http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2006/10/muniwireless.htm

For Release: October 10, 2006

Should Municipalities Provide Wireless Internet Service?
FTC Staff Report Provides Guidance to Promote Competition

Improving consumer access to broadband Internet service is an  
important goal for federal, state, and local governments. The  
possibility of competitive risks arising from municipal participation  
in wireless Internet service, however, calls for a careful analysis  
by policymakers considering if, and to what extent, a municipality  
should involve itself in such service, according to a report prepared  
by Federal Trade Commission staff.

The report, “Municipal Provision of Wireless Internet,” offers  
guidance for policymakers considering these questions. According to  
Maureen K. Ohlhausen, Director of the FTC s Office of Policy  
Planning, “Many leaders in the U.S. acknowledge that broadband  
Internet service is crucial to the American people and our economy.  
However, municipal provision of wireless Internet service raises  
important competition issues that policymakers should consider when  
determining whether and how municipalities should provide that service.”

Rather than attempt to provide a one-size-fits all answer for every  
municipality, the report sets forth a decision-tree framework with a  
variety of options, recognizing that the potential benefits and risks  
of municipal involvement in wireless Internet may vary with a  
municipality s circumstances, such as the availability of broadband  
in the area and possible improvements in providing government  
services through increased broadband access.

Guiding this approach is a concern for competition principles, and  
the decision-tree framework seeks to reduce the possible competitive  
harms arising from a municipality operating as both a market  
participant and a regulator. By identifying a range of operating  
models, the framework outlines a variety of options that offer  
reduced competitive risks while still achieving benefits from  
increased broadband access. The report also discusses process  
considerations, such as transparency and accountability, that can  
improve the decision-making process overall.

The report describes the various wireless Internet technologies  
currently in use or under development, identifies a range of  
operating models that have been used to provide or facilitate  
wireless Internet service, summarizes the major arguments for and  
against municipal participation, and describes various types of  
legislative proposals related to municipal Internet service.

The report is the first publicly released work from the FTC’s  
Internet Access Task Force, convened by Chairman Deborah Platt  
Majoras in August 2006. Led by Ohlhausen with participants from  
throughout the agency, the Task Force seeks to enhance the FTC’s  
expertise in the area of Internet access, which has become an  
important public issue. The Task Force currently is studying the so- 
called “net neutrality” issue.

The FTC and its staff have engaged in advocacy related to competition  
in the cable industry and the allocation of radio bandwidth spectrum  
before state and federal entities. The FTC also has reviewed numerous  
cable industry mergers, and mergers involving providers of Internet  
technology and content. To prepare the report, FTC staff researched  
technologies, legislative proposals, and case studies of  
municipalities that have deployed, or are in the process of  
deploying, wireless Internet systems.

The Commission vote to authorize the staff to file the report was  
5-0, with Commissioner Jon Leibowitz issuing a separate concurring  
statement that can be found as a link to this press release on the  
FTC’s Web site.

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