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Comcast Raises Controversial 'Broadcast TV' and 'Sports' Fees $48 Per Year (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Comcast's latest price hikes include a significant increase in the company's widely despised "Broadcast TV" and "Regional Sports Network" fees. The Broadcast TV fee is moving from $5 a month to $7 a month, while the Regional Sports Network fee is rising from $3 a month to $5 a month, according to notices sent to customers in several cities. Combined, that's a change from $8 to $12 a month, giving Comcast an extra $48 a year from each customer that has to pay the fees. Comcast began charging these fees a few years ago, which have risen quickly. Just over a year ago, Comcast raised the Broadcast TV fee from $3 to $5 and the Regional Sports fee from $1 to $3. The two fees have thus gone from $4 to $12, combined, in little more than a year. Comcast customers recently sued the company, saying that Comcast falsely advertises lower-than-actual prices and then raises rates by tacking on these two fees. Comcast falsely portrays these fees as being required by the government, the proposed class action lawsuit said. Charter is facing a similar lawsuit. Comcast says the fees recover a portion of the price it pays broadcast networks and regional sports networks to air their content. But paying for programming is simply part of the cost of doing business as a cable TV provider, and programming costs have always been passed on to consumers in their cable TV bills. By charging fees separately from basic rates, "Comcast has found a way to secretly and repeatedly increase the monthly price it charges for its channel packages" even when customers are supposed to be getting a flat rate during a contract term, the lawsuit said. The Broadcast TV fee was introduced in 2014, initially as $1.50 a month, and the Regional Sports fee was added in 2015 at $1 a month. Comcast charges the sports fee even though it owns many of the regional sports networks that broadcast sporting events in local markets. The price increases were reported by TVPredictions and DSLReports, and customers have been posting letters they received from Comcast detailing the price changes.

9 of 166 comments (clear)

  1. This is fair by youngone · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Comcast (and the other US regional monopolies) have spent an awful lot of money to dominate the markets they operate in.

    These fees are just one way they have to claw those costs back.

    Another method is having State Governments pass laws stopping cities and towns from operating their own networks in competition.

    1. Re:This is fair by cdrudge · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No one is saying that it's not fair for Comcast et al to charge what they need to in order to make a profit. The issue is they advertise say $39.99 for some package but then it comes with the extra fees that should be included in the advertised price as they are just the cost of doing business. If the advertised price is $39.99, it shouldn't actually cost $39.99 for the content.

      This isn't even considering all the extra taxes and fees that go beyond their cost and get passed on to various government bodies.

  2. Easy way to increase profits by QuietLagoon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wall Street investors want year-over-year profit increases. It is far easier for Comcast to just raise these fees (which really should be a part of the quoted price for the cable TV package) than it is for Comcast to spend money on things that make its customers happy (like quality customer service) and more willing to buy more Comcast products.

  3. Re:Welcome to Trump's America Inc. by tripleevenfall · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You will pay. You will not complain. You have no rights against the all-powerful CORPORATION. Unless you incorporate yourself.

    I'm not free to cut the cord?

  4. Re:Welcome to Trump's America Inc. by msauve · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Nobody is holding a gun to your head making you pay for TV at all."

    Ultimately, someone may be. Those under contract, who paid for service at a specific rate are now seeing price increases to the service being disguised as government mandated "fees." Stop paying before the contract ends, and ultimately the full force of government law enforcement (which includes guns) may come into play.

    Yeah, it's a stretch in the real world, but so is claiming that such people have a real choice. Do you "you feel morally and mentally superior?"

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  5. Re:Welcome to Trump's America Inc. by Penguinisto · · Score: 4, Informative

    You will pay. You will not complain. You have no rights against the all-powerful CORPORATION. Unless you incorporate yourself.

    I'm not free to cut the cord?

    ...or switch to Satellite TV (which I've done for *years* now... )

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
  6. Re:Welcome to Trump's America Inc. by tsqr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    TFS: "Comcast began charging these fees a few years ago, which have risen quickly. Just over a year ago, Comcast raised the Broadcast TV fee from $3 to $5 and the Regional Sports fee from $1 to $3. The two fees have thus gone from $4 to $12, combined, in little more than a year."

