The Battle Over Government-Run Internet Heats Up at FCC
The Battle
Over Government-Run Internet Heats Up at FCC
A Republican aide claims the federal agency can' t overturn state restrictions.
By Brendan Sasso
August 20, 2014 If Federal Communications Commission
Chairman Tom Wheeler wants to stop states from blocking city-run broadband, he' ll likely have to override Republican opposition to
do it.
In a speech Wednesday, a top Republican FCC aide argued
that the agency lacks the authority to overturn state laws on the issue. More
than 20 states, at the behest of cable and telecom industry lobbyists, have restricted
the ability of cities to build their own broadband networks.
Matthew Berry, the chief of staff to Republican FCC
Commissioner Ajit Pai, argued that cities and towns are just
"appendages" of state governments. States are free to restrict local
policymaking as they see fit, Berry
argued.
He acknowledged that the federal government can preempt
state laws, but only through a "clear statement" from Congress.
Without that congressional authorization, the FCC can' t
take action, Berry
said.
The Republican aide implied that Wheeler is only
contemplating action on the issue as a way to tamp down liberal outrage over
his proposal for weaker net-neutrality regulations.
"We do not have the bandwidth to waste on a
symbolic, feel-good effort that appears designed to appease a political
constituency that is unhappy with where the FCC is headed on other
issues," Berry said at a conference of state legislators in Minneapolis.
He warned that the FCC will only lose in court if it tries to act against state
laws.
In letters to members of Congress, Wheeler has said
federal preemption is "not a step to be taken lightly" and that the
agency would examine each state law individually.
But he has insisted that he has the authority to overturn
the laws, which he argues restrict competition and leave consumers with slower
Internet service.
Section 706 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 gives
the FCC the authority to "promote the deployment" of high-speed
Internet. State restrictions on local Internet projects may be in violation of
that provision, according to Wheeler. The legal question is whether the
provision gives the agency "clear" authority to strike down state
laws.
The agency is considering petitions from Chattanooga ,
Tenn. , and Wilson , N.C. ,
to overturn state restrictions so they can expand their municipal projects.
Internet providers and many state lawmakers argue that
the city-run projects can waste taxpayer money. But Wheeler and congressional
Democrats argue the projects can boost economic development by providing
high-speed Internet access to local businesses.
The projects are often built in areas without high-speed
Internet service from commercial providers.
"I believe that it is in the best interests of
consumers and competition that the FCC exercises its power to preempt state
laws that ban or restrict competition from community broadband," Wheeler
wrote in a June blog post. "Given the opportunity, we will do so."
http://www.nationaljournal.com/tech/the-battle-over-government-run-internet-heats-up-at-fcc-20140820
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