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CenturyLink Plans 1,000 Job Cuts, To Take at Least $300 Million From CAF Phase II

CenturyLink plans to cut its workforce by about 1,000, the company confirmed Friday in an emailed statement. "After careful consideration, CenturyLink has made the difficult decision to reduce its workforce," the statement said. "This includes current positions as well as…

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not backfilling open positions." Affected employees will receive severance packages and assistance to find new jobs, including within the company. "Additional steps will include minimizing the number of contractors we work with, reducing travel expenditures and further reductions of non-employee-related expenses." CEO Glen Post said on an Aug. 5 analyst call that CenturyLink was planning a "reduction in the number of employees" to cut costs, according to a transcript of the call. On that call, Chief Financial Officer Stewart Ewing said CenturyLink estimates it will take at least $300 million of the $514 million in annual USF support it's eligible for under the FCC's Connect America Fund Phase II. CenturyLink is continuing to evaluate whether to take more than that and expects to notify the FCC of its final decision on or before an Aug. 27 deadline for price-cap telcos, the company said in a separate emailed statement. Ewing said the $300 million would go to about two dozen states where CenturyLink serves high-cost areas and it's studying whether to take the CAF II subsidies in another 11 states. If the telco doesn't accept the CAF II support there, Ewing said the company could continue to receive about $100 million in USF "frozen support." He said the FCC is unlikely to write rules before late 2016 or maybe 2017 for a reverse auction in areas where price-cap carriers don't accept CAF II money.