REVIEW & OUTLOOK  MARCH 15, 2010
Broadband Trojan Horse
The FCC has a new plan but doesn't want a vote.
Health care isn't the only policy arena in which the Obama Administration
aims to ram through controversial new rules. The Federal Communications
Commission is set to unveil a "national broadband plan" opposed by industry
and without any of the five commissioners voting on it.

Last year, Congress directed the FCC to develop a plan to make high-speed
Internet available to more people. But given that 95% of Americans already
have access to some form of broadband-and 94% can choose from at least four
wireless carriers-rapid broadband deployment is already occurring without
new government mandates.

Since 1998, the FCC has classified broadband as an "information service"
subject to less regulation than traditional telecom services. The Supreme
Court's Brand X decision in 2005 validated that classification, and the
upshot has been more investment, innovation and competition among Internet
service providers, all to the benefit of consumers.

In 2009 alone, broadband providers spent nearly $60 billion on their
networks. Absent any evidence of market failure, the best course for the FCC
is to report back to Congress that a broadband industrial policy is
unnecessary. Instead, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski is moving to increase
the reach of his agency and expand government control of the Web.

Among other things, he wants broadband services reclassified so the FCC can
more heavily regulate them. The national broadband plan, to be unveiled
tomorrow, will call for using the federal Universal Service Fund to
subsidize broadband deployment. The USF currently subsidizes phone service
in rural areas, and Mr. Genachowski knows that current law prevents it from
being used to subsidize broadband unless broadband is reclassified as a
telecom service. Congress ought to be wary of letting the FCC expand its
jurisdiction through back doors like this.

Mr. Genachowski wants more control over broadband providers so that he can
implement "net neutrality" rules that would dictate how AT&T, Verizon and
other Internet service providers manage their networks. To date, Congress
has given the FCC no such authority. Nor has the agency had success in
court. Based on oral arguments last month, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals
is almost certain to rule against the FCC in a case involving Comcast's
network management.

At the urging of liberal advocacy groups like Free Press and Public
Knowledge, Mr. Genachowski also wants to use the national broadband plan as
a vehicle for returning to the bad old 1990s era of "open access"
regulations. He recommends forcing major broadband providers like Time
Warner Cable and Qwest to share their high-speed networks with smaller
competitors at federally set rates. We can't think of a better way to reduce
capital investment and slow the build-out of high-speed networks.

Mr. Genachowski's proposals are meeting resistance from telecom companies
and fellow commissioners, which is reason enough to put his broadband plan
to an agency vote. Instead, the chairman is urging his colleagues to sign a
general statement that endorses the goals of the plan and ignores the
details.

"Instead of risking a split vote among the five regulators on approving the
plan," reports National Journal, "Genachowski is seeking consensus on a
joint statement, which sources said would provide him with some political
cover for the controversies that are certain to be triggered by some of the
plan's recommendations."

The FCC chairman and his staff have spent the better part of a year
preparing a major report while keeping his colleagues largely in the dark.
What happened to the Obama Administration's promise to be open and
transparent?

Copyright 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Regards,

Jeff


Jeff Broadwick
Sales Manager, ImageStream
800-813-5123 x106     (US/Can)
+1 574-935-8484 x106  (Int'l)
+1 574-935-8488       (Fax) 



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