    So, a practice that started "a few years ago" and has continued over the past year, has what to do with Trump?

  7. Re:Welcome to Trump's America Inc. by cayenne8 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I'm actually getting ready in the next couple of days, after I watch the last couple items off the DVR....to cut the cord on ATT Uverse.

    This is the exact kind of crap that should really drive folks to do this.

    I figured my set up....

    For local channels, I set up an indoor HDTV antenna (you can find these on sale, I got mine at Wally Worldmart for $79). I put this up on a pole in my house and works great. I had to get this, in order to get our local PBS (WYES) that is still on VHF, and is very hard to pull in with other antennas. Otherwise, I'd recommend one of the Mohu Leaf HDAntennas. This one worked great except for my local PBS and I like some shows on there.

    I bought a Tivo Roamia OTA 1TB DVR to act as my local channel tuner. It comes with included lifetime guide service. Worked great out of the box.

    The only drawback of the Tivo unit, is that the Netflix and Amazon Prime streaming which it also does (and searches across), the front ends are horribly laggy, but for OTA needs, it is amazing.

    For my streaming needs, I got the Amazon FireTV.

    I got this over the FireTV stick for its extra computing power. It streams VERY well Netflix, and Amazon Prime (4K on these too). AND...the power was needed for my streaming app that solves my "cable network" needs.

    I did Playstation VUE. I got the 70+ channels package for $35/mo. It has all the ESPNs (I like during college football season), all the cable news I want (MSNBC, Fox News, CNN, etc), and channels like TCM, TBS, Nat'l Geo, FX..etc...

    It also has built in DVR functionality, which makes it great for catching the Walking Dead on AMC to watch at my convenience and skip commercials.

    The Fire TV is powerful enough to use the VUE guide....Roku 3 and PS3 could not use the guide very well at all.

    So, this is my living room.

    For the other TVs in my house (bedrooms, office), I set up a bit of networking for those.

    I set up Tivo Minis to stream from the main unit into each bedroom, for DVR and live HD tv. The main unit has 4 receivers, so you can watch different stuff in each room. I also have an Amazon FireTV for each other room, so I can watch streaming or VUE cable channels in each room. Again, each can be watching different things.

    The Tivo Minis don't work wirelessly, and I also found the FireTVs don't work as well wireless as they do wired.

    So, for each room I have Ethernet over AC....and a little TP-Link switch there too.

    So now..everything hooks up nicely, and I dropped from $113/mo for UVerse to $35/mo with VUE.

    I figure in about 8 mos I'll break even on the new hardware.

    So far, the only caveats....my house has some less than optimal wiring, I think leftover from Katrina rework problems. At times, my Tivo has problems with slow network, but not that often. Also, setting up the Tivo minis...it has to go through Tivo Centrals computers before it can get recognized by your main DVR unit. This is a horribly thought out, PITA...but if you register your Mini online with tivo 24 hours before you hook it up, and then you have the main unit phone home a few times while trying to sync them , it will finally work. They need to fix that. I almost gave up on it, but once it syncs..works as intended and I live the Tivo guide and user interface. Auto commer

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  8. Re:Verizon does this too by Fly+Swatter · · Score: 4, Informative

    Verizon recently introduced a $2.80 (plus taxes) fee for my FIOS router, which they claim is old -- and to "support it" they need this monthly fee.

    I got the same warning of the impending 2.80 fee to support old routers. I was on 15/15, which was a holdover from signing up years ago. Since it was nearing time to to 'renew' my contract, I checks the options. It wound up being 10.00 cheaper per month to upgrade to 50/50 - and since I was upgrading to 50 or higher they gave me a new quantum blah blah router free of charge.

    So to avoid the 2.80 fee I wound of with faster service and a new router for 10.00 less. If you are on a 'contract agreement' with verizon, you can upgrade or renew that contract at any time.