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Telco bill go ahead draws mixed reviews

By: Grant Gross, IDG News Service (Washington Bureau)(04/28/06)

A wide-ranging telecommunications reform bill approved by a US House committee late Wednesday will drive down cable TV prices and increase demand for broadband services, said supporters of the legislation.

The Communications Opportunity, Promotion, and Enhancement Act (COPE) creates a national franchise process for telecom carriers, such as Verizon Communications Inc. and AT&T Inc., which are rolling out television services based on IP (Internet Protocol) in competition with cable TV. Currently, new providers of cable-like TV services must get approval in every city where they want to provide service.

Verizon cheered the House Energy and Commerce Committee's vote to approve the bill and send it to the full House floor. The company and the United States Telecom Association also applauded the committee's vote to reject an amendment that would have prohibited broadband providers from blocking or impairing their customers' access to competing Web sites or applications.

The net neutrality amendment, offered by Representative Ed Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat, would have also required broadband providers that set aside bandwidth for services such as IPTV to offer the same bandwidth to competing services. Supporters of net neutrality say that without a strong law, broadband providers could block content from competitors, or charge companies extra for their content to have top priority.

The House should pass the bill and not weigh it down with issues such as "mandating government regulation of the Internet," Peter Davidson, Verizon senior vice president for federal legislative affairs, said in a statement.

Net neutrality advocates said they were disappointed in the committee's vote on the Markey amendment. The approved telecom bill says broadband providers should not block or impair competing content, but it would allow the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to investigate blocking abuses only after the fact, and it would prohibit the FCC from creating new net neutrality rules.

Supporters including Public Knowledge, a consumer group focused on online rights, said it will continue to fight for a net neutrality law.

"We are disappointed but not surprised that the committee voted to turn over the future of the Internet to the telephone and cable industry," Gigi Sohn, Public Knowledge's president, said by e-mail. "Neither of those two sectors contributed to the creative development of the Internet, and neither is known for innovation. They are known for their desire to control what goes over their networks."

Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, has introduced a stand-alone net neutrality bill, and two other senators have floated a second proposal.

The bill, sponsored by committee Chairman Joe Barton, a Texas Republican, also requires VOIP (voice over IP) providers to offer customers enhanced 911 emergency dialing service, and it allows municipal governments to offer broadband data and video services.

Large broadband providers have fought municipal Wi-Fi deployments, but the committee rejected an amendment offered by Representative Lee Terry, a Nebraska Republican, which would have grandfathered in the 14 states that have passed laws outlawing municipal broadband services.

Barton doesn't expect many city governments to offer broadband services, but said they should have the opportunity, especially in areas where commercial providers are slow to offer service.

If the full House passes the bill, it would then go to the Senate, where it would go through committee hearings. Congressional leaders have targeted Oct. 6 as the last day of business for the year, and Congress will not be in session for most of the month of August.

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