Two weeks before Comcast and TWC gave up the idea of marital bliss, Mike Florio, one of four commissioners and a president who make up the California Public Utility Commission leadership, proposed blocking the transfer of TWC franchises in the state to Comcast, arguing that the combined cable companies would “have a monopoly in approximately 78 percent of census blocks.”
After Comcast pulled the plug on the acquisition, an administrative law judge in California was asked to stay the comment period on Florio’s proposal. But the judge decided to continue allowing comments and for the CPUC to move forward with its review process. The full commission could vote on Florio’s proposal in the coming weeks.
What’s the point of rejecting a merger after the merging parties have already called it quits? Bloomberg reports that it appears to be a matter of establishing the extent of the CPUC’s authority over the state’s broadband providers.
After all, Time Warner Cable is the dominant cable/Internet provider for Los Angeles, and is still likely to be involved in some sort of major acquisition in the near future. Similarly, Comcast has a hold on the San Francisco Bay region, and that company has $45 billion that had been set aside to buy TWC. It would help the CPUC to have an understanding of what it can and can’t do to regulate the broadband market.
by Chris Morran via Consumerist
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