Government Technology
Digital Communities: city, county and regional technology news

The Wireless Association Urges Senators Not to Act on Out-of-Date Stats

CEO Steve Largent

Sep 7, 2007, News Report

Found in: Wireless / Mobile / Broadband

The Wireless Association president and CEO Steve Largent issued the following statement yesterday in response to an announcement by Senators Klobuchar (D-MN) and Rockefeller (D-WV) that they will introduce legislation to regulate the competitive wireless industry:

"It is disappointing and unfortunate that Senators Klobuchar and Rockefeller intend to introduce legislation based on incomplete and misleading data. The truth is that complaints about wireless service to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) are infrequent and declining.

"The most recently published FCC data, which was absent from the Senators' announcement, clearly shows that contract-related complaints, as well as overall wireless complaints, are falling.

"Between 2003 and 2006, the number of contract-related complaints dropped from 15 for every one million subscribers, to just nine for every one million subscribers. In that same period of time, the number of total complaints decreased by 19%. All of that occurred while 75 million new subscribers were choosing wireless service, an increase of nearly 50%. This is hardly evidence of an industry in need of regulation and, in fact, suggests just the opposite. More Americans are choosing wireless communication than ever before and are increasingly more satisfied with their service.

"Additionally, the Better Business Bureau (BBB) data that was cited in the Senators' announcement was presented out of context. In their survey, 'Cellular Telephone Service and Supplies' is the single complaint category the BBB provides for the wireless industry. As such, all wireless related complaints (hardware, contracts, customer service, etc.) are lumped into one category. Other industries, such as automotive, are separated into multiple categories. If the more than 50 different auto-related categories were grouped into one category, the number of automobile complaints would be more than twice that of wireless and the complaint settlement rate would be far less than the wireless industry's 92%.

"Wireless consumers in America enjoy the most affordable service in the free world, enabling Americans of all walks of life to enjoy and take advantage of innovative, competitive mobile services. The Klobuchar-Rockefeller bill is unnecessary and, if enacted, threatens to increase the cost of wireless service and reduce the number of choices available to American consumers."

CTIA is the international association for the wireless telecommunications industry, representing carriers, manufacturers and wireless Internet providers.


Latest News in Wireless / Mobile / Broadband


Latest Government Technology News


Industry Solutions for Government

Read real world deployments of technology in government from our sponsors.

View All Industry Solutions
Exclusive white papers, best practices
and presentations. Registration required.

Highlights

  • Digital Cities Winners Showcase I-Seminar

    The original event was broadcast on: Wednesday, March 26, 2008 - Duration: 60-minutes

  • Special Report: A Foundation for the Future of Local Government
    In fiscal 2008, governors' budget proposals show a lower expected growth rate of just 4.2 percent, with expenditures expected to total $642 billion. Pressures will likely increase in health care, criminal justice, employee benefits and pensions, and physical infrastructure -- in part to make up for the lingering effects of cuts made in previous years. Even so, demand for digital infrastructure is increasing.
  • Why Mobile Device Management is Critical to IT
    Learn more about how IT organizations can manage mobile devices as corporate assets, and safeguard the corporate data that is accessed on them.