In a move FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler and the commission's Democratic majority said would bring more broadband and Wi-Fi connections to schools and libraries, commissioners on a party-line 3-2 vote Thursday raised E-rate’s annual spending cap by $1.5 billion. They signaled their intent to approve another reform aimed at giving people more access to the Internet, adding broadband to Lifeline (see 1411120026). Republican commissioners, while backing the aim of E-rate, opposed raising the spending cap.
In what Communications Act Title II opponents say illustrates a split among progressives on net neutrality, Rev. Jesse Jackson urged FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler at a meeting Thursday not to base rules on Title II, according to an as yet still unposted ex parte notice. Jackson, echoing concerns by minority groups as well as by broadband providers like AT&T, told Wheeler and top agency aides he feared reclassification “would harm investment in broadband infrastructure, which would reduce broadband deployment … in minority communities,” said TechFreedom’s ex parte report on the meeting given to us. The meeting included what one of the participants, Minority Media and Telecommunications Council Vice President Nicol Turner-Lee, called a group of “strange bedfellows” that included net neutrality groups and free market advocates like the Free State Foundation.
In what Communications Act Title II opponents say illustrates a split among progressives on net neutrality, Rev. Jesse Jackson urged FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler at a meeting Thursday not to base rules on Title II, according to an as yet still unposted ex parte notice. Jackson, echoing concerns by minority groups as well as by broadband providers like AT&T, told Wheeler and top agency aides he feared reclassification “would harm investment in broadband infrastructure, which would reduce broadband deployment … in minority communities,” said TechFreedom’s ex parte report on the meeting given to us. The meeting included what one of the participants, Minority Media and Telecommunications Council Vice President Nicol Turner-Lee, called a group of “strange bedfellows” that included net neutrality groups and free market advocates like the Free State Foundation.
Top telecom issues set for discussion at NARUC’s annual meeting this week in San Francisco include states’ authority under Communications Act Section 706, 911 reliability, the USF contribution base and municipal broadband, NARUC members said in interviews.
Top telecom issues set for discussion at NARUC’s annual meeting this week in San Francisco include states’ authority under Communications Act Section 706, 911 reliability, the USF contribution base and municipal broadband, NARUC members said in interviews.
Going into more detail about the issues he sees facing a Title II approach than he has said publicly, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler told public interest advocates that the agency would have to grapple with its legal authority to impose net neutrality rules on wireless, given a section of the Communications Act that some say prohibits treating mobile as common carriers, said three people who attended the Nov. 10 meeting. Wheeler also raised questions about the impact reclassification would have on privacy, according to the attendees, as well as an issue commissioners Mike O'Rielly and Ajit Pai brought up Friday at a Free State Foundation panel discussion on net neutrality: Would broadband providers have to begin paying into the USF?
Going into more detail about the issues he sees facing a Title II approach than he has said publicly, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler told public interest advocates that the agency would have to grapple with its legal authority to impose net neutrality rules on wireless, given a section of the Communications Act that some say prohibits treating mobile as common carriers, said three people who attended the Nov. 10 meeting. Wheeler also raised questions about the impact reclassification would have on privacy, according to the attendees, as well as an issue commissioners Mike O'Rielly and Ajit Pai brought up Friday at a Free State Foundation panel discussion on net neutrality: Would broadband providers have to begin paying into the USF?
Speakers strongly disagreed over whether the Telecommunications Act of 1996 requires a rewrite or, as some preferred to say, an update. Representatives from the New America Foundation’s Open Technology Institute and Computer & Communications Industry disputed the idea that any real overhaul is necessary, while an analyst from the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation insisted a full rewrite is warranted.
Speakers strongly disagreed over whether the Telecommunications Act of 1996 requires a rewrite or, as some preferred to say, an update. Representatives from the New America Foundation’s Open Technology Institute and Computer & Communications Industry disputed the idea that any real overhaul is necessary, while an analyst from the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation insisted a full rewrite is warranted.
USTelecom petitioned the FCC to give ILECs a break on various legacy rules so they can concentrate on the buildout of fiber and modern communications networks. The Monday petition has a list of rules for which it seeks commission forbearance.