Image Source: Fox Business
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has formally approved Verizon Communications' $20 billion acquisition of Frontier Communications, a major development in the U.S. telecom industry. It followed Verizon's promise to shut down all of its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs-a step taken in the wake of Trump administration regulatory scrutiny.
The purchase by Verizon, initially worth $9.6 billion plus $10 billion in taken-over debt, will allow the telecommunications giant to grow and upgrade Frontier's fiber-optic network across 25 states. The company has pledged to connect more than one million American residences with high-speed fiber each year, speeding the transition away from copper lines and promising massive infrastructure spending, particularly in rural areas.
The agreement was approved after months of public backlash from FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, who had claimed that Verizon's DEI practices were discriminatory and could potentially block the agreement. In a letter to the FCC, Verizon stated that it would take down its "Diversity and Inclusion" website, eliminate references to DEI in training, and eliminate all workforce diversity objectives and connected management compensation incentives. Chief Legal Officer Vandana Venkatesh stated that the steps would be effective immediately, making the company's practices conform to new federal guidelines.
While advocates praise the action as a gesture toward equal opportunity and compliance with regulations, critics-including Democratic FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez-sound a warning it is a sign of increasing federal entanglement in corporate employment policies.
Source: CNBC
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