That’s the next owner’s responsibility, not his.Yeah, that's your phone line. If you do cut it off because you only use a cell phone, keep in mind that you may be forced to re-connect it all when you move or sell.
That’s the next owner’s responsibility, not his.Yeah, that's your phone line. If you do cut it off because you only use a cell phone, keep in mind that you may be forced to re-connect it all when you move or sell.
I believe it will be the next owners responsibility to contact Cox to repair it if they want Cox telephone service. Cut it off and keep on trucking!!!!That’s the next owner’s responsibility, not his.
When I moved in my current house it was a new neighborhood. They had Cox cable hanging on my fence and it was there several weeks. I called Cox and asked them about when they were going to bury it. They said “we can’t assist because you are not a Cox customer”. For some reason that really peed me off so I went and cut the cable. They were there within an hour and fixed it, then buried.I’ve tried calling but cox has horrible customer service which is one reason I stopped using them.
When I moved in my current house it was a new neighborhood. They had Cox cable hanging on my fence and it was there several weeks. I called Cox and asked them about when they were going to bury it. They said “we can’t assist because you are not a Cox customer”. For some reason that really peed me off so I went and cut the cable. They were there within an hour and fixed it, then buried.
It says Cox on the right sideHmmm. I've never seen Cox use twisted pair wire, nor a box that doesn't identify it as being Cox.
Unless it's required by the buyer. In a power outage or bad weather that knocks out the cell tower there's nothing like an actual phone line. I wouldn't have a home without it. It's also great for giving someone a number and not having to deal with spam texts.That’s the next owner’s responsibility, not his.
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