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VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS

(Redirected from Bell Atlantic)
:''"Verizon" redirects here: this article is about the corporation; see also Verizon Wireless, Verizon Online DSL and Verizon FiOS.''
'Verizon Communications, Inc.' () is an American broadband and telecommunications company and a component of the Dow 30. It was formed in 2000 when Bell Atlantic, one of the Regional Bell Operating Companies, bought 'GTE', formerly the largest independent local exchange telephone company in the United States. Prior to its transformation into Verizon, Bell Atlantic had merged with another Regional Bell Operating Company, NYNEX, in 1997. The name is a portmanteau of ''veritas'' and ''horizon''.

Contents
History
GTE Merger
Merger effects
MCI acquisition
Verizon services
Voice
Verizon VoiceWing
Video
Data
Directory operations
See also
Corporate governance
Verizon's competitors
Cellular service
Broadband
Television
Literary References
References
External links

History


Bell Atlantic logo, 1984–1997.

Verizon was founded in 1983 as 'Bell Atlantic Corporation'. It inherited seven Bell Operating Companies from American Telephone & Telegraph following its breakup. Bell Atlantic's original roster of operating companies included:

The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania

New Jersey Bell Telephone Company Telephone Company

The Diamond State Telephone Company

The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company

The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of Maryland

The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of Virginia

The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of West Virginia
Bell Atlantic originally operated in the U.S. states of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, West Virginia, and Virginia, as well as Washington, D.C.
In 1994, Bell Atlantic became the first RBOC to entirely drop the original names of its original operating companies. Ameritech and NYNEX (and SBC Communications in 2002) simply added d/b/a names to its operating companies; U S West and BellSouth had merged their operating companies. Operating company titles were simplified to:

★ Bell Atlantic—Delaware, Inc.

★ Bell Atlantic—Maryland, Inc.

★ Bell Atlantic—New Jersey, Inc.

★ Bell Atlantic—Pennsylvania, Inc.

★ Bell Atlantic—Virginia, Inc.

★ Bell Atlantic—Washington, D.C., Inc.

★ Bell Atlantic—West Virginia, Inc.
Bell Atlantic logo, 1997–2000.

In 1996, CEO and Chairman Raymond W. Smith orchestrated Bell Atlantic's merger with NYNEX. When it merged, it moved its corporate headquarters from Philadelphia to New York City. NYNEX was consolidated into this name by 1997.
Prior to its merger with GTE, Bell Atlantic traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) under the "BEL" symbol.
GTE Merger

Bell Atlantic acquired GTE on June 30 2000 and changed its name to 'Verizon Communications, Inc.' It was among the largest mergers in United States business history. It was the result of a definitive merger agreement, dated July 27 1998, between Bell Atlantic, based in New York City since the merger with NYNEX in 1996, and GTE, which was in the process of moving its headquarters from Stamford, Connecticut, to Irving, Texas.
The Bell Atlantic–GTE merger, priced at more than $52 billion at the time of the announcement, closed nearly two years later, following analysis and approvals by Bell Atlantic and GTE shareowners, 27 state regulatory commissions and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), and clearance from the United States Department of Justice (DoJ) and various international agencies.
The merger of Bell Atlantic and GTE, to form Verizon Communications, became effective on June 30 2000, with an exchange ratio of 1.22 shares of Verizon Communications Common Stock for each share of GTE Common Stock owned. Fractional shares resulting from the exchange of GTE stock into Verizon Communications shares were sold at a price of $55.00 per share. Verizon began trading on the NYSE under its new "VZ" symbol on Monday, July 3 2000.
Meanwhile, on September 21 1999, Bell Atlantic and UK-based Vodafone AirTouch Plc (now Vodafone Group Plc) announced that they had agreed to create a new wireless business with a national footprint, a single brand and a common digital technology – composed of Bell Atlantic's and Vodafone's U.S. wireless assets (Bell Atlantic Mobile (which was previously called ''Bell Atlantic-NYNEX Mobile'' by 1997), AirTouch Cellular, PrimeCo Personal Communications, and AirTouch Paging).
This wireless joint venture received regulatory approval in six months, and began operations as Verizon Wireless on April 4 2000, kicking off the new "Verizon" brand name. GTE's wireless operations became part of Verizon Wireless – creating what was initially the nation's largest wireless company before Cingular Wireless acquired AT&T Wireless in 2004 – when the Bell Atlantic–GTE merger closed nearly three months later. Verizon then became the majority owner (55%) of Verizon Wireless.
Genuity was formerly the Internet division of GTE Corp and spun off in 2000.[3]
Level 3 Communications acquired the bankrupt ISP in 2002 for only $137 million; a bargain-basement price considering the $616 million that a pre-Bell Atlantic-merger GTE paid for Genuity (then BBN Planet) in 1997.[4]
Merger effects

