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Khali Henderson
Group Editor, Telecom Division and Editor in Chief, PHONE+
khenderson@vpico.com
Cara Sievers
Assistant Editor,
csievers@vpico.com
Kelly Teal
Business and Regulatory Editor,
kteal@vpico.com 
 
 

Raise a Glass to John Sumpter
02/26/2008 16:13

Kelly Teal

It’s so easy to feel insulated from real life when I’m traveling to events like COMPTEL and NARUC. I’ve walked through so many hotel hallways this month that they all look the same. Food no longer is distinguishable by dish – it’s all the same starch, protein, vegetable or chocolate and red wine. Events and faces and names blur. I wonder when I’ll finish falling through the rabbit hole. And then bad news is passed on. And the sadness I feel is genuine, about the most genuine emotion one can experience in an insulated world that doesn’t shield us from death.

I’m talking about John Sumpter, whom I met at COMPTEL in the fall of 2005. John died of cancer in late January; his passing was announced this week at COMPTEL. He was a lawyer, for the longest time, for Pac-West Telecomm. Before that, he had worked for AT&T. But for me, he was the teddy bear masquerading as a grumpy old man who, when I was a baby telecom reporter, took the time to sketch the entire history of telecommunications on a series of 4x6 notepad pages. We hung out at the PHONE+/xchange booth for something like an hour that afternoon (and he was worried about taking up too much of my time! Are you kidding??). I still have those sketches in my office – crude pencil drawings of telegraph poles and the black rotary phones AT&T leased in the ‘60s, the cordless landline phone, the mobile phone. John gave me an education – and, subsequently, story ideas – that I will always appreciate.

And I know it’s not just me. John was very special to others in our industry.

John will be (unable-to-quantify) missed. His sense of humor, drier than a cracker, damn near made me double over. The kicker was that he combined a knowledgeable brain with a big heart. There are several people like John in my life and with John’s passing, I am reminded to tell them that I treasure them, just as I treasure the memory of the time John spent with me, for no benefit to him at all.

User Comments !

Kelly, 

This article reminded me how small and personal this industry has become.  The fact that you took the time to chronicle a relationship to which we can all relate working in the channel is a reminder of what we are all here for... revenue, of course, but even more so... genuine personal and professional growth - and, if we are really fortunate, meeting a trusted friend and advisor along the way.  Thanks for the reminder.

Posted by: Greg Plum | February 28 2008 14:10:07


Kelly, thank you for this!  I am sad to learn about John's passing.  I worked with him for a number of years at PacWest and yes, his dry sense of humor - legendary!  John will be missed.

This really puts laser focus as a reminder that we should stay in touch with the folks that touch our hearts - It is so easy to be too busy and time and people just slip away.

Posted by: Trace Williams | March 07 2008 11:41:09




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