102<br />FAX: 240-314-8130<br />----- Forwarded by Scott Ullery/RKV on 10/29/2007 01:18 PM -----<br /><br />Scott Ullery/RKV<br />10/29/2007 01:20 PM<br /><br />To: rockvillecentral-owner@googlegroups.com<br />Subject: Re: [Rockville Central] Fee, FIOS, Foe, Fum<br /> <br />The City of Rockville is eager for competitive cable and Internet services to be available to its residents. We continue to negotiate with Verizon on an agreement that would allow the company to install and keep its new fiber optic cables in City streets, sidewalks and other rights-of-way. Among other things, this agreement simply requires the company to obtain necessary and routine permits to undertake construction and conduct its business using City streets, sidewalks and other rights-of-way. The permit process is essential to ensuring the public's property and all community interests are protected. Without the City's oversight, construction projects in the City's rights of way would present a very high risk of seriously damaging City assets, other utility infrastructure, and even private property. <br /><br />The Mayor and Council have directed that the fees associated with these permits cover the city's costs, so that taxpayers are not, in effect, subsidizing a for-profit commercial enterprise. The normal fees that the City charges for work in the rights-of-way are based on a cost study done by an outside financial firm. For a project of the size proposed by Verizon, there is a great demand placed on City government services among them, permit application review, engineering review, traffic plan review, traffic control, review and oversight of plans for repair and restoration of streets, sidewalks, and any utilities that may be damaged; and inspection of the work as it progresses and upon completion. Verizon has declined to pay these fees and has requested substantial reductions in them. The City has offered a number of alternatives that, we believe, would meet both Verizon's and the City's needs. We are continuing to work with Verizon on these alternatives and hope to make progress soon on these negotiations.<br /><br />The City also wants Verizon to commit to a faster and more reasonable timetable for rolling out the FIOS service to all residents in the City. Based on Verizon's current schedule, it may take five years or more for service to be provided to King Farm, which is not acceptable. <br /><br />Scott Ullery, City Manager<br />City of Rockville<br />111 Maryland Avenue<br />Rockville, MD 20850-2364<br />240-314-8102<br />FAX: 240-314-8130<br /></blockquote><br /><hr><br /><b>Anne Robbins</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Council<br />Mail: <a href="mailto:anner41@hotmail.com">anner41@hotmail.com</a><br />Web: <a href="http://www.re-electannerobbins.com/">www.re-electannerobbins.com</a><br /><blockquote>Thanks for the opportunity to comment. First, this is a matter that <u>needs</u> to be discussed and hopefully brought to a satisfactory conclusion by negotiations involving <b>all members</b> of the <u>new</u> Mayor and Council. I believe it would be counter productive for me, or any of the incumbants, to give detailed positions on the current areas of disagreement between the City and Verizon. There have been real and substanial differences between the City and Verizon and, in my judgment, the past atmosphere for reaching accords has not been very positive for a number of reasons. I believe we should make a concerted effort, as a <b>new</b> Council, to move ahead, in a more positive context, and I feel that is possible. I have heard from a number of my constituents who are supportive of Verizon and I want to give this an opportunity to succeed. Having said that, I can also say that I am a firm believer in the value of open competition for government contracts and arrangements with businesses and corporations, and, I am concerned about fairness and cost impacts on all residents.<br /></blockquote><br /><hr><br /><b>Piotr (Peter) Gajewski</b> , Candidate for Rockville City Council<br />Mail: <a href="mailto:candidate@votegajewski.com">candidate@votegajewski.com</a><br />Web: <a href="http://www.votegajewski.com/">www.votegajewski.com</a><br /><blockquote>Don,<br /><br />Competition between service providers is the consumer’s strongest way of ensuring best service at the most competitive price. And so, I do believe that it behooves the City of Rockville to find a way for Verizon to compete with Comcast in Rockville.<br /><br />I am not privy to the details of the present impasse between Rockville and Verizon but based on what has been reported, I do agree that the City should insist on a firm time frame for Verizon to wire the whole city. What that time frame should be (3 years? 5 years?) remains for me an open question. With respect to what neighborhoods should be wired when, I do not see this as a major issue, as long as there is agreement that all neighborhoods will be wired, and as long as the timeframe to accomplish this is reasonable. <br /><br />Whether Verizon should pay the full cost of City inspectors is also an open question for me. It is in Verizon’s self interest to do the work in a satisfactory fashion. If it fails in this task (rips up other infrastructure, does not repair roads that it digs up, etc.) it could be subject to legal action. So, to what extent is shadowing Verizon, in order to inspect their work and then charge them for it, really necessary? Again, I am not privy to the details of the present impasse, so it is difficult for me to answer this, but I raise it as a concern.