Bob, as I recall Barry said they were projected to be in the
vicinity of $7,000 to $8,000 annually.
The savings opportunity may not be lost by reverting to
AT&T; that will be subject to negotiation. Right now our priority is to restore
reliable service.
Dave
From: Bob Vallio
[mailto:rbvallio@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, December 16, 2010 4:21 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: Re: Telephones
What were the annual savings
going to be?
Bob -- W6RGG
On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 12:10 PM, Sumner, Dave, K1ZZ <dsumner@arrl.org> wrote:
Some of you are aware that
recently we have had some problems with people being unable to connect to the
in-house telephone conference bridge. Unfortunately, that was just the tip of
the iceberg. We have had, and continue to have, a variety of ongoing problems
with both outgoing and
incoming calls.
This came about because
three weeks ago, in a good-faith effort to reduce the telephone bill and on the
recommendation of the
company that maintains our office telephones, Barry switched our
service from AT&T to Verizon.
It was supposed to be a seamless transition, but it turned out to be anything
but. The last straw came today when Verizon provided conflicting information and gave us no reason
to believe they would EVER get it right –
or for that matter, that they would be responsive to problems in the future.
The switch was based
entirely on cost savings; we have not had service problems with AT&T.
So we are going back to
AT&T. I don’t know how smoothly the transition back will go – at this point I have no expectation that any technology
company can get it right the first time –
but at least with
AT&T (unlike Verizon) we
have the phone numbers of people who will actually talk to us and know how to solve
problems.
I’m beginning to
think the Luddites may have a point.
Dave K1ZZ