The House Communications Subcommittee locked down 10 a.m. Wednesday in 2123 Rayburn for an expected hearing on barriers to broadband infrastructure deployment. “With ever-increasing demand for broadband Internet access, whether fixed or mobile, the subcommittee will review proposals break down barriers preventing consumer access to this vital resource,” the committee said in a news release. “The proposals would streamline processes for getting access to federal lands and utility poles, require smart dig-once policies that take advantage of existing roadwork to deploy fiber conduit, and examine the bureaucracy that impedes private sector investment in broadband.” Lawmakers on multiple House committees raised the issue of “dig once” policies Thursday, including Communications Subcommittee ranking member Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., who has prioritized the issue in past sessions of Congress. In the Transportation Committee, Rep. John Garamendi, D-Calif., proposed an amendment to the Surface Transportation Reauthorization and Reform Act (HR-3763) during a Thursday markup. The amendment would have set up a process by which “the conduit would be laid in as that road was repaired or constructed,” he said, calling it “pretty simple” but with major economic development and public safety implications: “The cost is minor compared to the potential benefit,” Garamendi said. “Ms. Eshoo has introduced a similar bill that will eventually be discussed in committee.” Transportation Committee Chairman Bill Shuster, R-Pa., opposed the amendment, arguing it would be “imposing new mandates” on states. Garamendi disagreed but withdrew the amendment, promising “we’ll continue to work this.” In the Communications Subcommittee, Eshoo and Subcommittee Chairman Greg Walden, R-Ore., introduced the Broadband Conduit Deployment Act, an Eshoo bill that lacked GOP backing in the past. “Paving the way for smoother deployment of state-of-the-art-broadband networks has long been a goal for our subcommittee,” Walden said in a statement. “This legislation meets that goal and makes it easier to connect more Americans to this vital 21st century resource.” The American Cable Association, AT&T, CenturyLink, Incompas, Public Knowledge, TechFreedom and the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation lauded the bill. Similar provisions exist as part of a bipartisan bill that Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., is spearheading in the Senate. The bill “will further reduce the cost of laying thousands of miles of fiber optic lines by private businesses,” American Cable Association President Matt Polka said. The bill attracted 26 other lawmakers as co-sponsors, Eshoo’s spokesman told us. The backers are a mix of Democrats and Republicans, from Commerce Committee Vice Chairwoman Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., to Congressional Black Caucus Chairman G.K. Butterfield, D-N.C. Garamendi also backs the Eshoo/Walden bill.
Unless the inevitable widening schism in programming costs that would follow Charter Communications' purchases of Bright House Networks and Time Warner Cable can somehow be addressed, the FCC should reject the deals, Incompas said in an ex parte filing posted Tuesday in docket 15-149 on a meeting Tuesday at the group's conference in San Francisco between Gigi Sohn, counselor to Chairman Tom Wheeler, and Angie Kronenberg, Incompas general counsel. Incompas said it raised red flags about how the deals might affect the broadband market's competitive landscape. Charter's application lacks any kind of analysis of what the transactions would do to broadband competition and to the "intertwined markets" for linear video and broadband, Incompas said. Consumers prefer ISPs that also offer multichannel video services, but rising video costs are a big hurdle for small- and mid-sized ISPs interested in building out their broadband networks, Incompas said. Charter's and TWC's larger scales post-deals would mean lower programming costs for New Charter relative to potential broadband competition, resulting in "a substantial barrier to future broadband investment and competition in (New Charter's) footprint," the group, formerly known as Comptel, said.
