Fayetteville, AT&T Reach TV deal

Last updated Tuesday, February 20, 2007 10:03 PM CST in News

By Dug Begley
The Morning News

    FAYETTEVILLE -- Letting your fingers do the walking in Fayetteville will soon include your remote.

    Tuesday evening, the Fayetteville City Council approved a contract with AT&T to provide Internet-based television service in the city.

    City Attorney Kit Williams said the agreement is similar to one the city has with Cox Communications. Williams also noted the contract guarantees AT&T will carry local educational, government and public access channels at its basic level of service.

    He said the contract is similar to agreements AT&T has with other cities in Arkansas, such as Little Rock and Maumelle. Fort Smith also contracted with AT&T on Tuesday evening, Williams added.

    Cathy Foraker with AT&T said the company will fund all necessary upgrades to deliver local channels via the Internet-based television service. She added competition in the area will benefit consumers.

    "The rates for both providers tend to go down, as much as 25 percent," Foraker said.

    The service, called Uverse, will transmit television channels to subscribers over the same lines delivering phone service to homes. Foraker said last month Fayetteville should have the service later this year.

    Concerned citizens told the council that gives the city plenty of time to mull over the contract. Jim Bemis, a supporter of the local public access channel, said he worried the proposed contract was too vague.

    "We have no firm assurance of really anything that they are offering," Bemis said.

    Colleen Pancake, president of the Community Access Television board, said maintenance on the new equipment needed to work with AT&T should be covered.

    "Our main concern at access is we're not killed somehow by some loophole," she said.

    At a Glance

    Fayetteville City Council

    On Tuesday evening, the council:

    * Approved removing access to Custer Lane from the design of Pebble Creek Flats, a mixed use development planned for the corner of 18th Street and Custer Lane.

    * Amended the 2007 budget to account for nearly $164 million in scheduled capital improvements. Most are part of the bond package voters passed for sewer, road and trail improvements last year.

    Source: Staff Report

    Reader Comments (9 comment(s))


    The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsibility of their authors. The Morning News does not review comments before their publication, nor do we guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by our comment policy. If you see a comment that violates our policy, please notify the web editor.

    No more Cox wrote on Feb 20, 2007 10:49 PM:

    " I can hardly wait. Is it just my neighborhood or has reception from Cox cable gotten absolutely unbearable in the last few weeks? "

    cox customer wrote on Feb 21, 2007 6:56 AM:

    " it is real bad here "

    Bad wrote on Feb 21, 2007 7:20 AM:

    " Bad here to !!! "

    Yeah Man!! wrote on Feb 21, 2007 7:36 AM:

    " I hope this can be extended to all of washington county. Let this come to Springdale as well...what a package that could be....telephone, cable, cell phone, internet all in one bill....and at a lower cost...with all 4 combined will probably be cheaper than Cox. Way to go Fayetteville! "

    Question wrote on Feb 21, 2007 10:52 AM:

    " Is this AT&T service for Fibre To The Home (FTTH), where a strand of fibre will give the user telephone, video and internet? If so, things are going to get EXTREMELY exciting. "

    Competition Rules wrote on Feb 21, 2007 1:27 PM:

    " The IPTV technology will carry phone, video and broadband. Springdale has already signed a contract. Thank god for competition. Cox has ignored customers for too long. Choice is a good thing for us. "

    Don't Get Your Hopes Up wrote on Feb 21, 2007 4:55 PM:

    " AT&T is not installing fiber to the home. U-Verse uses the same copper, twisted pair wires that landline telephones use. And according to a Feb. 7 article in the Wall Street Journal, U-Verse technology doesn't even work. I also wouldn't expect to see any great price advantages. If Fayetteville is like other cities where AT&T is selling video services, it will only build in a few neighborhoods and ignore everyone else. What a scam. "

    dave wrote on Feb 22, 2007 8:10 AM:

    " last comment was obviously from a cox cableco employee. The at&t service is Fiber To the Curb. And it works. "

    Serious Shopper wrote on Feb 22, 2007 3:19 PM:

    " I am excited only if this means that Cox will no longer be able to gouge it's customers, and provide poor reception/service. Trying to watch your favorite show in between bouts of serious pixelation is less than fun! "


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