''Note this section refers to land lines only, as Verizon Wireless operates nationwide.''
Verizon shares were made a component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average on April 8 2004.[5] Verizon currently has 140.3 million land lines in service. With the MCI merger, it has more than 250,000 employees. Verizon serves customers throughout much of the United States. The primary states that it provides service to include:

★ Southwestern Connecticut

Delaware

Maine


Maryland

Massachusetts


New Hampshire


New Jersey

New York

Pennsylvania



Rhode Island


Vermont


Virginia



West Virginia

Washington, D.C.
These states are served by the following renamed Bell Operating Companies:

★ Verizon Delaware, Inc. – Also serves a portion of southeastern Pennsylvania

★ Verizon Maryland, Inc.

★ Verizon New England Telephone & Telegraph, Inc. – noted with a (
★ )

★ Verizon New Jersey, Inc.

★ Verizon New York Telephone, Inc. – Also serves Southwestern Connecticut

★ Verizon Pennsylvania, Inc.

★ Verizon Virginia, Inc.

★ Verizon Washington, D.C., Inc.

★ Verizon West Virginia, Inc.
(

★ ) Also served by GTE operating companies (refer below)
It also provides service to secondary markets (mostly from its acquisition of GTE) in:

Arizona






California



★ ,






Florida

Idaho





Illinois



Indiana




Michigan




Nevada






North Carolina


Ohio



Oregon





Puerto Rico

South Carolina


Texas

Washington





Wisconsin


These states are served by these operating companies:

GTE Southwest, Inc. dba Verizon Southwest,Inc., which serves only Texas.

GTE Florida, Inc. dba Verizon Florida, Inc.

Verizon South, Inc. (marked with a
★ )

Verizon North, Inc. (marked with a

★ )

Contel of the South, Inc. dba Verizon Mid-States, Inc. (marked with a


★ ) Also served by Verizon North.

Verizon Northwest, Inc.(marked with a



★ ) Operations in California do business as "Verizon West Coast, Inc."

Verizon California, Inc. (marked with a




★ )
Due to the rigorous climate and high costs, GTE Alaska was sold to Alaska Power and Telephone Company rather than be merged with Verizon.
Verizon also owns stakes in some international communications companies, most notably 23.14% of Vodafone Italy. On April 3 2006 Verizon agreed to sell its stakes in Verizon Dominicana (operating in the Dominican Republic), CANTV of Venezuela, and Puerto Rico Telephone Company, Inc. (PRT) in Puerto Rico to Telmex and América Móvil for $3.7 billion.[6] Verizon's other international investment is 50% ownership of Gibraltar NYNEX Communications.
In 2002, Verizon sold GTE's former telephone operations in 3 states: Missouri and Alabama operations were sold to CenturyTel, and Kentucky operations were sold to Alltel, which later spun off its landline operations as Windstream. In 2005, Verizon sold off GTE's former telephone operations in Hawaii to The Carlyle Group, This operation is now known as Hawaiian Telcom. As of January 16 2007, Verizon's operations in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont are going to be split off into a new Bell Operating Company, spun off, and merged with FairPoint Communications.
In 2006 Verizon moved its headquarters from New York City to Basking Ridge, New Jersey.
MCI acquisition

MCI logo, 2003-2006

Verizon Business logo, 2006-

On February 14 2005, Verizon agreed to acquire MCI, formerly WorldCom, after SBC Communications agreed to acquire AT&T just a few weeks earlier.
Media coverage has focused on several ways in which that acquisition, once completed, would benefit Verizon, including economies of scale derived from a potential productivity boost to be achieved via the elimination of thousands of jobs at the combined company, and access to the large base of business customers currently served by MCI. The real benefit to Verizon was the acquisition of long-haul lines. The bulk of Verizon's business is concentrated in the eastern United States. This not only renders the company, effectively, a regional phone company, but also forces it to pay usage fees to long-haul carriers, such as former MCI, to complete calls for its customers whenever those calls go outside the Verizon "footprint". That need is obviated by the MCI acquisition and was key in the long term market position strategy. By January 6 2006, MCI was incorporated into Verizon with the name 'Verizon Business'. With this merger, Verizon also acquired the naming rights to the Washington, D.C. home of the Washington Wizards and the Washington Capitals, the Verizon Center (formerly known as the MCI Center).
Just prior to the acquisition, MCI had purchased an internet services company, Totality.
Verizon, with MCI, was the largest telecommunications company in the United States based on sales of $75.11 billion, profits of $7.4 billion and assets of $168.13 billion. After completion of the BellSouth/AT&T merger, AT&T became the largest telecommunications company in the world in terms of assets and profits.
Rank[7] Company Sales Profits Assets Market Value
25 Verizon Communications 75.11 7.40 168.13 93.18
49 AT&T 43.86 4.79 145.63 107.04
131 BellSouth 20.55 3.29 56.55 57.82
'Merged' 64.41 8.08 202.18 164.86