<br /><br />I would be interested in learning more whether Verizon has a general problem of negotiating deals or whether Rockville is unique (or nearly unique) in their experience. It is a fact that Verizon has managed to enter into agreements with other jurisdictions, so is it possible that Rockville is just a particularly difficult partner? I notice that in recent weeks Rockville came to another negotiating impasse, this time with an artists who was asked to create a piece of art for our new Town Center. Is this just a coincidence, or is it possible that Rockville sometimes takes so principled a stance in negotiations that practical considerations are overshadowed (i.e. we can’t see the forest through the trees)?<br /><br />If elected, I will want to explore the questions raised above as a road map for returning to the table with Verizon. While certainly no deal is better than a bad deal, in the long run, Rockville residents should not have to accept not having a full scope of services that Verizon can provide and is providing for many of our neighbors. By making Comcast compete with Verizon the services of both companies will be strengthened and Rockville residents will be the real winners.<br /><br />Peter<br /></blockquote><br /><hr><br /><b>John Britton</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Council<br />Mail: <a href="mailto: jbritton@schnader.com">jbritton@schnader.com</a><br />Web: <a href="http://www.vote4john.org/">www.vote4john.org</a><br /><blockquote>Don:<br /><br />First, I have to say that I DO intend to bring everyone to the table so that we can engage in open and productive negotiations! Having said that, I also submit two other oft-repeated and over-used generalities connected with this issue -- I do not like the monopolistic franchise regime (full disclosure here as I am a disgruntled customer of Comcast) and I would like to see FiOS available to me and everyone else in Rockville as soon as possible.<br /> <br /> The discussions, and reasons for delay, are threefold:<br /> <br /> 1. Infrastructure damage and replacement -- the installation of fiber optic cables necessarily involves the tearing up of City streets, sidewalks and other rights-of-way. The cost of replacement and any other damage as a result of installation should be borne by Verizon. Indeed, I don't think this is an issue as this is the standard operating procedure for any utility's work. I would add that the City and Verizon coordinate such infrastructure work with other utilities as much as possible, so that the same street is not torn up and rebuilt several times in a short time, causing a prolonged disruption in the community. I have seen too many times where one utility performs its work to be followed by another utility in the same right-of-way, where the jurisdiction seemingly could have limited the disruption through permit coordination. This level of coordination may have an impact on the roll-out plan if there is other extensive utility work concurrent with the installation of the fiber optic system.<br /> <br /> 2. Fees -- I appreciate the City's need to charge a fee that recovers its costs related to the permitting and oversight of the installation of the system. I favor, however, the position that the FiOS system is both a private, for-profit endeavor and a community benefit. After all, we want our City to be a leader, on the cutting edge, in telecommunications. It is good for our City and its residents. Although I need to do more homework on the extent and scope of the fees at issue, I would be more flexible on fees and balance the costs between Verizon and the City on the principle that there are necessary public costs for such a community service. Perhaps this is the essence of the City Manager's recent statement that the City has offered a number of alternatives that may satisfy both Verizon and the City, alternatives that I understand will be discussed in negotiations that will kick in again after the election.<br /> <br /> 3. Roll-out -- With one condition, I believe leaving it to Verizon and the market for scheduling the roll-out is appropriate. The irony in this instance is that by delaying the implementation to get a better deal on timing for certain customers, we've prolonged significantly the implementation time for all customers. The one condition is to employ all reasonable means to ensure that the rollout is effected equally in affluent and less affluent areas of the City. In the existing politically charged environment concerning equality of services for certain areas of the City, it is prudent to attempt a balanced rollout.<br /><br />John Britton<br /></blockquote><br /><hr><br /><b>Richard Gottfried</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Council<br />Mail: <a href="mailto:richgott@erols.com">richgott@erols.com</a><br />Web: <a href="http://www.gottfried4council.org/">www.gottfried4council.org</a><br /><blockquote>Dear Don,<br /> <br />Thank you for your interest in our opinions as candidates.<br /> <br />With regard to the FIOS issue in Rockville, following the explanations and counter-explanations as presented in the Mayor and Council sessions has been frustrating as complete information does not seem to be available.