The FCC must address the overall spending of the USF, not use “savings” from universal service reform to expand other USF programs, FCC Commissioner Mike O'Rielly said Friday in remarks to the commission’s Consumer Advisory Committee (CAC). O'Rielly said he wanted to lay down this marker as the agency takes up Lifeline reform. He also suggested that at least one of the CAC members should come from a group representing taxpayers.
NARUC planned Friday to comment on the FCC net neutrality NPRM, adding to the more than 1 million comments already filed on the NPRM. (See separate report in this issue.) NARUC General Counsel Brad Ramsay told us Friday he was still writing the group’s comments but said he anticipated they would “undoubtedly quote” a net neutrality resolution NARUC’s board passed Wednesday at its meeting in Dallas (WID July 17 p13).
NARUC planned Friday to comment on the FCC net neutrality NPRM, adding to the more than 1 million comments already filed on the NPRM. (See separate report in this issue.) NARUC General Counsel Brad Ramsay told us Friday he was still writing the group’s comments but said he anticipated they would “undoubtedly quote” a net neutrality resolution NARUC’s board passed Wednesday at its meeting in Dallas (CD July 17 p17).
For all the last-minute negotiations, partisan bickering and congressional pressure involved in Friday’s FCC E-rate modernization order (CD July 14 p1) -- not to mention the sweep of bringing Wi-Fi connections to millions of schoolchildren nationally -- several major issues facing the program were left on the table, advocates involved in the debate told us. “This was a tough sell, but the next set of deliberations will be even harder,” said Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education and former West Virginia Democratic governor, who supported FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s proposal. “There will be an incredible amount of debate."
For all the last-minute negotiations, partisan bickering and congressional pressure involved in Friday’s FCC E-rate modernization order (WID July 14 p3) -- not to mention the sweep of bringing Wi-Fi connections to millions of schoolchildren nationally -- several major issues facing the program were left on the table, advocates involved in the debate told us. “This was a tough sell, but the next set of deliberations will be even harder,” said Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education and former West Virginia Democratic governor, who supported FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s proposal. “There will be an incredible amount of debate."
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler has sidestepped likely partisan Capitol Hill battles surrounding E-rate for now due to the nature of his overhaul, apparently focusing on Wi-Fi and not immediately touching the fund’s contribution rate and size, lobbyists and observers told us. They predict political rancor will come in later phases of the E-rate revamp when those parts will be inevitably addressed. The prime Hill critics now are Democratic architects of the original 1996 Telecom Act E-rate provisions, who question the proposal in more granular ways and urge the agency to listen as E-rate beneficiaries express fears, sending a critical letter Tuesday. The FCC will vote on Wheeler’s item Friday, and it’s been controversial among FCC Republicans. (See separate report in this issue.)
FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai said in a statement that negotiations between his office and Chairman Tom Wheeler over E-rate broke down Tuesday, when Wheeler’s staff “rejected almost every suggestion that I made.” Wheeler’s E-rate modernization proposal could still be approved when the commission is scheduled to take it up Friday, Pai’s Chief of Staff Matthew Berry told us. But he expressed disappointment it would likely be along a party-line vote with the support of the commission’s two Democrats.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler has sidestepped likely partisan Capitol Hill battles surrounding E-rate for now due to the nature of his overhaul, apparently focusing on Wi-Fi and not immediately touching the fund’s contribution rate and size, lobbyists and observers told us. They predict political rancor will come in later phases of the E-rate revamp when those parts will be inevitably addressed. The prime Hill critics now are Democratic architects of the original 1996 Telecom Act E-rate provisions, who question the proposal in more granular ways and urge the agency to listen as E-rate beneficiaries express fears, sending a critical letter Tuesday. The FCC will vote on Wheeler’s item Friday, and it’s been controversial among FCC Republicans. (See separate report in this issue.)
FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai said in a statement that negotiations between his office and Chairman Tom Wheeler over E-rate broke down Tuesday, when Wheeler’s staff “rejected almost every suggestion that I made.” Wheeler’s E-rate modernization proposal could still be approved when the commission is scheduled to take it up Friday, Pai’s Chief of Staff Matthew Berry told us. But he expressed disappointment it would likely be along a party-line vote with the support of the commission’s two Democrats.
A group of rate-of-return regulated rural local exchange carriers wants broadband access for rural and urban areas on similar conditions, rates and terms within USF budget parameters, it told the FCC. The Small Company Coalition, which has described itself as a national group of rural telecom and broadband providers (http://bit.ly/1nC5EkH), asked the agency to avoid unfunded mandates or retroactive rulemaking. It said “voice traffic will never go away completely,” as it declines at a 5-15 percent rate annually and “networks are not being used less, but instead are being used more than ever,” in an attachment (http://bit.ly/1jLisUo) to a coalition letter to the commission posted Monday in docket 10-90 (http://bit.ly/1o08FxY). “IP and bandwidth is replacing TDM and voice traffic at an alarming rate.” The coalition said its proposal would work with one from ITTA, a group of mid-sized telcos, and rate-of-return companies could choose which model works best. The coalition said it has “refined and improved” its plan after getting feedback from industry stakeholders and to reflect issues raised in the FCC Connect America Fund order (CD June 12 p7). The materials didn’t identify the members of the coalition.