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Comcast Agrees to $2.6M in Refunds

By Linda Haugsted -- Multichannel News, 2/16/2006 11:15:00 AM

A rate challenge by about 100 cities and regional regulatory authorities across the country has led to Comcast Corp. agreeing to refund about $2.6 million to consumers.

Refunds averaging $2 per household will be made to about 1.3 million Comcast subscribers during the next two months. That represents approximately 2% of Comcast’s universe. The rest of the MSO’s regulators accepted its pricing representations on its federal filing.

A Comcast spokesman stressed that his company followed federal law and industry standards to set the rates the communities challenged. But the dispute was “costly and time-consuming,” so Comcast opted to end it, spokesman Tim Fitzpatrick said.

“This settlement resolves outstanding disagreements regarding the methodology used to calculate rates for equipment and related installation activities, and this agreement will reduce the likelihood of similar disputes in the future,” he added.

Communities in this challenge raised questions about Comcast’s national rate filings in 2004.

The local franchising authorities hired an accountant, Florida-based Ashpaugh & Sculco LLC, and Front Range Consulting Inc. of Colorado to analyze the filing Comcast made to the Federal Communications Commission. They concluded that Comcast had overcharged for some service calls and equipment costs.

Based on the report, client cities and regional cable authorities -- including the Metropolitan Area Communications Commission outside Portland, Ore. -- ordered rate rollbacks by Comcast.

Other participants in the challenge included Arlington and Montgomery counties in Virginia, regulators from the Denver metro area and small, individual towns such as Murfreesboro, Tenn.

The cities paid 10 cents per Comcast subscriber to fund the rate analysis.

Comcast responded to the rate-rollback orders by filing an appeal with the FCC in 2004. That was still pending, but it was withdrawn as part of the settlement.

In 2005, even more communities joined the 94 that challenged the 2004 rate hikes. Consumers whose cities joined the challenge in its second year will receive refunds of less than $1. Refunds in the cities that initially challenged the rate will average more than $3.

Dick Treich of Front Range said there are no plans at this time to analyze Comcast’s 2006 rate filing, which is due March 1.

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