<br /> <br />Open competition for cable service is something that we need in Rockville, and as your next councilperson I would support engaging in dialogue with Verizon as to how we can bring Verizon service to Rockville. With our continuing focus on making Rockville a high tech, biotech nexus for Maryland businesses, it is imperative that we have the advanced infrastructure and competive service not only for entertainment purposes but to support information technology.<br /> <br />Some issues that will have to be resolved include access to condo and apartment buildings that are contractually obligated to Comcast and the issue of equal access throughout the City. It is troubling to me that alternate reports claim that Verizon FIOS has been installed in other areas of the County at a lesser cost. I don't know yet why that reported cost discrepancy exists.<br /> <br />I would like to bring all the interested parties to negotiation and find out what is the real situation with Verizon. So far, I have heard only one point of view expressed, that of the current Mayor and Council. I would like to hear from Verizon directly as to what is necessary to have a win-win for the citizens of Rockville.<br /><br />Sincerely,<br /> Richard A. Gottfried<br /> </blockquote><br /><hr><br /><b>Theo Anderson</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Council<br />Mail: <a href="mailto:theo@vote4anderson.com">theo@vote4anderson.com</a><br />Web: <a href="http://vote4anderson.com/">http://vote4anderson.com/</a><br /><blockquote>Don,<br /> <br />I thank you for taking the time to send in your question to me. I do apologize that I did not get back with you earlier, as after work and on the weekends my days and nights are consumed with putting out flyers, going door-to-door and meeting with the residents of Rockville and putting out signs and such. I'm running a grassroots campaign and simply don't have anyone else to do these things for me and don't have a contribution war chest to reach into to send out mailers and such. <br /> <br />While I won't portend to know all the details of the past Mayor and Council's dealing with FIOS, nor all the nuances surround the disagreements and both parties inability to reach an amicable decision that would have benefited the citizens of Rockville, such as myself, who is sick and tired of paying these inflated monthly bills to COMCAST, as a new council member I will definitely have a different strategy in dealing with FIOS. <br /> <br />I can clearly say, competition is good for the consumer and offers choice. Fiber will come to Rockville and WE will have options. I will work with my fellow Council members and the Mayor to bring ALL parties to the table and not let sidebar meetings and single opinions dominate such a serious and far reaching effect decision. I will call upon my mediation skills and coalition building talents to really vett out the issues so that we can get this process moving forward and so relief as soon as possible can be brought to the deserving citizens of Rockville. <br /> <br />I'm for open competition and choice and will be an honest broker for the citizens of Rockville. It's time for a change and I hope that the citizens will honor me with their confidence and trust that I will make that change for them and everyone that has a vested interest in this matter. Thank you for your great question. I encourage you and others who are interested in hearing more about me and my campaign platform issues to visit my web site at <a href="http://www.vote4anderson.com">www.vote4anderson.com</a>. I would be honored to have your vote on Nov 6, 2007.<br /> <br />Sincerely,<br />Theo Anderson<br /></blockquote><br /><hr><br /><b>Tracy Pakulniewicz-Chidiac</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Council<br />Mail: <a href="mailto:electtracy@gmail.com">electtracy@gmail.com</a><br />Web: <a href="http://www.tracyforcouncil.org/">http://www.tracyforcouncil.org/</a><br /><blockquote>Hi Don -<br /><br />I'm glad you reached out to me to get my opinion on this - it's very important.<br /><br />I have to say, I personally would love to have a choice in my cable provider and I think bringing Verizon into the City and giving residents choices would be invaluable. However, I would only support that if Verizon can provide assurances that they will not destroy our infrastructure and would compensate for damages and other costs having them install their infrastructure would put on the City. Taxpayers should not have to foot the bill for poor installation of FIOS.<br /><br />But ultimately, choices are important and I would hope to be able to bring them to Rockville.<br /><br />Thanks for your question.<br /><br />Best,<br />Tracy</blockquote><br /><hr><br /><b>Bob Dorsey</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Council<br />Mail: <a href="mailto:bob@votedorsey.com">bob@votedorsey.com</a><br />Web: <a href="bob dorsey rockville">bob dorsey rockville</a><br /><br />No statement received.<br /><hr><br /><b>Eric (Kuohwa) Wang</b>, Candidate for Rockville City Council<br />Mail: <a href="mailto:kuohwawang@yahoo.com">kuohwawang@yahoo.com</a><br />Web: None<br /><br />No statement received.<br /><hr>Don Libeshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12396665796257950441noreply@blogger.com7