Where are all the payphones?
Deregulation and industry greed are wiping out a form of old technology that's a critical lifeline

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When the big earthquake, terrorist attack, or other civic disaster finally hits San Francisco, a lot of people are going to be in for a major shock: their high-tech cell phones and computer-based office telephone systems might not work.

But after the 1989 Loma Prieta quake and after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in New York City, residents found there was still a way to reach their loved ones and let the world know they were OK; they used an old-fashioned communications tool that's low tech, securely grounded, publicly accessible, and reliable.

It's called a pay phone.

Next time there's a disaster, we may not be so lucky: pay phones, fixtures of the public landscape for more than a century, have been quietly disappearing. And many of those that remain don't work. These essential communication tools — good for emergencies, privacy, and the poor — are falling victim to deregulation laws, the greed of telecommunications companies, and the public's obsession with high technology.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T


In San Francisco they've departed in droves from sidewalk carrels; corner stores; bus shelters; subway platforms; office, museum, and movie theater lobbies; supermarkets; shopping malls; city swimming pools and YMCAs; diners; parks; and gas stations. They've been disappearing at a rate of about 10 percent annually for the past four years, down from roughly 400,000 at the height of the dot-com boom to 150,000 today, trade group attorney Martin Mattes told state regulators last year. The decline in San Francisco mirrors those in California and the nation.

And while pay phones may seem like quaint relics of another era, they remain an important part of the nation's communications system, serving millions of people who for one reason or another don't have or can't use cell phones. And consumer advocates say the loss of the pay phone system is a serious problem.

Although cell phones are pretty ubiquitous, not everyone can afford one — and not everyone can use one. For socially marginalized people, pay phones are still a lifeline. For people who can't use wireless technology — and can't afford a home phone line — they're essential.

Why are pay phones vanishing? The ready answer — cell phones — identifies the technology that's replacing them and cutting into their profits. But it doesn't completely explain why a society that once valued pay phones — and may ultimately remember that it still does — has let them disappear. That story has more to do with the politics of deregulation and the profits of telecom companies.

THE POWER OF OLD TECH

In the 2004 climate-change disaster film The Day after Tomorrow, Dennis Quaid plays a climatologist who anticipates dire consequences from a sudden oceanic temperature drop, which is triggered by global warming and leaves New York City frozen solid. From the beaux arts NYC Public Library where he's taken shelter, the Quaid character's son (played by Jake Gyllenhaal) needs to call Dad in Washington, D.C., but the cells don't work. So he finds a half-submerged mezzanine pay phone with a dial tone ("It's connected to the telephone lines," he notes brightly), ...

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( 4 comments | Comment on this article )
homsar on Wednesday, August 15, 2007 at 04:10 PM
This is a very informative article. I'm very happy to see consciousness about the sharp and steady decline of payphones brought to a wider audience. As someone who just got a cell phone in 2007, I had a chance to personally experience the frustration of not being able to find a working phone. And my needs were usually convenience-oriented. This is a shame that again, the "market forces" vote in favor of the rich, who can afford to not notice the loss of this valuable public service. The irony is that in the end we may all pay the price, as the article states, when an emergency occurs, and there is no way to use our cell phones. Another example of short sighted profit mongering shafting the poor in the short run, and setting an alarm clock of doom for all of us in the long run. What can we do to petition for the return of this useful, and potentially life saving public service?
boaster on Thursday, August 16, 2007 at 04:01 PM
The pay phone in my neighborhood was nothing but a hangout for drug dealers to do their business. I was glad to see it go. How many other urban pay phones were also used for nefarious purposes?
sf24hr on Friday, August 17, 2007 at 01:05 AM
I live part time in Mexico, and their payphones work pretty good (considering the abuse they get). You use a smart card instead of coins or those aggravating calling cards. And their cell companies are still making a fat profit.
the_woodwose on Tuesday, July 15, 2008 at 08:31 AM
Of course pay phones are disappearing, what do you expect? Are we better off with all the choices we have for phone service now, cell, landline, voip, multiple carriers, and lower costs than we were 20 or 30 years ago, even though it's harder to find a working pay phone? Between voip and my cell phone, I haven't had to pay long distance charges in 4 years, and I remember back in the day a few hours of calls a month to friends and family could run $50 or $60. And what does a local landline cost these days? About the same as it cost 30 years ago, or in real terms, probably a third what it used to cost. And how nice is it to have a cell phone when you are meeting someone somewhere? To be fair, Diana Scott should have least compared phone service overall today to what has been available over the last 30 years instead of just moaning about the loss of pay phones because of "faith based deregulation," corporate greed, anti-union outsourcing, and government incompetence. But what do you expect from a soft-headed reporter?

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