FairPoint's workers now paying the price

Apologies are in order for FairPoint Communications workers who, it was announced last week, are being forced to accept $30 million in contract concessions from the company.

The 3,000 employees are now in the unenviable position of paying the price for being right.

The sorry tale dates back to 2007, when the relatively tiny FairPoint Communications, based in Charlotte, N.C., offered to purchase the much larger Northern New England land-line market from Verizon.

The deal underwent lengthy and detailed scrutiny by federal and state regulators, who ultimately overcame their early objections and approved of the sale. As did this newspaper, which supported the transaction in this column.

Looking back through the Sun Journal library, there were plenty of signs things might go badly.

"Morgan Stanley concerned that potential Verizon buyer not fiscally fit," said one headline from 2007.  The investment bank predicted that FairPoint would suffer from cash-flow problems.

"N.H. advocate advises no deal," said another headline. New Hampshire's consumer advocate recommended that utility regulators reject the FairPoint sale, saying customer service would suffer.

"Groups assail FairPoint purchase," said another headline. Small business owners and politicians urged Vermont Gov. Jim Douglas to oppose the sale of Verizon's landlines because it could not afford to roll out the next generation of technology, fiber-optic service.

But no group had more at stake than the Verizon employees, and no group protested the sale as loudly. The union prepared an extensive analysis showing that the sale would be bad for customers and employees, and that FairPoint was in no position to make the deal work.

They picketed, protested, lobbied and testified but, in the end, they lost.

"We don't think FairPoint is big enough to run the company," said Jim McDonald, a 32-year Verizon employee from Norway. "I think they'll run this thing right into the ground."

He was right.

Since the takeover, the company has been plagued by billing errors, service problems, unresponsive customer service and allegations that pre-switchover computer tests were faked. 

The credit market crisis and the business recession have also hurt the company, but its wounds have mainly been self-inflicted.

In the end, the critics, led by the employees, were right — FairPoint was just too small, too highly leveraged and too inexperienced to take over the much larger Verizon properties.

FairPoint is now seeking concessions from two unions, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and the Communications Workers of America, because it needs to restructure its debt and reduce costs. The company went into bankruptcy protection in October and is working on a reorganization plan.

The new agreement calls for deferring 2010 wage increases until the final year of the contract, plus restructuring compensation packages.

Former CEO Gene Johnson, who waved off a 25-percent drop in his stock price the day after the sale, is long gone, as are consultants who engineered this sale and supplied the rosy predictions. Johnson once predicted that his critics would be proven wrong and that the "proof is in the pudding."

Well, the puccing only proved he was wrong and the employees were right.

Now, only the bankruptcy lawyers will come out ahead.

editorialboard@sunjournal.com

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Displaying comments, from newest to oldest

Glenn's picture
verified

key words, union workers, 

key words, union workers,  Verizon really wanted to abandon them, so it sounds to me that the union was too greedy, and did not care about money the company did not have, I remember people did not want fairpoint to hire non union workers that could have saved  money. But to support the union greed, this is what we got. Fairpoint is a good company, my phone and internet work all the time.  Dump the union and all will be well.

preaves's picture
staff

Hey! Thanks for the email,

Hey!

Thanks for the email, John. We're using a script that syncs our production database with our Web site, and sometimes it does funky things.

I do read the Get Satisfaction page, but I have to apologize, I don't always get to them as fast as I get to personal emails.

Thanks for your patience. It's been a long 9 weeks since these Web problems started.

--Pattie (preaves@sunjournal.com)

tron's picture

Hey Patti, I've just noticed

Hey Patti, I've just noticed your email has changed, is there something going on?  Did you get adopted?  Did you enter the witness protection program?  I smell something is afoot.

JohnBerry's picture

SunJournal, Please. I thought

SunJournal, Please.

I thought by now you would have the editorial up. We enjoy this do-it-yourself journalism but jumping in with your 2 cents would be nice.

tron's picture

your best bet is to email

your best bet is to email Patti at the sun journal, she usually answers and responds to comments made, fairly quickly.  Sad to say, I don't think they read the forum much unless someone complains, and now they've eliminated the suggest removal tab, your best option is to write to Patti directly.

pbarry@sunjournal.com

 

JohnBerry's picture

Thanks, I will since I am

Thanks, I will since I am curious about what they had to say.

Queenie's picture
verified

I can't read the article!

I can't read the article!

tron's picture

That was the intent of the

That was the intent of the original post, however, as is usually the case in these forums, the Fairpoint bashers come out in force to slam the company.  Is Fairpoint a great company, probably not, but it is trying and people tend to forget that Verizon really wanted to abandoned the northeast and probably would not have kept up the service to the best of its ability.

JohnBerry's picture

FairPoint is doing the same

FairPoint is doing the same thing. They are not making improvements due to their bankruptcy. Verizon could have sold the New England assets to Commonwealth Telephone Enterprises. At the time of the purchase many communications experts told our politicians and the regulators that Commonwealth was in a far better position to make a go of the sale. Commonwealth, however, did not want to over-pay for the New England assets. In retrospect they were correct, the assets were overpriced and could not provide adequate income to secure the kind of price Verizon wanted. Politicians and regulators engaged in wishful thinking and allowed the overleveraged and overpriced sale to proceed even though independent analysts called it folly. I am not a FairPoint hater. I am someone who looks at a situation realistically and does some basic research.

Now we are stuck with a company owned by its creditors. The creditors have already lost a couple billion and they have 92% ownership of a company that is selling for 3 cents a share. What do you think they will do for us? Not much, they can't afford it.

skippy's picture
verified

While I enjoy reading the

While I enjoy reading the comments, it would benice if you also published the article so we can read it.

 

ke6pij's picture

I, too, saw this coming

I, too, saw this coming before the ink was dry. To me, it had seemed like Fairpoint was biting off more than they were prepared to chew. They lacked the infrastructure that was necessary to support the network they inherited. This outcome was inevitable, yet those in charge allowed it to happen anyway.

 

JohnBerry's picture

Failure Forseeable        

Failure Forseeable

        Just who did not see this coming long before the deal with Verizon was finally completed? I am not a business genius but I knew that this company was getting in way over its head. I wrote to the regulators and to our political leaders. The almost unanimous response was that, in essence, far greater minds had examined this deal and it was sound.

This is a company that does not have the ability to accept payments online. You can call with a credit card number, which is a very expensive practice, or mail in the payment, also far more expensive than an internet based payment system, those are the choices. This is the 21st century. Mail and phone payments are 17th (at best) and early-20th century technologies. FairPoint understands neither the technologies of the 21st century nor the business practices of the 21st century.

So, while the President of FairPoint gets over $800,000 in compensation the employees of FairPoint get screwed. And, since employee satisfaction has a great effect on performance, we, the FairPoint ratepayers, get screwed also. Who could have seen this coming?

 

tron's picture

Perhaps you should try

Perhaps you should try again.  I ALWAYS pay my fairpoint bill on line, and I always have.

JohnBerry's picture

Tron, You are correct about

Tron, You are correct about being able to pay online. I had email communication with FairPoint and in the last email they sent me on the subject they said that they would contact me when the service was available. That email was from Larry Caruso, Senior Manager/Outbound Telemarketing and is dated almost one year ago, February 16, 2009. Silly me, I actually thought I would get contacted just like they promised.

fixit001's picture

Nice Article these are really

Nice Article these are really the best ones that the Sun Journal puts out DUH!!!

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