Telecommunications

Industry Briefs

Columbia Transmission Communications (CTC), a wholly-ownedsubsidiary of Columbia Energy Group, unveiled plans to beginbuilding the initial leg of its telecommunications network Monday.The initial leg of the overall route will extend 260 miles from NewYork City to Washington D.C. using Columbia Gas Transmission’sright-of-way. It will be capable of providing voice, data and videosignal access to 16 million people. The company is developing plansto extend this network to 2,500 route miles with direct access to35 million people throughout the eastern United States, includinglines to Cleveland, Cincinnati and New Orleans. CTC said usingColumbia’s right-of-way will allow for a competitive, low-costfiber network. Columbia still needs to get landowner approval forthe lines, a company spokesman said, because the right-of-way wasapproved for pipeline use, not telecommunication wire.

June 15, 1999

Gas Deregulation Schedule Set in MA

The Massachusetts Department of Telecommunications and Energy(DTE) sent an order (File # 98-32-B) last Wednesday to all 10 stategas utilities, requiring them to deregulate service to residentialcustomers by 2004. The order directed gas utilities to work withmarketers on planning for a competitive market during the five-yeartransition. After the first three years of the program, the DTEsaid it will review the situation to determine if additionalefforts are needed to help spur competition. Massachusettscommercial and industrial consumers have had gas customer choicesince 1993.

February 8, 1999
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