Shocker: More Than Half The Money Paid Into High Cost Universal Service Fund Not Going To Provide Universal Service

from the how-do-you-spell-boondoggle? dept

For years, we’ve pointed out that the “Universal Service Fund,” is a huge boondoggle. Basically, we all pay a tax on our phone bills that’s supposed to go towards this “universal service fund,” which telcos are supposed to use to provide phone service to rural areas. But, as we’ve been pointing out for over a decade there’s little evidence that’s what happens. There’s almost no oversight of the program, and there are many stories of waste and abuse. The latest, in a long line, is that 59 cents of every dollar that goes to the big telcos from this USF… does not go towards universal service. Instead, the telcos just take that money and do other stuff with it. So, basically, this is a way for the telcos to hide much higher rates through a bogus government “tax,” that isn’t used for its expressed purpose. That seems like a class action lawsuit waiting to happen.

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Comments on “Shocker: More Than Half The Money Paid Into High Cost Universal Service Fund Not Going To Provide Universal Service”

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20 Comments
Christopher (profile) says:

Rural Areas?

Might be an attempt at humor, but this is actually VERY true. The USF does NOT dictate that it has to be for X thing and by giving the private internet companies this money, allows them to defund their part of projects to an extent and put that money into lobbying people in Congress.

Simply put: DON’T GIVE THE MONEY TO PRIVATE COMPANIES! It’s time for the government to do the building up of the internet backbones ourselves and then lease out access to these companies.

TQ1 says:

Gov't Control?

So, we should let the Government build a better internet backbone? Sure they created it, but like everything else, it was Private Ingenuity that built it up to what it is today. Look at the USPS. Is the Government running that service efficiently? No, get the government out of our communications and let the private sector build a better mousetrap.

The eejit (profile) says:

Gov't Control?

Holy fuck, are you a moron? The USPS has never let me down, whereas FedEx and UPS have. The private banks nearly bankrupted the world. Patents are moving towards the point of actively harming the US economy. And the stupid are being allowed to govern.

I think there are more serious problems than this, but this should be outright illegal.

pixelpusher220 (profile) says:

Gov't Control?

“Look at the USPS. Is the Government running that service efficiently?”
.
Uh, the USPS has a whole world of responsibilities that private companies do not. Coupled with the fact that their prime service (mail delivery) is being usurped by another entity (the internet), it’s quite hard to run a service with a mandated price structure.
.
If the USPS were run like a business, it would charge you based on where you are sending something, AND it wouldn’t send things to quite a few places at all simply because it wasn’t economical.
.
Either you have universal service or you don’t. The private sector does not provide universal service unless forced; i.e. cable franchises.

Desco (profile) says:

Rural Areas?

“Simply put: DON’T GIVE THE MONEY TO PRIVATE COMPANIES! It’s time for the government to do the building up of the internet backbones ourselves and then lease out access to these companies.”

Yes, because the government never funnels money meant for something good into the general funds and blows it on other crap. Social Security… Medicare… Pensions….

Anonymous Coward says:

Gov't Control?

I think much of the reason is simply that the USPS has a monopoly on mailbox delivery. This gives them economies of scale that the private sector can not benefit from due to the legal inability to deliver mail into your mailbox.

It’s much easier for the USPS to deliver mail to you when they are delivering it to your neighbors as well. It’s hard for them to deliver it to your neighbors if your neighbors aren’t home or if they have to knock on a door every time they need to deliver mail, in opposed to simply dropping it in your mailbox.

One would have to compare U.S. mail delivery systems to mail delivery systems in other countries. From what I hear, even in China the mail delivery system is much better.

Anonymous Coward says:

Gov't Control?

(In other words, the USPS gets paid for mail delivered to you and your neighbor, so they can better afford to get mail to you. Since the private sector can not deliver mail into your mailbox this causes them to lose many customers and the result is that they have to go out of their way to deliver mail to many of their customers without being allowed to benefit from the economies of scale and the money they can make by delivering mail to the neighbors of those customers. To compensate they must charge everyone more since the high fixed costs of going to a customers neighborhood can not be much more easily covered by delivering mail to those customers neighbors as well).

Anonymous Coward says:

Gov't Control?

“can not be much more easily covered by delivering mail to more of those customers neighbors as well”

It’s also worth noting that, from what I read, all of the mail delivery innovations (ie: electronic tracking) were developed by the private sector and copied by the USPS (so much for patents protecting those who actually innovate). The USPS hasn’t innovated at all, they have no incentive to, the government gives them such a huge government imposed advantage that they don’t feel the need to innovate.

Those who compete on a level playing field always have incentive to innovate and advance themselves because if they don’t they know that their competitors will eat them alive. Those who benefit from a govt imposed competitive advantage hardly ever innovate, why should they?

Anonymous of Course says:

Telco crooks

After becoming annoyed at the third world reliability of my land line I dropped the long distance calling service. When I found a LD connection fee was still included in my monthly bill I called and asked why I was being charged this fee.
I was told it was required by the FCC, by a telco call center supervisor. The fee was intended to help mom and pop telco’s who had to connect to big telco lines. The only thing the FCC stipulated is the fee limit of $6.50. Of course the fee was $6.50.
A small thing but when added to the billions of tax payer dollars pocketed by these thieves that were provided for broadband service expansion it’s very annoying.

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