November 2015

Federal Communications Commission
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time
http://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2015/db1123/DA-1...

Agenda:

  • Overview – The path to the reverse auction
  • Step-by-step review of the “Application to Participate in the Reverse Incentive Auction” (FCC Form 177):
    • How to complete and submit the application
    • Submission of channel sharing agreements
    • Submission of ownership information
  • Summary of the “Red Light” rule
  • Relinquishment options
  • Question & answer session


Federal Communications Commission
December 3, 2015
1:00 pm
http://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2015/db1123/DA-1...

At the December meeting the Council will hear progress reports from each working group.



Income disparities holding back US Internet adoption

New Census data from the 2014 American Community Survey reveal how uneven broadband adoption remains throughout the country. While several factors can weigh positively or negatively on adoption, including commute patterns and levels of educational attainment, income has perhaps the biggest effect.

Nationally, most households (75.1 percent) had a broadband internet subscription in 2014, but the gap between lower-income and higher-income households remains large. For example, 92.1 percent of households earning $75,000 or more annually had a broadband subscription, almost double that of households earning under $10,000 each year (46.3 percent). Adoption rates among households with incomes between $10,000 and $35,000 were also similarly low by comparison. These disparities aren’t going away, either. While many public and civic leaders focus on expanding access to fiber-speed internet—a necessary step in itself—they shouldn’t overlook the need to address adoption gaps. Nationally, a reformed version of the Federal Communication Commission’s Lifeline program could help, but incorporating broadband into its purview remains a work in progress. Since internet regulation is highly variable across the country, state and local leaders must tackle this challenge with programs targeted to their markets. Incentivizing physical roll-out in low-income neighborhoods and creating digital skills curricula are some of the promising options, and markets can follow the lead from innovators like Minnesota, Seattle, and elsewhere. Ultimately, collaborative strategies at all levels of the public and private sector—and across all geographies—are crucial to expand the reach of the country’s digital information networks. If the country wants to repeat the shared economic prosperity of the 20th century as we advance further in the 21st, we don’t really have a choice.

Towards Digital Constitutionalism? Mapping Attempts to Craft an Internet Bill of Rights

The idea of an “Internet Bill of Rights” is by no means a new one: in fact, serious efforts to draft such a document can be traced at least as far back as the mid-1990s. Though the form, function and scope of such initiatives has evolved, the concept has had remarkable staying power, and now — two full decades later — principles which were once radically aspirational have begun to crystallize into law.

In this paper, we propose a unified term to describe these efforts using the umbrella of “digital constitutionalism” and conduct an analysis of thirty initiatives spanning from 1999 to 2015. These initiatives have great differences, and range from advocacy statements to official positions of intergovernmental organizations to proposed legislation. However, in their own way, they are each engaged in the same conversation, seeking to advance a relatively comprehensive set of rights, principles, and governance norms for the Internet, and are usefully understood as part of a broader proto-constitutional discourse. While this paper does not attempt to capture every facet of this complex political behavior, we hope to offer a preliminary map of the landscape, provide a comparative examination of these diverse efforts toward digital constitutionalism, and — most importantly — provoke new questions for further research and study.

The paper proceeds in four parts, beginning with a preliminary definition for the concept of digital constitutionalism and a summary of our research methodology. Second, we present our core observations related to the full range of substantive rights, principles and themes proposed by these initiatives. Third, we build on that analysis to explore their perceived targets, the key actors and deliberative processes which have informed their character, and the changes in their substantive content over time. Finally, we look forward, identifying future directions for research in this rapidly changing policy arena and for the broader Internet governance community.

While 6th Circuit Reviews Appeal, Organized Attack Begins In House

As the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals considers the Federal Communications Commission's decision to roll back Tennessee and North Carolina anti-muni laws, elected officials opposed to local authority are mounting an assault to head off possible enabling legislation. Their first target is the House of Representatives.

Gov Nikki Haley (R-SC), Attorney General Roy Cooper (D-NC), Gov Bill Haslam (R-TN), and Attorney General Luther Strange (R-AL) all sent letters to of the House Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton (R-MI). Their letters express derision at the thought of allowing local communities the ability to make decisions for themselves when it comes to ensuring local businesses and residents have the Internet access they need.

Sens Daines, Capito, King Call on FCC to Increase Transparency, Enforcement for Rural Broadband Funding

Senators Steve Daines (R-MT), Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) and Angus King (I-ME) urged the Federal Communications Commission to consider strict enforcement measures and increase transparency for the recently announced Connect America Fund funding.

The FCC recently announced more than $1.5 billion in annual funding as part of the second phase of the Connect America Fund to expand and support broadband service in rural areas. The senators call on the FCC to provide a publically available list of accountability measures for proper use of the funds, and to explain what enforcement mechanisms will be implemented if carriers fail to meet their obligation under the Connect America Fund program.

FCC’s Intergovernmental Advisory Committee Releases Lifeline Reform Recommendations

The Federal Communications Commission’s Intergovernmental Advisory Committee released recommendations on November 19, 2015, in response to the Lifeline Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.

The recommendations include: making broadband service eligible for Lifeline support; eliminating the ETC status requirement for Lifeline providers; adopting appropriate customer service requirements to ensure that Lifeline providers adhere to policies and procedures that support Lifeline consumers; and streamlining the enrollment and verification process in concert with other federal programs, among other things.

[Gary Resnick is the chair of the FCC’s Intergovernmental Advisory Committee]