Verizon and cable companies promise to reformat documents to avoid derailing deal

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Verizon and four cable companies are willing to reformat documents they submitted to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to prevent technical issues from derailing the agency's review of their $3.6 billion deal.

The Communications Workers of America, the largest union for telecommunications workers, asked the FCC last month to delay its review of the deal, saying Verizon and the cable companies had not made important details available to third parties. Other opponents of the deal, including consumer groups Public Knowledge and Free Press, as well as Sprint and the Rural Cellular Association, echoed the union's complaints. he groups said Verizon had not made some of its documents available in electronic form and would have charged them thousands of dollars for paper copies. Verizon and the cable companies revealed they had met with top FCC officials on April 27. In that meeting, the companies all offered to provide the documents in PDF form and to create an electronic index to sort through the materials. The companies insisted that they had already "complied with the technical and formatting specifications contained in the commission's instructions," but that they were willing "to take certain additional steps to facilitate third-party review of the materials."


Verizon and cable companies promise to reformat documents to avoid derailing deal