Verizon services


Voice

Verizon provides several different types of land line services - standard POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service) service as well as VoIP (Voice Over Internet Protocol) and optical fiber line services. In addition, Verizon offers long distance services. Verizon also offers a product that is a joint venture with Microsoft called "Verizon Web Calling" A type of VoIP service used within Windows Live Messenger
Verizon VoiceWing

Verizon VoiceWing is a Voice over IP (VoIP) service offered by Verizon that offers phone service over a broadband Internet connection. A DSL, cable, or Verizon FiOS Internet connection, a regular telephone, a router, and a telephone adaptor are required for service.
Video

Verizon launched its FiOS Video service in Keller, Texas on September 22 2005. FiOS TV [8] uses an optical fiber network to deliver more than 330 total channels, more than 180 digital video and music channels more than 20 high-definition channels, and 1,800 video-on-demand titles.Verizon also provides DIRECTV service as well.
Data

Verizon provides DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) Internet service in many areas where it offers phone service. See Verizon Online DSL.
Verizon recently began offering FTTP (Fiber to the Premises, or Fiber to the Home) to some subscribers. Verizon calls this "FiOS Internet".[9]
According to the non-profit spam monitoring organization Spamhaus, Verizon has the largest number of known spammers of all networks worldwide (as of August 2, 2007).[10]
Directory operations

Main articles: Idearc Media

The Yellow Pages business of Verizon known as SuperPages, and is a Texas-based sales, publishing and related services with 1,200 directory titles and a circulation of about 121 million copies in 41 states. The web site receives approximately 17 million visitors a month. It had an operating revenue of $3.6 billion in 2004 and employs 7,300 nationwide.[11] In a move to leverage against higher traffic sites, Superpages linked up with Google to provide search advertising services to its millions of listed businesses. SuperPages will offer its advertisers the ability to bid for Google search terms.[12]
With an estimated $17 billion in assets, Verizon has spun-off the business unit to finance its expansion in wireless and high-speed Internet services.[13] Verizon would not be the first Baby Bell to rid itself of its directory publishing operations; Qwest sold off its QwestDex directory services to become Dex Media, and Illinois Bell, now known as AT&T, sold its directory operations to RH Donnelley in 1990 ("AT&T Yellow Pages published by RH Donnelley").

See also



AirfoneAir-ground radiotelephone service offered by Verizon

AirTouch

Verizon SmartPark — Advanced Telecommunications Services

Verizon Wireless

Idearc

Playlinc

Corporate governance


Current members of the board of directors of Verizon Communications are, James Barker, James Foucault, Richard Carrión, Robert Lane, Sandra Moose, Joseph Neubauer, Thomas O'Brien, Hugh Price, Ivan Seidenberg, Walter Shipley, John R. Stafford, and Robert Storey.

Verizon's competitors


Cellular service


Alltel

AT&T

MetroPCS

Sprint Nextel

T-Mobile
Broadband


AT&T

Cablevision

Comcast

Embarq

Qwest

RCN

Time Warner Cable

Insight Communications
Television


Comcast

DirecTV

Time Warner Cable

Dish Network

Charter Communications

Cox Communications

Cablevision

RCN

Insight Communications

Literary References



★ On the first page of Stephen King's novel ''Cell'', about a wildfire of murderous insanity spread by cellphones, King quotes the famous line from the Verizon Wireless TV ad campaign: "Can you hear me now?"

References


1. The current company named Verizon was founded in 1983 as RBOC Bell Atlantic. This company purchased GTE in 2000, changing its name to Verizon Communications.
2.
3. Genuity Jilted by Verizon, Mulls Options Colin C. Haley
4. Changes afoot for Genuity customers Denise Pappalardo
5. AT&T, Kodak, IP out of Dow Chris Isadore
6. Verizon to sell off Latin units
7. The Forbes 2000
8. Verizon FiOS TV: FiOS TV
9. Verizon FiOS: FiOS for Home
10. Spamhaus Statistics : The Top 10
11. Verizon may sell billion directory services
12. Verizon online directory in ad deal with Google
13. Donnelley likely to pass on Verizon directories David Ranii

External links



Official site

Verizon VoiceWing - Official site

Verizon Wireless

Verizon Business

A History of Verizon Communications

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