FCC says carriers failed Florida after hurricane—but lets them off the hook

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai.

Enlarge / FCC Chairman Ajit Pai speaking at a press conference on October 1, 2018, in Washington, DC. (credit: Getty Images | Mark Wilson )

The Federal Communications Commission isn’t punishing carriers for their horrible response to Hurricane Michael in Florida, despite a commission investigation finding that the carriers’ mistakes prolonged outages caused by the hurricane.

Mobile carriers’ response to the hurricane was so bad that even FCC Chairman Ajit Pai—who normally avoids any criticism of the industry he’s paid to regulate—called it “completely unacceptable” in October 2018. Outages left many customers without cell service for more than a week, as Verizon and others struggled to restore service.

Pai initiated an investigation and released the FCC Public Safety Bureau’s resulting report yesterday. The report recommends changes that carriers can make to improve future hurricane responses, and Pai said he is “call[ing] on wireless phone companies, other communications providers, and power companies to quickly implement the recommendations contained in this report.”

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