From Newsgroup: comp.misc
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2026/05/att-sues-california-in-attempt-to-shut-off-old-phone-network/
AT&T sued California yesterday over the staterCOs refusal to let the
carrier stop providing phone service to all potential customers in its wireline network territory. AT&T is also asking the Federal
Communications Commission to declare that California cannot enforce
its rules and to let AT&T stop providing service to about 199,000
phone customers.
....
AT&T yesterday also submitted petitions asking the FCC to intervene
directly in California. One petition asks for permission to
discontinue copper-based service to 184,000 residential customers and another asks for permission to discontinue copper service to 15,000
business customers.
Some folks may have already seen this already, but if not, this is a
pretty big deal:
California has been ground zero for some years now in the fight between
AT&T and consumers who want to keep traditional POTS service. Yes, AT&T
et al have already been aggressively pursuing copper retirement
elsewhere, but thus far, the California Public Utilities Commission has prevented AT&T from abandoning thousands of customers without reliable
vice service (partly due to massive consumer uproar). Unlike other
states that have given in to AT&T and eliminated Carrier of Last Resort
rules (often as a result of bribery, as in Illinois), COLR is still on
the books in California.
Back in March, the FCC unfortunately made a very bad move by preempting
state rules where they conflicted with the FCC's deregulatory agenda,
bringing this all to a head. Now, AT&T has:
* Sued the CPUC for its previous refusal to grant AT&T's application to discontinue POTS in California.
* Petitioned the FCC to preempt California's COLR rules and allow it to proceed with disconnections and end ETC/Lifeline obligations anyways
* Applied to disconnect 199,000 POTS customers in California by June
2027 (automatically granted by the FCC under its new streamlined rules,
unless there is significant and immediate consumer opposition)
Sadly, I've heard from many consumers who were misled, bullied, or lied
to by companies like AT&T and Verizon into giving up their POTS landline
when they did not want to, or people who have related how they were
migrated by AT&T to so-called "advanced" replacements, and then could no longer reliably make or receive calls due to poor connectivity. People
have recently reached out and are terrified to death given their
inability to reliably reach 911 or anyone else by any other means.
Even if you have given up your landline or don't depend on one, please consider taking action to support those who depend on them. Particularly
in hilly, mountainous, rural, wildfire-prone, earthquake-prone, and
power outage-prone areas, people *will* die if this proceeds as
"business as usual". Now is the time to have solidarity with those who
need to have access to landline service for emergencies and reliable 911 access. And as the "analog divide" expands, so too does the digital
divide, as people with access only to DSL or dial-up have that taken
away from them too.
There are several actions people can take to help protect what access to landline infrastructure still remains. There is a bulletin outlining all
the imminent threats to POTS, both in California and nationwide, and how
to take action, here:
https://phreaknet.org/action
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