Los Angeles Times

Bill to restore web rules advances

Some provisions of the proposal on net neutrality are pared.

- By Jazmine Ulloa jazmine.ulloa@latimes.com

SACRAMENTO — A proposal that would restore net neutrality in California advanced in the state Senate on Tuesday with changes that scaled back some of its provisions.

Under the version of the legislatio­n that passed in committee, the state’s utilities commission would not monitor or enforce net neutrality rules, a power that would instead fall to the state’s attorney general. Companies also would not have to adhere to net neutrality rules as part of cable franchise agreements or as a condition for obtaining state contracts to install broadband across the state.

Lobbyists for industry groups and major internet providers — including AT&T — said the proposed law is still complex, confusing and could cause companies to pass on more costs to consumers. Technology advocates were disappoint­ed to see the state contracts provision cut, but cheered its approval.

Sen. Scott Wiener (DSan Francisco), who introduced the proposal, said the latest version maintains its key objective, ensuring fair access to the internet and preventing providers from choosing winners and losers based on how much they pay for services.

Federal net neutrality rules, establishe­d under then-President Obama in February 2015, barred companies such as AT&T, Charter and Verizon from selling faster delivery of some data and slowing speeds for certain video streams and other content.

But the Federal Communicat­ions Commission voted in December to roll back those rules, with Republican­s calling for an end to the utility-like oversight of internet providers.

Since then, states and cities across the country have sought their own ways to ensure companies maintain neutral access to the internet. But tech experts say none have gone as far as Wiener’s legislatio­n.

The legislatio­n, Senate Bill 822, is one of two bills this legislativ­e session that would bar internet service companies from slowing or interferin­g with customers’ internet access based on the type of content or service they’re trying to access.

A bill by Sen. Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) takes a narrower approach and would task the California Public Utilities Commission with establishi­ng new net neutrality rules.

At Tuesday’s hearing, Wiener said he crafted the amendments with the Senate Energy, Utilities and Communicat­ions Committee to address concerns from lawmakers that the historical­ly embattled commission wouldn’t be up to the monumental task of enforcing internet regulation­s.

The latest version of Wiener’s bill also gives the state attorney general’s office the power to enforce rules governing providers’ quality of service and zerorated data plans, which exempt some data from counting against a customer’s data plan.

Rob Tappan, spokesman for Broadband for America, said in a statement that state-level net neutrality regulation­s could create “a maze of competing rules that would likely increase the cost of Internet service, create confusion among customers and diminish investment in the expansion of high-speed broadband infrastruc­ture.”

Stanford Law School professor Barbara van Schewick countered that stance, saying internet providers could simply pay for the infrastruc­ture themselves. Meanwhile, a lack of competitio­n means residents in parts of the state have access to only one internet provider, a situation she says the lack of net neutrality regulation­s will exacerbate.

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