USA TODAY US Edition

Washington state passes own rules for Net neutrality

But state likely will face court battle against FCC

- Brett Molina

Washington became the first state to pass its own laws governing Net neutrality, countering the U.S. government’s repeal of national regulation­s preventing Internet service providers from blocking or throttling content.

“We know that when D.C. fails to act, Washington state has to do so,” Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said before signing the measure, the Associated Press reported. “We know how important this is.”

Inslee, a Democrat, signed the law protecting Net-neutrality rules within the state on Monday. The new legislatio­n, which passed with bipartisan support, cements into state law the rules set by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission in 2015.

The FCC’s rules prohibited Internet Service Providers from blocking legal content, throttling traffic or prioritizi­ng content on their broadband networks.

In December, Republican commission­ers successful­ly overturned those rules, voting to replace them with a looser set of requiremen­ts that ISPs disclose any blocking or prioritiza­tion of their own content.

The repeal, supported by FCC Chairman Ajit Pai and the major cable and telecom companies and opposed by large and small tech Internet companies, garnered intense public interest.

State attorneys general have sued to overturn the FCC’s new rules. Democratic lawmakers, consumer groups and other supporters of the Obamaera rules are also pushing for a Congressio­nal Review Act measure to

“We know that when D.C. fails to act, Washington state has to do so.” Gov. Jay Inslee

reinstate the old rules.

ISPs including AT&T and Comcast have said they won’t block or throttle legal websites with the relaxed rules but left open the possibilit­y of charging more for some content. They’ve argued the 2015 rules were too burdensome and held back investment­s.

Some states are passing their own laws. Washington’s law will take effect June 6, two months after the FCC’s new rules are slated to go into effect. However, the FCC’s order bars state laws from contradict­ing the federal government’s approach, setting up the possibilit­y that state efforts like Washington’s will wind up in court.

❚ Last month, the Oregon House of Representa­tives passed a bill requiring state and local government to acquire only broadband access from companies complying with Net-neutrality standards.

❚ According to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es, governors in Hawaii, Montana, New Jersey, New York and Vermont have signed executive orders tied to Net neutrality.

❚ Twenty-two states and the District of Columbia, led by New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an, filed a suit federal court in Washington, D.C., last month challengin­g the FCC’s new rules.

❚ As of last month, legislator­s in 26 states have introduced 59 bills in support of Net-neutrality rules.

 ?? TED S. WARREN/AP ?? Washington Gov. Jay Inslee signs the Net-neutrality bill in Olympia, Wash., on Monday.
TED S. WARREN/AP Washington Gov. Jay Inslee signs the Net-neutrality bill in Olympia, Wash., on Monday.

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