House Commerce Approves National Franchise Bill

By John Eggerton
Broadcasting & Cable

4/26/2006 6:42:00 PM

http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA6328577.html?display=Breaking+News


The House Commerce Committee, by an overwhelming vote of 42 to 12, has 
paved the way for the creation of national video franchises, though the 
bill itself still has a ways to travel before it becomes law.

The goal, say the bill's proponents including Committee Chairman Joe 
Barton, is to increase price and service competition to cable, while 
speeding the rollout of high-speed Internet service.

Both the House and Senate are revamping the 1996 Telecommunications Act to 
reflect the rise of the Internet to near-utility status and the 
government's compelling interest in promoting high-speed Internet access.

Opponents almost all of whom concede some video franchise reform is needed, 
say this bill will, instead, pave the way for telcos to cherry pick service 
while discriminating in the provision of Internet access, "fundamentally 
and detrimentally" changing the character of the Internet.

Whatever it will do, it won't be doing it just yet.

The bill must still pass the full House, where amendments can be 
reintroduced, then be reconciled with a Senate bill that will contain a lot 
more elements. Commerce Committee Chairman Joe Barton (R-Tex.) has almost 
guaranteed a bill will make it to the President's desk this session, daring 
reporters to bet against it. But at least one cable lobbyist privately 
advised this reporter to take that bet.

Not included in the bill are voted-down amendments that would have held 
national video franchisees to a build-out schedule and toughened 
prohibitions on red-lining--building out more attractive parts of a 
franchise and bypassing ones with less potential return on investment or, 
as Democrat Ed Markey puts it, "the other side of the tracks."

Still the bill as passed has language that requires telephone companies 
getting into video service to eventually serve all of a franchise, rather 
than allowing them to choose which parts of an area to offer service to, as 
the bill passed out of the Telecommunications Subcommittee allowed. That 
anti-redlining addition sat well with the cable industry, which had been 
pushing for it, but was not enough for Markey and others who wanted 
build-out requirements as well.

Also pleasing the cable industry was an amendment that was adopted that 
will allow cable companies to seek national franchises immediately if they 
currently have competition from an overbuilder.

Another amendment that was defeated would have prevented discrimination in 
service on the basis of race, color, creed, sex, or national origin. While 
everybody agreed they were against such discrimination, the amendment was 
voted down as unnecessary given that current civil rights laws already 
assured that. In addition, the amendment might have triggered a referral to 
the Judiciary Committee where, Barton said, "mischief" could be done to the 
bill which could delay its passage.

The committee voted 34-22 not to adopt an amendment toughening "network 
neutrality" provisions in the bill, an issue that has gained major traction 
and could resurface on the House floor and will almost certainly do so in 
the Senate version.

Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), who spearheaded the amendment, had argued that 
without the amendment, the bill would spell the "end of the Internet as we 
know it," allowing telephone companies to discriminate in Internet service 
and fundamentally change the character of the Internet.

He and others warned during mark-up of the bill Wednesday that there would 
be backlash from constituents. Chairman Joe Barton strongly opposed the 
amendment, saying the bill already contained sufficient protections for 
Internet access--through FCC adjudicatory powers--and that anything more 
specific would be unnecessarily preemptive.

Net neutrality backer Media Access Project was not surprised, but saw 
hopeful signs for adding net neutrality in the Senate version of the bill, 
buoyed by the recent lobbying blitz by 'neutrality' forces.

"This outcome was expected," said MAP President Andrew Schwartzman, "but we 
are somewhat surprised - and encouraged - by the progress that net 
neutrality advocates have made in the last few weeks.

"A broad-based industry and citizen coalition supporting net neutrality is 
rapidly gaining steam.  Prospects in the Senate are looking better and better."

Savetheinternet.com, one of the groups that had just coalesced around the 
issue, called the vote a sell-out and vowed to "continue rallying public 
support for Internet freedom as the legislation moves to the full House and 
Senate."

Withdrawn was an amendment to help law enforcement track online child 
pornographers. Barton said there were some germaneness issues. But he 
promised to get it in the bill before it is voted on in the House.

Verizon lobbyist Peter Davidson, senior VP for federal legislative affairs, 
pushed for swift passage sans any net neutrality additions. "Today, 
consumers won yet another decisive victory with committee passage of the 
video choice bill," he said. "The House should now pass, without delay, 
legislation to empower video consumers with more choices, and not weigh 
down this important reform with other issues -- such as mandating 
government regulation of the Internet."


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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