Wireless Service Recovers Slowly From Hurricane Sandy Devastation
NEWS ANALYSIS: As wireless service slowly returns to hurricane-devastated areas of the Northeast U.S., carriers are bringing in generators and entering into extraordinary arrangements to provide service to customers.
Customers using cable for Internet, phone and television were having service restored as well, and the level of outages was now below 20 percent, Turetsky said. The FCC wasn't willing to break out the number of outages by carrier. However, Verizon Wireless spokesperson Melanie Ortel told eWEEK that the company had fared well through the storm. "More than 96 percent of our towers from Maine to Virginia are operational and supporting Verizon Wireless customers. The network performed well in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, due largely to sustained network investment, which includes permanent backup generators at most sites." "Network teams continue round-the clock restoration efforts to those sites still affected and offline due to lack of commercial power or connectivity—predominately in New York City and northern New Jersey," Ortel said. "As power and connectivity conditions have improved over the last 24 hours, we have seen some improvement to wireless service in Lower Manhattan and other locations in the metropolitan area." Ortel noted that Verizon Wireless is working on keeping its network running as well as focusing on restoration. "We're continuing to refuel permanent generators at cell sites until commercial power is restored, deploy additional portable generators as needed and where possible, and support customers by offering recharging services at open retail stores," she said.






















