Tuesday, May 26, 2026Tech HubAboutContactAdvertiseNewsletter
Back to Home
AT&T sues to ditch Cali copper phone lines to save billions

AT&T sues to ditch Cali copper phone lines to save billions

Telecoms giant files suit in Golden State so it doesn't have to maintain network it claims is hardly used

B
Blizine Admin
·1 min read·0 views

AT&T sues to ditch Cali copper phone lines to save billions

Jump to main content

REG AD

Networks

AT&T sues to ditch Cali copper phone lines to save billions Telecoms giant files suit in Golden State so it doesn't have to maintain network it claims is hardly used

Dan Robinson Dan Robinson

Published fri 22 May 2026 // 14:29 UTC

AT&T wants to ditch its traditional copper phone line infrastructure in California in favor of fiber everywhere, claiming it has to spend $1 billion each year on a telephone network that a tiny percentage of customers use.The US telecoms giant announced plans this week to invest $19 billion in The Golden State between now and the end of the decade to bring fiber to more than 4 million additional households and businesses, upgrading customers to the newer infrastructure.As part of its plans, the telco has filed a lawsuit [PDF] against several state officials seeking a court order to overturn California rules that require AT&T to continue offering a “plain old telephone service” (POTS).

REG AD

AT&T points out that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) recently adopted rules that encourage telcos to retire their aging copper lines.

REG AD

The Washington-based telecoms regulator said the expansion of fiber cabling is hindered by "the need for carriers to divert precious resources to the maintenance of deteriorating legacy networks that deliver outdated services to an ever-decreasing number of subscribers."In its court filing, AT&T says "the copper wires that once served every home now serve just 3 percent of households in AT&T’s California territory," but complains that state-level "Carrier of Last Resort" (COLR) rules require it to continue supporting and maintaining POTS even after the FCC has authorized the service to be phased out. Under basic pre-emption principles, those COLR rules cannot stand, it asserts. MORE CONTEXT FCC says it's making it easier for US telcos to ditch legacy lines

Openreach turns up the heat to force laggards off legacy copper lines

Openreach: Fiber can sniff out leaky water pipes – if anyone bothers fixing them

Price, lead times and scarcity of fiber optics may derail projects

But while the telco likes to portray this as bringing faster and more reliable modern network technology to all California residents, critics say rushing to phase out the old phone network could leave some users behind. A nonprofit public interest group, Public Knowledge, previously warned the FCC directive could impact consumers in rural areas, the elderly, those with disabilities, and anyone who relies on specialized medical equipment that uses phone lines.As The Register has previously covered, the UK’s former state-level operator BT was forced to delay plans to turn off the public switched telephone network (PSTN) and replace it all with all-fiber infrastructure after similar concerns were raised. This followed the introduction of a government charter to protect vulnerable customers, particularly those using TeleCare, which supports alarms that the elderly or infirm can trigger if they need emergency assistance.AT&T said it will take “a thoughtful, phased approach to upgrade customers,” and claimed “no customer will be left without access to phone or 911 service.”However, Public Knowledge said the FCC order relaxes or entirely drops various safeguards put in place by previous US administrations, including the requirement to prove through engineering tests that a new service adequately replaces the old for medical equipment and alarm systems.  ®

broadband att networks fcc

REG AD

Ucell and ZTE complete large-scale deployment of AI‑Powered green network solution in Uzbekistan

Network-wide rollout boosts energy efficiency by 10.6%, cutting carbon emissions and operational costs without compromising user experience

SaaS

The SaaS-pocalypse can wait, Salesforce still has customers where it wants them

AI coding agents may make software cheaper to build, but switching off major platforms remains expensive, risky, and deeply annoying

ZTE Day Indonesia 2026 strengthens AI innovation and digital infrastructure collaboration to accelerate Indonesia's digital transformation

The annual tech showcase highlights next-gen AI, cloud, and future-ready ICT solutions while uniting ecosystem partners to build the foundation for the nation's AI era

Personal Tech

HP customer claims firmware update shoved printer off support cliff

Internal notes point to cloud connectivity woes for older OfficeJets, though company denies systemic issue

Columnists

Utah tells porn sites to take the P out of VPNs, and it's their fault that they can't

Governments can't touch VPNs technically or commercially. The mess they'll make if they try will be off the scale

Systems

EU's digital sovereignty boo-boo may be the best thing to ever happen to the project

DIY or die. Just don't let the CIA buy it

MOST POPULAR

Security America's top cyber-defense agency left a GitHub repo open with passwords, keys, tokens – and incredibly obvious filenames Systems Intel's CEO reveals early hiring challenges as bankruptcy concerns deterred top talent Off-Prem Google Cloud suspended major customer Railway.com without cause, causing outage

📰Originally published at theregister.com

Comments