Article 120 of 200
MONEY
PAY PHONES GOING WAY OF DINOSAUR OUTLETS FEWER, INCOME LESS AS CELL USE THRIVES
The Associated Press
 
01/23/2000
The New Orleans Times-Picayune
ORLEANS
Page F8
(Copyright 2000)

 

Raymond Spera says he is almost always on the phone checking messages at work, calling his children at home or making appointments with friends and associates.

But these days he doesn't bother to hunt down a public phone.

"Quite honestly, I don't use a pay phone at all, because I have this," said Spera, 34, waving a cellular phone, which rang insistently on a recent Sunday afternoon in Philadelphia's upscale Rittenhouse Square.

"Before, I would run into vandalized or out-of-order pay phones all the time. I would only use them when I had to," he said.

Spera is among a fast-growing number of consumers who shun pay phones in favor of increasingly affordable wireless phones that can be used to send or receive calls anytime, anywhere and then be tucked away in a pocket or purse.

Pay phone providers are feeling the pinch.

Nationwide figures are not kept on the decline, but pay phone providers across the country say it is noticeable, especially in larger cities where the volume of calls is bigger.

"I don't think there is any question that wireless phone usage has had a definite impact," said Vince Sandusky of the American Public Communications Council, which represents independent phone companies. "Most of the companies ... don't just throw up a pay phone wherever they might want one anymore."

Bell Atlantic Corp., which operates 90 percent of the public booths in the Northeast, says it had a 14 percent drop in 1999 pay phone revenue and a 10 percent decline in 1998. Pacific Bell said a similar decline seemed "intuitively correct," though it did not have figures.

It's a far cry from the days of the first coin-operated phone, introduced in 1889 by William Gray in Hartford, Conn., said Sheldon Hochheiser, a historian for AT&T Corp.

"The story goes that he had a wife who had taken ill," he said. "He didn't subscribe to a phone. So he went to the nearest place -- a local shop -- but the foreman wouldn't let him use the phone. It got him thinking there should be another way."

It was a clunky wooden thing, with a listening receiver, a speaker to talk into and no coin return, Hochheiser said. But Gray's coin- operated phone worked, and it got rid of an earlier generation of pay phones, which required costly attendants who collected fees.

It also opened up service to about 90 percent of the population who could not afford a home line. In 1902, more than 81,000 pay phones were in use nationwide, a figure that increased considerably in 1912 when New York installed 25,000 pay phones. By that time, companies had switched to a standardized metal design that basically remained until the 1960s, Hochheiser said.

The United States has about 1.6 million pay phones and only 3 percent of the population lacks home service, officials say. But the number of pay phones is likely to decline as several companies are tearing down underused phones, concentrating those that remain in more lucrative locations such as transportation centers, downtown street corners and office buildings.

The chief reason for this re-evaluation comes from the roughly 80 million cell phones in use nationwide, a number that continues to grow rapidly as the devices become smaller and cheaper, according to the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association of Washington, D.C.

In addition, the rise of prepaid calling cards and dial-around calling plans -- such as the 10-10 discount programs -- have siphoned away revenue, because pay phone providers only receive small compensation when a competitors' card or calling plan is used at their public booths.

And then there's the image and upkeep. In larger cities, companies say vandalism can be commonplace, leaving phones run down and out of order.

All these factors could lead to the extinction of pay phones, said Anand Anandalingam, a professor of information management at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business.

"The chances are, the traditional pay phones that are wired are going to become obsolete," he said. "They may be replaced by a wireless equivalent ... so when you enter a mall, you can pick up some kind of cordless phone to make a call."

Nicholas Economides , an economics professor at New York University's Stern School of Business, agreed. Already, at least one entrepreneur is developing a prototype for a "disposable" cell phone, which comes with prepaid minutes, Economides said.

But fans of pay phones aren't writing them off just yet, saying they still offer the greatest protection from dropped calls, static interference and even bugged lines.

And that may have benefited at least one group.

"Amongst gangsters, they're reluctant to talk on cell phones and in their homes because their lines could be wiretapped or picked up," said Fred Martens, former executive director of the now-defunct Pennsylvania Crime Commission, which tracked the Philadelphia crime family and other groups.

"So a pay phone is still a vehicle for them," he said. "As long as the mob is alive, pay phones will have a viable market."

   

Caption: A cell phone user passes a pay phone in Philadelphia. Consumers are increasingly shunning pay phones as cell phones become more affordable and convenient. For example, Bell Atlantic Corp., which operates 90 percent of the public booths in the Northeast, says it had a 14 percent drop in 1999 pay phone revenue and a 10 percent decline in 1998. AP PHOTO

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