|

Tauzin-Dingell Bill Good
for ISPs
One online advocate, the USIIA, issued an alert notifying
ISPs that the Internet Freedom and Broadband Deployment Act of 2001, also
known as H.R. 1542, is good for ISPs, "especially small and mid-sized
service providers."
by Dave
McClure
USIIA President and CEO
[May 24, 2001]
|
|
For more on the USIIA, see the ISP-Planet
profile. Current USIIA concerns also include H.R. 1017 Anti-Spamming
Act of 2001, H.R. 237, the Consumer Internet Privacy Enhancement
Act, and H.R. 1410, the Internet Tax Moratorium and Equity
Act. Please note that tracking numbers and content of Senate
bills
differ from numbers and content of House bills.
This
alert is a sample of the advocacy that the United States Internet
Industry Association, an ISP association, engages in. The article
includes the latest markup language of H. R. 1524, known colloquially
as the "Tauzin-Dingell bill." The legislation was modified
by the House Commerce Committee this week and the USIIA argues
that it is good for ISPs. We urge ISP owners and operators to
read the actual legislation to determine what is right for your
business.
|
Update on HR 1542, the "Tauzin-Dingell Bill"
HR 1542, the "Internet Freedom and Broadband Deployment Act of 2001,"
has been amended to include the clarifications USIIA requested of the
House Energy and Commerce Committee. It has also seen substantial strengthening
of the pro-ISP portions of the bill.
Based on the version of the bill that was approved in Committee, USIIA
endorses passage of the bill and strongly recommends that ISPs support
it. A copy of the latest version follows this alert.
Much has been written about this billmostly by opponents of the
ILECs, and most of it deliberately vague or misleading. Adam Thierer of
The Cato Institute does a credible job of summing up its contents:
"The bill . . . takes small but important steps to liberalize the broadband
marketplace by allowing the incumbent local telephone exchange carriers
(or "Baby Bells") to offer Internet and data services across long-distance
boundaries. The Bells are currently not allowed to serve the long-distance
voice marketplace without the approval of state and federal regulators.
The amended version of the bill would also somewhat limit the line-sharing
requirements placed on the Bells by the Telecommunications Act of 1996,
but it would still require them to share certain portions of their networks
with competitors. "
Thierer also notes that, "a vociferous and remarkably acrimonious public
advertising campaign has been launched by opponents of the bill. . . Policymakers
and the general public are more than a little confused about what these
ads really mean since the ads speak in vague generalities about how best
to 'promote competition' and 'encourage investment'. "
The Tauzin-Dingell bill represents some of the strongest support for
ISPs ever set forth in legislation. The bill's guarantees of continued
exemptions at the FCC, consumer choice, open access to telephony networks,
non-discriminatory pricing and mandatory deployment of central office
equipment can only help ISPsespecially small and mid-sized service
providers.
ISPs should consider the following actions:
- Read the bill. The most recent version, as reported out of the House
Energy and Commerce Committee, is attached to the end of this alert.
USIIA would rather you read the bill and form your own opinion of Internet
legislation, so that you are not mislead or misinformed. If you have
questions regarding the language, please contact USIIA so that we can
assist you.
- When discussing the bill with opponents to its passage, ask them
to show you specific language in the Act that is harmful to the interests
of ISPs (as distinct from the interests of long-distance companies and
CLECs). Pay particular attention to Section 5, which outlines the benefits
to ISPs.
- Consider what the bill will do for your ISP business and its customers.
HR 1542 for the first time sets into law some of the guarantees that
ISPs need in order to thrive. This bill, for the first time, codifies
mandatory non-discriminatory access for ISPs to ILEC-provided DSL. This
is open access on a level not offered by CLECs, DLECs, cable companies
or satellite/wireless companies.
- Send a letter of support for deregulation of broadband to the House
Energy and Commerce Committee, referencing Bill HR 1542. Fax the letterCongress
still does not read email messages. The fax number for the House Energy
and Commerce Committee is (202) 225-1919.
The issue in supporting this legislation is whether ISPs support open
access and deregulation of broadband networks in order to ensure themselves
a place as competitors in the broadband Internet market. USIIA urges you
to do what is right for your business and your customers, and support
HR 1542.
End
Editor's note:
Please take a moment to read HR 1542 in its current
markup language. HR 1542 is in route to the House Judiciary Committee
for further discussion and will then be sent to the House floor for debate.
If it passes the House, the legislation would also have to pass the Senate
before the bill is sent to the President to be signed into law.
Go
to Page 2: H.R.
1542 As Amended >
|