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| Wednesday, January 27, 1999 Published at 05:02 GMT UK Hull phones set to ring changes ![]() Kingston Communications: Seeking to branch out The UK's only council-owned telephone company could pass into private hands if Labour councillors vote to float it on the Stock Exchange on Wednesday evening.
The only way the firm, valued at �500m, can afford to proceed is if the sole shareholder - Hull City Council - agrees to sell all or some of its shares to raise fresh investment. Hull's Labour councillors have fiercely resisted giving up what they term "social ownership" of the company. However, government pressure and company ambitions have forced their hand and it seems likely that they will agree to at least a partial sale of shares on Wednesday. Hull's unique telephone system, with its distinctive cream-coloured public call boxes, is the only survivor of experiments in town hall telephone systems that took place at the turn of the century. If the bid to float is successful, the company is poised to enter the fields of fibre optics, satellites and computer communications. | UK Contents
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