USA TODAY US Edition

Net-neutrality laws are now in state hands

23 states and D.C. have filed a lawsuit seeking to prevent the rules change

- Mike Snider

Net neutrality is dead. Long live Net neutrality.

The longtime hot-button issue — essentiall­y about whether your Internet service provider should be able to block or slow legal traffic, or charge for faster delivery of some content — won’t likely recede any time soon, even though a milestone nears in the national tussle about the topic.

Some states are also considerin­g laws preventing Internet service providers from blocking and throttling content on consumers’ broadband connection­s, even though they’re likely to face court challenges from opponents who argue that the new federal rules prevent states from passing their own.

California’s state judiciary committee will hear one such bill soon.

“In California, we can lead the effort to clean up this mess and implement comprehens­ive, thorough Internet protection­s that put California Internet users and consumers first,” state Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, who sponsored the bill, said in a statement.

Oregon has already passed its own. On April 10, Gov. Kate Brown signed into law a measure requiring state agencies only to do business with ISPs that do not block or slow traffic or accept payment to prioritize some data.

Attorneys general in 23 states and the District of Columbia have filed a suit seeking to prevent the rules change, calling it “arbitrary, capricious and an abuse of discretion.”

All of this activity suggests Net neutrality could likely be an issue in the midterm elections and perhaps even in the 2020 campaign cycle.

If so, that could be good news for politician­s hoping to draft on the issue. Most citizens (86%) support Net neutrality, as defined by the 2015 rules, ac- cording to a new survey, released Wednesday by the non-partisan group Voice of the People, and conducted by the Program for Public Consultati­on at the University of Maryland. It surveyed

997 registered voters in March. Support for Net neutrality crosses party lines among voters with 90% of Democrats in favor and 82% of Republican­s, the survey found. Support from Republican­s has risen from 75% when a similar survey was conducted in December 2017.

That means a growing populace wants “the Internet to work the way it’s always worked,” said Phillip Berenbroic­k, senior policy counsel for Public Knowledge, a non-profit group that has filed suit challengin­g the Federal Communicat­ion Commission’s December overturnin­g of the 2015 rules. “And you have got a minority of folks here in Washington that currently have access to levers of power that are in disagreeme­nt with more than 80% of the American public. ... It’s baffling.”

Telecom giants, which lobbied for the Obama-era rules’ repeal, can also get legislator­s’ attention. Since 1989, the telecom industry, led by AT&T, Comcast and Verizon, has donated more than

$100 million to sitting members of Con- gress and their leadership PACs, 55% of that to Republican­s, according to a report in The Verge.

Still, in Congress some Net neutrality-supporting lawmakers hold out hope for an immediate resolution: a Congressio­nal Review Act measure to reinstate the 2015 rules. There’s enough support already in the U.S. Senate for a vote, and it must be done by June 20.

The likelihood of the Congress Review Act measure’s success is slim, however. In the U.S. House, 160 Democrats are already on board for a vote that needs 218 signatures. But a CRA measure must also be approved by President Trump, an unlikely event since he appointed Ajit Pai, chairman of the FCC, and called the Obama-era rules a “power grab.”

Pai has been shepherdin­g through the repeal of the old rules and their replacemen­t with the Restoring Internet Freedom order, a set of lighter-touch regulation­s. It was expected to officially take effect Monday but won’t kick in for at least a few more weeks as it undergoes additional vetting by the Office of Management and Budget.

In reality, the FCC has already shifted its stance. Within a month of being appointed by Trump, Pai ended several Net neutrality-related investigat­ions started by his predecesso­r, including the investigat­ion of whether free data plans offered by wireless providers such as AT&T and Verizon violated the agency’s regulation­s.

This has left the issue of Net neutrality in the hands of states and courts. The legal action by the state attorneys general — along with suits filed by groups such as Free Press and National Hispanic Media Coalition, and companies including Mozilla, Etsy and Vimeo — will begin going through the judicial process in the coming months.

Also happening in the states: Several governors have passed executive orders requiring ISPs doing business with the state follow Net-neutrality conduct.

These state initiative­s could yield more court challenges, too. USTelecom, a trade group made of ISPs including AT&T and Verizon, has promised to sue to block Net-neutrality measures adopted by states such as Washington, the first to do so, “to avoid a piecemeal, patchwork approach to the future of our Internet,” the group’s CEO and president Jonathan Spalter said on the group’s blog.

A potential “maze of competing rules” could make broadband prices go up, confuse customers “and diminish investment in the expansion of highspeed broadband infrastruc­ture — which would disproport­ionally hurt rural and other traditiona­lly underserve­d communitie­s across the country,” said Rob Tappan, spokesman for Broadband for America, an organizati­on with members that include AT&T, CenturyLin­k, Charter, Comcast and Cox.

Bipartisan legislatio­n is a better alternativ­e, he says. But legislatio­n requires compromise, and that has been elusive.

A growing populace wants “the Internet to work the way it’s always worked.” Phillip Berenbroic­k Senior policy counsel for Public Knowledge, a non-profit group

 ?? TED S. WARREN/AP ?? Washington Gov. Jay Inslee signed a bill March 5 to protect the open Internet. The action there and in other states suggests Net neutrality could be an issue in the midterm elections and even the 2020 presidenti­al election.
TED S. WARREN/AP Washington Gov. Jay Inslee signed a bill March 5 to protect the open Internet. The action there and in other states suggests Net neutrality could be an issue in the midterm elections and even the 2020 presidenti­al election.
 ??  ?? FCC chair Ajit Pai
FCC chair Ajit Pai

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