Unless the inevitable widening schism in programming costs that would follow Charter Communications' purchases of Bright House Networks and Time Warner Cable can somehow be addressed, the FCC should reject the deals, Incompas said in an ex parte filing posted Tuesday in docket 15-149 on a meeting Tuesday at the group's conference in San Francisco between Gigi Sohn, counselor to Chairman Tom Wheeler, and Angie Kronenberg, Incompas general counsel. Incompas said it raised red flags about how the deals might affect the broadband market's competitive landscape. Charter's application lacks any kind of analysis of what the transactions would do to broadband competition and to the "intertwined markets" for linear video and broadband, Incompas said. Consumers prefer ISPs that also offer multichannel video services, but rising video costs are a big hurdle for small- and mid-sized ISPs interested in building out their broadband networks, Incompas said. Charter's and TWC's larger scales post-deals would mean lower programming costs for New Charter relative to potential broadband competition, resulting in "a substantial barrier to future broadband investment and competition in (New Charter's) footprint," the group, formerly known as Comptel, said.
SAN FRANCISCO -- Petitioners challenging the net neutrality order threw a “Hail Mary” in arguing the FCC was statutorily precluded from reclassifying broadband access as a Title II telecom service under the Communications Act, said Steptoe and Johnson attorney Markham Erickson. He represents Incompas (formerly Comptel), Level 3 and Netflix in defending the order. Erickson spoke at a Davis Wright net neutrality seminar Wednesday after the Comptel Plus conference.
SAN FRANCISCO -- Petitioners challenging the net neutrality order threw a “Hail Mary” in arguing the FCC was statutorily precluded from reclassifying broadband access as a Title II telecom service under the Communications Act, said Steptoe and Johnson attorney Markham Erickson. He represents Incompas (formerly Comptel), Level 3 and Netflix in defending the order. Erickson spoke at a Davis Wright net neutrality seminar Wednesday after the Comptel Plus conference.
SAN FRANCISCO -- Fiber deployment to customers is edging up due to market forces, and could expand more rapidly if government authorities would lower obstacles, said Comptel Plus panelists. Fiber to the Home Council President Heather Gold said the percentage of homes passed by fiber is only about 25 percent, but should approach 70 percent within five years.
SAN FRANCISCO -- Fiber deployment to customers is edging up due to market forces, and could expand more rapidly if government authorities would lower obstacles, said Comptel Plus panelists. Fiber to the Home Council President Heather Gold said the percentage of homes passed by fiber is only about 25 percent, but should approach 70 percent within five years.
SAN FRANCISCO – The FCC has “a lot more competition policy to go” and needs the support of Incompas and its members, as well as their customers' stories, said Gigi Sohn, counselor to Chairman Tom Wheeler at the Comptel Plus meeting Tuesday. “We're going to rely on you,” Sohn said, providing an overview of the Wheeler agenda on the incentive auction, special access, IP technology transition, broadband deployment, Lifeline, USF and video reform. “Keep telling those stories and we'll get more and more people on the side of competition and bigger, faster broadband,” she said.
Nearly every small and/or new multichannel video programming distributor has difficulty obtaining reasonably priced video programming, with a large minority of them seeing retransmission consent fees more than doubling in recent years, according to a 2015 video competition survey put out Tuesday by NTCA and Incompas, the recently renamed Comptel (see 1510190061). The survey is from Networks for Competition and Choice -- made up of Incompas, ITTA, NTCA and Public Knowledge -- which are jointly pushing for video rules changes. The groups worked together to oppose now-abandoned Comcast/Time Warner Cable, and now are focusing on the video marketplace, members told us. "It sort of grew out of everyone noticing we're all saying the same thing and experiencing the same difficulties," said Jill Canfield, NTCA vice president-legal and industry.
SAN FRANCISCO – The FCC has “a lot more competition policy to go” and needs the support of Incompas and its members, as well as their customers' stories, said Gigi Sohn, counselor to Chairman Tom Wheeler at the Comptel Plus meeting Tuesday. “We're going to rely on you,” Sohn said, providing an overview of the Wheeler agenda on the incentive auction, special access, IP technology transition, broadband deployment, Lifeline, USF and video reform. “Keep telling those stories and we'll get more and more people on the side of competition and bigger, faster broadband,” she said.