Today is the one-year anniversary of two of the biggest decisions made by the Federal Communications Commission under Democratic Chairman Tom Wheeler.
On February 26, 2015, the FCC voted 3-2 along party lines to enforce net neutrality rules and preempt state laws that prevent the expansion of municipal broadband networks. But whether either decision will survive past Wheeler’s chairmanship is still an open question. Republicans in Congress have tried to overturn them, and lawsuits against the commission are still pending.Trade groups representing Internet service providers sued to halt the net neutrality rules and a related reclassification of broadband as a Title II common carrier service. Judges at the US Court of Appeals in Washington, DC, heard oral arguments in December and could issue a decision in the next few months (though no one knows exactly when).
North Carolina and Tennessee sued the FCC to preserve state laws that prevent municipal broadband networks from expanding to surrounding cities and towns. Oral arguments in that case are scheduled for March 17.
Meanwhile, Republicans have made numerous efforts to eliminate or minimize the impact of the FCC’s rulings, so far unsuccessfully. Some proposals would have simply wiped out the net neutrality rules entirely, such as one bill introduced last March called the “Internet Freedom Act.” Yesterday, presidential candidates Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio signed onto a similar bill to kill the net neutrality rules.
Other proposals are more subtle but could significantly reduce the FCC’s power to enforce rules meant to protect consumers.
One Republican-sponsored bill would forbid “rate regulation,” but without defining the term, raising concerns that ISPs could impose data caps in discriminatory ways or charge prices that the FCC would otherwise declare “unjust” or “unreasonable.” This bill was approved by the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on communications this month despite objections from Democrats.
The FCC’s main purpose in approving net neutrality rules was to bar ISPs from blocking or throttling traffic or giving priority to Web services in exchange for payment. But there were other aspects, such as enhanced transparency requirements that force operators to provide more information about the plans they offer and their network performance. While the FCC temporarily gave small Internet providers an exemption from the enhanced transparency requirements, Republicans in Congress have been trying to make the exemption permanent and broaden it to cover more ISPs.



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