Sen. McCain Drafts Broadband Bill

WASHINGTON – In an attempt to break through state barriers and enable U.S. cities to offer broadband services to residents, Sens. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.) are guiding a bill through the Senate that would give municipalities the right to provide broadband services to their residents.

Under the terms of the Lautenberg and McCain-endorsed bill – titled the Community Broadband Act of 2005 – there would no longer be restrictions put on municipalities to offer broadband or advanced telecommunications services to citizens.

The bill comes at a time when recent studies indicate that the United States is lagging behind other countries as a broadband provider. Lautenberg and McCain claim that providers of traditional telecommunications services have slowed the rollout of nationwide broadband, particularly in poorer areas of the nation.

"This bill recognizes the critical role that public power systems are playing and will continue to play to ensure that no community is left behind in the electronic revolution," Joe Nipper, VP of government relations at the American Public Power Association, said in support of the bill.

The Community Broadband Act directly contradicts an effort on behalf of more than 14 states to prevent individual cities from providing high-speed access. Typically those cities either have no broadband access to begin with or the community cannot afford high-speed services offered at the state level. So far, Missouri, Texas and Arkansas have a “blanket prohibition” on providing broadband services.

The controversial bipartisan bill would also require city broadband providers to maintain the same rules and regulations that they impose on any other provider as well as comply with federal and state telecommunications laws.

"There is no valid justification for blocking local communities from offering broadband to its residents,” Lautenberg said. “If a town or a city wants to offer broadband as a tool for education and economic development, why should a state stop them?"

The Lautenberg and McCain bill is in direct opposition to another bill recently introduced by Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Texas) that would prevent municipalities from providing telecommunications, broadband or cable services in any area where there is a private provider.

The Supreme Court ruled last year that states could pass laws preventing their own municipalities from offering telecommunications and Internet services.

“While not every city and town will find that its interests are best served by offering advanced telecommunications, no community should be deprived of the opportunity to consider the best options for its citizenry," Nipper said.

Copyright © 2024 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Age Verification: FSC's Mike Stabile Reports from the Frontlines

Two years into the religiously-inspired crusade to ban free access to adult material in the U.S. through carefully drafted "age verification" legislation, the constant onslaught of state-by-state proposals and laws — many of them copied from each other — can be hard to follow.

Written Erotica Platform 'Hevvn' Launches

Hevvn, a new platform aimed at erotica writers seeking to publish, promote and profit from their work, debuted Thursday.

Sssh.com's Angie Rowntree Speaks at Brown University

Sssh.com founder Angie Rowntree spoke at a Brown University class last week, discussing several topics related to adult filmmaking.

Online Industry Veteran Joe E. Passes Away

Online industry veteran Joe E has passed away, according to friends and industry associates.

Judge Acquits Backpage Defendants of Most Charges Before 2nd Retrial

A federal judge acquitted former co-owner of Backpage.com Michael Lacey and two co-defendants on most of the counts remaining from the protracted trial launched against the website operators by the Justice Department in 2018.

Adult Time Partners With Animation Studio 3DGspot

Adult Time has signed a deal to distribute content on its streaming platform from animation studio 3DGspot.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp Signs Age Verification Bill Into Law

Republican Gov. Brian Kemp this week signed into law a bill that includes provisions requiring age verification for viewing adult content in Georgia, mirroring legislation being sponsored around the country by anti-porn religious conservative activists.

AEBN Publishes Popular Searches by Country for February, March

AEBN has released the popular searches from its straight and gay theaters in more than three dozen countries during February and March.

HardWerk Relaunches Through YourPaysitePartner

HardWerk.com has relaunched through YourPaysitePartner (YPP).

Aylo Asks Judge to Trim Sweeping GDP-Related Lawsuit

Aylo asked a California federal judge during a hearing on Monday to drop trafficking claims from a sweeping lawsuit brought by a former GirlsDoPorn model.

Show More