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Cable Service Reductions to Michigan Police and Fire Stations

"The new statute allows cable operators to ignore many of their existing contractual commitments to local communities, including ongoing obligations to provide cable service to police and fire stations."

The Michigan Chapter of the National Association of Telecommunications Officers and Advisors (MiNATOA) yesterday released a statement saying that Comcast Communications is now "severely restricting the complimentary cable service it now provides to police and fire stations in Michigan."

According to a recent letter from Comcast, said MiNATOA, "state legislators saw fit to fundamentally alter video service providers' complimentary service obligations across the state.

"Apparently," continued MiNATOA, "the cable giant was referencing a new, sweeping state law which essentially deregulated cable service in Michigan. The new statute allows cable operators to ignore many of their existing contractual commitments to local communities, including ongoing obligations to provide cable service to police and fire stations."

"Comcast really missed the mark on this one," said Larry Stoever, city manager for the city of Saline, Mich. "In a local government setting, cable service means more than video programming. For example, local governments can use cable as a distance learning tool so police and fire personnel can remain on call at their home station rather than travel to another location for training. It's also a good way to keep local police and fire stations informed about regional and state-wide emergencies."

MiNATOA said that Comcast will continue to provide service to one police station and one fire station in each community. But according to Carl Solden, supervisor for Waterford Township, Mich., "Even many small- to mid-size communities have more than one fire station. Can Comcast really decide that one police or fire station is more important than any other?"

Comcast did not reply to an e-mail query by press time.

Wayne E. Hanson served as a writer and editor with e.Republic from 1989 to 2013, having worked for several business units including Government Technology magazine, the Center for Digital Government, Governing, and Digital Communities. Hanson was a juror from 1999 to 2004 with the Stockholm Challenge and Global Junior Challenge competitions in information technology and education.