I wonder how this fits in with AT&T’s SLA commitments? How can you audit your 
SLA without the RFOs?

 -mel beckman

On Jan 18, 2019, at 9:28 AM, Victor Breen 
<vic...@impulse.net<mailto:vic...@impulse.net>> wrote:


Well, I guess it's nice to know we're not the only ones getting that treatment. 
I'll have to see about this "gold status" you speak of.

--
Victor Breen  |  vic...@impulse.net<mailto:vic...@impulse.net>
Sr. Engineer  |  Impulse Advanced Communications
main 805.456.5800  |  www.impulse.net<http://www.impulse.net>

________________________________
From: Kaiser, Erich <er...@gotfusion.net<mailto:er...@gotfusion.net>>
Sent: Friday, January 18, 2019 8:17:39 AM
To: Victor Breen
Cc: nanog@nanog.org<mailto:nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Re: AT&T starting to charge for RFOs on ASE tail circuits?

Yes we have seen that response in the past on RFOs.  Most of these random 
outages are maintenance for moving fiber due to construction and they do not 
tell you when it is going to happen, we have been complaining about this for 
the past year to them.    Every other carrier issues a maintenance notification 
(most of the time), for some reason they do not feel it is necessary and blame 
the ASE product.

We are now a gold status customers so the support has gotten better.  We are 2 
months into it so we will see long term how it will work out.

Dealing with them has been frustrating for sure...

Erich Kaiser
The Fusion Network



On Fri, Jan 18, 2019 at 9:19 AM Victor Breen 
<vic...@impulse.net<mailto:vic...@impulse.net>> wrote:

Hey All,


I just caught wind from multiple support reps of ours that AT&T is now 
demanding payment to get an RFO. As in, our folks are calling up AT&T to see 
why a particular tail circuit was down for whatever period of time and has 
since come back up with no clear utility power issue or backhoe fade to explain 
it. The response they get is that an RFO is billable and they have been asked 
to accept the charge to proceed (which they have rightly rejected thus far). 
This is the first time I've heard of this happening with any of our last-mile 
transport providers.


I'm very curious, has anyone else experienced this lately with AT&T or any 
other carriers?

--
Victor Breen  |  vic...@impulse.net<mailto:vic...@impulse.net>
Sr. Engineer  |  Impulse Advanced Communications
www.impulse.net<http://www.impulse.net>

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