House Oversight Hearing Scheduled for FCC Commissioners July 12
Citing its investigation into waste, fraud and abuse in the Lifeline low-income Universal Service Fund program, the House Communications Subcommittee has scheduled an Federal Communications Commission oversight hearing, one of numerous FCC oversight hearings Republicans have called since the beginning of 2016. The subcommittee said the July 12 hearing will feature all five commissioners. It left no doubt about where Republican leadership stands on the program. The hearing notice said the members of the committee "will seek an update from the commissioners on the mismanagement of the Lifeline program." Likely at least some of the members of that FCC witness panel will not concede what they are updating is mismanagement.
The hearing will also look at proposed broadband privacy rules, the set-top box proposal and what the committee leadership say are "ongoing" FCC transparency lapses, a charge leveled by FCC Republican members as well. “The FCC continues to push the limits of congressional patience, grab jurisdiction from other agencies, and leave the marketplace bewildered and confused. Pledges of openness and transparency have failed to materialize. Meanwhile, it appears not just Republicans on the commission are kept in the dark on major policy proposals. This is not make believe – the consequences are real and the FCC must do better,” said Subcommittee Chairman Greg Walden (R-OR). “The upcoming hearing will provide our members an important opportunity to once again conduct oversight of an agency that needs reorganization."
House Oversight Hearing Scheduled for FCC Commissioners July 12