From the Lansing State Journal
Published December 11, 2004
Schneider: Comcast compromises on vanishing satellite equipment
GRAND LEDGE - A few months ago, Barb Francis made the switch from Dish Network satellite TV to Comcast cable.
The circumstances under which Francis' satellite equipment disappeared are a matter of dispute. But the upshot was that Francis found herself on the hook for $383.63.
"Dish Network is going to turn me over to a collections agency," Francis gasped when she called me this week.
After I phoned Comcast on behalf of Francis, company spokesman Jerome Espy investigated Francis' predicament and worked out a deal.
Francis, who lives in Grand Ledge, will pay Dish Network the $383.63. But then Comcast will credit Francis' account with that amount, meaning she won't have to pay a cable bill for awhile.
Francis accepted the offer as a fair compromise.
Long gone
Both sides agree that a Comcast technician hauled Francis' satellite equipment away after Francis boxed it up. But under what arrangement?
Francis said she assumed that the Comcast guy was returning the equipment to Dish Network as part of the deal.
But according to Espy, the Comcast technician was under the impression that Francis had purchased the equipment outright from Dish Network and that he was simply doing her the favor of disposing of the stuff.
Comcast, Espy said, is not in the habit of returning equipment to satellite companies.
Not knowing that, Francis assumed that once the satellite gear left her doorstep, it was bound for Dish Network.
Only on Nov. 30 when Francis got the big bill from Dish Network did she realize that something was amiss.
For a week, Francis went back and forth between the two companies, finally landing on a hard reality: The dish equipment had been discarded.
But it belonged to Dish Network; Francis was merely renting the stuff. Somebody had to pay for it.
Though not crazy about having to pay the $383.63 upfront, Francis is satisfied with the prospect of getting the money back eventually.
For his part, Espy said Comcast is crediting Francis' account as a "courtesy."
"There probably was a miscommunication," he said. "We have no way of knowing what was said. But typically, it wouldn't have happened this way."
Published December 11, 2004
Schneider: Comcast compromises on vanishing satellite equipment
GRAND LEDGE - A few months ago, Barb Francis made the switch from Dish Network satellite TV to Comcast cable.
The circumstances under which Francis' satellite equipment disappeared are a matter of dispute. But the upshot was that Francis found herself on the hook for $383.63.
"Dish Network is going to turn me over to a collections agency," Francis gasped when she called me this week.
After I phoned Comcast on behalf of Francis, company spokesman Jerome Espy investigated Francis' predicament and worked out a deal.
Francis, who lives in Grand Ledge, will pay Dish Network the $383.63. But then Comcast will credit Francis' account with that amount, meaning she won't have to pay a cable bill for awhile.
Francis accepted the offer as a fair compromise.
Long gone
Both sides agree that a Comcast technician hauled Francis' satellite equipment away after Francis boxed it up. But under what arrangement?
Francis said she assumed that the Comcast guy was returning the equipment to Dish Network as part of the deal.
But according to Espy, the Comcast technician was under the impression that Francis had purchased the equipment outright from Dish Network and that he was simply doing her the favor of disposing of the stuff.
Comcast, Espy said, is not in the habit of returning equipment to satellite companies.
Not knowing that, Francis assumed that once the satellite gear left her doorstep, it was bound for Dish Network.
Only on Nov. 30 when Francis got the big bill from Dish Network did she realize that something was amiss.
For a week, Francis went back and forth between the two companies, finally landing on a hard reality: The dish equipment had been discarded.
But it belonged to Dish Network; Francis was merely renting the stuff. Somebody had to pay for it.
Though not crazy about having to pay the $383.63 upfront, Francis is satisfied with the prospect of getting the money back eventually.
For his part, Espy said Comcast is crediting Francis' account as a "courtesy."
"There probably was a miscommunication," he said. "We have no way of knowing what was said. But typically, it wouldn't have happened this way."