Fort Collins and Loveland residents tired of paying
But those who rarely place calls outside the city could be stuck with part of the bill.
A group of government and business leaders, including the city of Fort Collins and the Fort Collins Area Chamber of Commerce, are among the leading supporters of a move to combine 14 Northern Colorado communities into a single calling area.
The effort was spearheaded by the city of Loveland, which filed an application with the state Public Utilities Commission in October. Qwest Communications International Inc., which provides most of the phone service in the region, is scheduled to provide information to the PUC by the beginning of next week. The information will project calling volume among the communities and help the PUC determine if the change would be Residents will be able to give feedback on the proposal, which, if approved, would take several months to implement. Terry Bote, a spokesman for the PUC, said public hearings will be scheduled. Gary Gordier, The change could spread the costs all over the state, though, Gordier said. «Nothings free,» he said. «If we wind up having the toll charges taken away, rates increase on the other side of the coin.» Fort Collins and Greeley created a dedicated circuit so employees of both municipalities could make calls without Gordier estimates the city saved $10,000 a year by giving up the dedicated circuit. Renee Wheeler, assistant to the city manager of Loveland, said expanding the calling area shouldnt lead to additional costs. Wheeler notes the town of Berthoud was granted an extension of the coverage area in 2000 and phone bills didnt increase. «If it didnt happen in Berthoud, why would it happen in Loveland?» she asked.
By BOB MOOK