Here's Another Chance to Weigh In on the FCC's Net Neutrality Repeal

An appeals court ordered the FCC to seek comments on whether its new regime hurts public safety or low-income consumers. 
Ajit Pai smiling in front of a blue wall
FCC Chair Ajit Pai led the agency's effort to repeal Obama-era net neutrality rules.Photograph: Ethan Miller/Getty Images

The Federal Communications Commission is once again seeking comment on its repeal of its Obama-era net neutrality rules. But the new comment period isn't focused on the usual issues that underpin the net neutrality debate, such as blocking or throttling content. Instead, it will focus on less-noticed aspects of the agency's decision with regards to public safety and the agency's oversight of broadband internet providers.

In 2015 the Obama-era FCC reclassified broadband service providers as "common carriers" like traditional telephone companies, giving the agency broader authority to regulate broadband providers. But in late 2017, the now Republican-controlled FCC voted to overturn the Obama-era rules, relinquishing much of that authority.

A coalition including state attorneys general, internet industry groups, and nonprofit organizations quickly filed suit, arguing the FCC’s decision was illegal. Last year a federal appeals court sided mostly with the FCC. But there were some caveats. The FCC's order attempted to override state net neutrality laws, but the court decided the FCC didn't have the authority to do so. The court also said the FCC hadn’t adequately considered how repealing the net neutrality rules would affect public safety, utility pole regulations, and an FCC program called Lifeline that subsidizes phone and internet service for low-income families.

Instead of tossing out the FCC's order entirely, the court gave the FCC the chance to address those issues. But former FCC lawyer Gigi Sohn says the courts could strike down more of the new rules if it finds the agency's response unsatisfactory.

A new comment period on FCC’s new rules, known as the "Restoring Internet Freedom Order," is the commission's first step toward trying to satisfy the court. It's not likely that FCC chair Ajit Pai is going to have a change of heart about reclassifying broadband. The public notice of the comment period was announced quietly under the cryptic heading “Wireline Competition Bureau Seeks to Refresh Record in Restoring Internet Freedom and Lifeline Proceedings in Light of the D.C. Circuit's Mozilla Decision.”

"We look forward to addressing” the issues that the court identified, Pai said in a statement following the appeals court ruling last year.

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But comments will add to the public record that the FCC will have to address as part of the case. You can file a comment through the agency's online comment system by using the proceeding number 17-108, or by paper following the instructions found in the FCC's public notice. The deadline is March 30.

"The American public should raise their voices and let Washington know how important an open internet is," FCC commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel said in a statement this week.

The FCC specifically seeks comment on how the order affects public safety, utility poles, and Lifeline service. For example, the agency's public notice asks whether public safety officials rely on retail wireless services as opposed to dedicated communications networks.

Net neutrality advocates say the FCC's decision hurt public safety during the 2018 California wildfires, when Verizon throttled firefighters' mobile internet speeds after they exceeded their data caps.

"This throttling has had a significant impact on our ability to provide emergency services," Santa Clara County fire chief Anthony Bowden wrote in a declaration in the lawsuit. "Verizon imposed these limitations despite being informed that throttling was actively impeding County Fire's ability to provide crisis-response and essential emergency services." Verizon has said that the throttling was a mistake, and it has a policy not to limit service during emergencies.

The appeals court decided that the 2018 throttling incident, which occurred after the FCC's 2017 vote, shouldn't be considered as evidence in the suit.

The FCC's Obama-era rules didn't explicitly prohibit data caps, but they did prohibit “unjust or unreasonable prices and practices.” Perhaps more important, the FCC had broad authority to regulate broadband providers when they were classified as common carriers.

The FCC's previous attempt to solicit comments from the public was a fiasco. The agency's comment system crashed following a May 2017 segment of comedian's John Oliver's Last Week Tonight television show encouraging viewers to file comments. The FCC initially blamed a cyberattack for the outage, but the FCC's Office of the Inspector General later concluded those claims were misleading. The system was also flooded with comments using fake names.


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