Submitted: April 17, 2008 - 9:22pm
Source:
Multichannel News
Author:
Linda Haugsted
Cable operators in Iowa successfully promoted clean-up legislation to 2007's state franchising reform bill, which clarifies that cities, not counties, can collect franchise fees. The bill, which moved franchising authority out of the hands of local governments in order to speed market entry for new competitors, had defined municipalities to include counties, meaning those governments could have laid claim to franchise fees for the first time, according to Tom Graves, executive vice president of the Iowa Cable and Telecommunications Association.
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA6552350.html?nid=4262
Links to Sources
Related
- Iowa Judge Nixes New Fees
- Court Rules Against Iowa Cities Over Franchise Fees
- California Cities Seek A Veto for Video Bill
- Iowa Lawsuits Target Franchise Fees
- NATOA Cries Foul Over FCC's ‘Shot Clock’ Violation
- Florida’s Turn for Franchise Reform?
- Local Lobbyists Launch Telecom Reform Site
- Illinois Gov. Signs Franchise Law
- California OKs Statewide-Franchise Rules
- PA Statewide-Franchise Bills Move Forward
- Local Government Groups Oppose FCC Video Franchise Order
- Verizon Still in Local Calif. Franchise Talks
- Franchise Bills Dominate State Debates
- Operators Opt For Calif. Oversight
- PEG Has Blurry Future In Golden State
Ratings
Recommendation:
0
Informative:
0
Accuracy:
0
Login to rate this headline.

