To: blankmind who wrote (574 ) 11/19/1997 9:21:00 PM From: Maverick Respond to of 1629
Merging WCOM 7 MCI NWs, part II WorldCom is hoping that its efforts in the local loop will soon make the company a household name. The company's strategy has been to buy carriers that already have spent the money to get fiber in the ground. That is the case, for instance, with Brooks Fiber Properties, Inc. in St. Louis, a company WorldCom re-cently announced plans to buy for more than $2 billion. When the MCI and other pending acquisitions are completed, WorldCom will have a total of 30,000 route fiber miles solely dedicated to local services. The combination of WorldCom, Brooks Fiber and MCI local phone facilities will cover nearly 90% of the local service areas in the U.S., said John Sidgmore, chief operating officer at WorldCom and CEO at UUNET. WorldCom's local loop strategy contrasts with that of MCI, which has learned the hard way that building out local networks can be expensive. In deploying its MCI Metro service, the company has incurred deep losses, including about $800 million in the past year. Among the users who were most bullish on the merger were those who have sampled MCI's recently introduced local service. Many users said they have been confined in the amount of local business they can throw MCI's way for various reasons, the most important of which is MCI's limited coverage. WorldCom's larger network of local exchange networks could provide users with just the right amount of competition needed to keep the regional Bell operating companies and GTE Corp. honest. For example, Allied Van Lines, Inc., last June switched two T-1s worth of outbound local trunks from Ameritech Corp. to MCI at its headquarters in Naperville, Ill. But all of the inbound calls still come over Ameritech trunks. The reason? ''At this time, they [MCI] still don't have the facilities to handle number portability,'' said Rich Parker, director of technology and telecommunications at Allied Van Lines. ''We're not going to change nearly a thousand phone numbers just to switch carriers.'' Other users said they have provided MCI with a list of their locations and have been disappointed with the number of places MCI said it can really provide local service. Charles Murray, telecommunications director of The Travelers Group, said that so