(Sept. 17, 2009) In the tiny hamlets dotting the hills behind the Lost Coast — places like Ettersburg, Whitethorn and Honeydew — phone service has been sketchy for years, but over the past two months, residents say, land line connections have broken down almost entirely. Complaints have ranged from clicks and buzzing on the line to constant busy signals, dropped calls and, in some cases, no service whatsoever. Many people say they can receive calls but cannot dial out.
Cell phones get virtually no reception in these densely forested mountains, where the closest neighbor is often a mile or more away. Without land lines these homes are essentially severed from the outside world. Dozens of these rural residents say Verizon, the only company that provides land line service in the area, has responded inadequately — irresponsibly, even.
“This is a disaster waiting to happen,” resident Mark Hilovsky told the Journal last week. “Someday, someone will need emergency services out here, and they won’t be able to get them.”
Everyone’s phones, it seems, have been affected a bit differently — so much so that Verizon can’t pinpoint the problem. Nor do they acknowledge there even is one, beyond some “service quality issues.” Aside from two brief outages — one on Aug. 28, caused by the heavy equipment of a county work crew; the other last week due to an equipment power failure — the company insists there has been no loss of dial tone or ability to contact 911 since the beginning of the year. Both outages, they say, were remedied in a matter of hours.
The two stories — Verizon’s and their rural customers’ — simply don’t match up.
Local residents say the problem is twofold: There’s the equipment, which is at least 40 years old and falling apart, and then there’s Verizon, whose customer service they describe as a virtual nightmare of automated phone mazes, corporate indifference and false promises. “Verizon immediately assumes [the problem] is your phone,” said Ettersburg resident Rod Silva, calling from a neighbor’s house. He’s slogged through the company’s labyrinthine automated customer service menu numerous times and explained the situation to a variety of real people, but nothing has changed, he said.
Claudia Thompson, another Ettersburg resident, said by e-mail that she’s filed one repair request after another, to no avail. In fact, her reports are often either deleted or listed as resolved on Verizon’s Web site, she said, yet she remains unable to place phone calls. According to several people, residents have received automated messages from Verizon telling them that service has been restored, then offering to sell them more services.
By August, residents were fed up. “We divided up chores in this ‘David versus Goliath’ battle with Verizon,” Thompson wrote. They filed formal complaints with the California Public Utilities Commission, left messages with County Supervisors Clif Clendenen and Jimmy Smith, as well as U.S. Congressman Mike Thompson, sent letters to the editors of local papers and were interviewed on KMUD. Some, including Silva, even tried calling Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg at his office in New York City. (His assistant eventually started blocking their calls, Silva said.)
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STAFF PICK / events / 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Blue Lake Casino. Get a tattoo from local and/or guest artists. www.bluelakecasino.com. 668-9770.
events / 6 p.m. Trinidad Town Hall, 409 Trinity St. Roaring ‘20s theme dinner and dance featuring blues master Earl Thomas. $60. 677-3631.
holiday events, art / 6-8 p.m. Morris Graves Museum of Art, 636 F St., Eureka. Bid on original art for your sweetheart while enjoying wine, hors d'oeuvres and live music. Proceeds benefit Humboldt Arts Council programs. $20/$15 HAC Members. www.humboldtarts.org. 442-0278.
events, music, dance / 8-11 p.m. Arcata Community Center, 321 Community Parkway. Arcata Volunteer Fire Department sponsored dance includes music by Dr. Squid no-host bar, late evening buffet, raffle and silent auction. $10. ArcataFire.org. 825-1562.
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