Yeah, thanks for the link, I just found the same article and came back to post.
One executive at a time when Verizon didn't have wifi calling, which could easily be understood as underplaying a slight weakness compared with other carriers.
Fwiw, their iPhone implementation from a technology point of view is fantastic - I can now make and receive calls in places where the coverage is weak (sorry, Mr. Shammo, but your coverage is not as ubiquitous as you think or say it is). But the usability of one part is crap. You have to register your physical location for the purposes of 911, but you can't use location services to fill in the address, it won't store addresses you've already entered if you want to switch between two places, etc.
I wonder if the 911 issue is the big reason they're dragging their heels? One person who calls 911 with the wrong location and maybe Verizon feels they'd be sued if there is a bad outcome?