CHICAGO – If you haven't cut the cord on your landline phone service, pretty soon you may not have a choice.
The Illinois Telecommunications Act is up for review this spring, and big phone companies are expected to push to eliminate a legal obligation to provide landlines, which are still the cheapest and most reliable form of phone service.
In a measure being pushed by big telecom provider AT&T in states across the nation, consumer advocates say, the phone company wants to eliminate the act's "obligation to serve" requirement, which gives everyone in the state the right to landline service.
That would open the door for phone companies to abandon areas they deem unprofitable.
Illinois still is home to about 1.3 million residential landlines, which is costly for service providers like AT&T and Frontier. It means maintaining copper wires, often in far flung areas, for a service that is increasingly disappearing.
Landline providers such as AT&T operate two networks at the same time — the old Time Division Multiplexing system (your landline) and a new fiber-optic system that can provide voice calling and Internet-tied entertainment services. The company has said it plans to abandon the old system by 2020.
Jon Banks, senior vice president of law and policy at USTelecom, an industry trade association, said in the past four years in Illinois, traditional phone companies have lost a large portion of market share. In 2008, those phone companies served 58 percent of households. In 2012, that dropped to 29 percent.
At the same time, the share of Illinois households that rely on wireless service jumped to 43 percent from 23 percent.