Madison, WI Header
File #: 33292    Version: 1 Name: Urging the FCC to reclassify Broadband Internet Service as a Telecommunications Service and establishing a basis for Net Neutrality.
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 3/3/2014 In control: DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE (ended 11-2021)
On agenda: 4/8/2014 Final action: 4/8/2014
Enactment date: 4/10/2014 Enactment #: RES-14-00263
Title: Urging the FCC to reclassify Broadband Internet Service as a Telecommunications Service and establishing a basis for Net Neutrality.
Sponsors: Paul R. Soglin, Shiva Bidar, John Strasser, Lauren Cnare, Matthew J. Phair, Lisa Subeck, Scott J. Resnick, Michael E. Verveer, Ledell Zellers
Fiscal Note
No appropriation is required.

Title
Urging the FCC to reclassify Broadband Internet Service as a Telecommunications Service and establishing a basis for Net Neutrality.

Body
WHEREAS, a free and open Internet is key to the economic and political future of the citizens of the City of Madison; and

WHEREAS, "Net Neutrality" is the concept of applying "common carriage" rules to the Internet in order to preserve its freedom and openness; and

WHEREAS, common carriage has historically been used to protect users of canals, railroads, truckers, telegraph and telephone networks from discrimination by the owners of said canals, railroads, truckers, telegraph and telephone networks; and

WHEREAS, in January 2014, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia struck down the Federal Communications Commission's Net Neutrality rules, which prohibited Internet providers from blocking or prioritizing Web traffic; and

WHEREAS, the Court found that the FCC's rules contradicted a previous FCC classification of broadband providers that exempts them from treatment as common carriers; and

WHEREAS, the providers of broadband Internet service are getting fewer, larger, and both economically and politically more powerful as corporate mergers continue in the telecommunications industry; and

WHEREAS, the Wisconsin legislature passed 2003 Wisconsin Act 278 which erected barriers to the provision of broadband service by municipalities and therefore prevented additional real local competition in the provision of high-speed broadband; and

WHEREAS, Judge Silberman's concurring opinion in the Net Neutrality case suggested that state barriers to municipal broadband service are an additional significant limitation to Internet access; and

WHEREAS, the Federal Communication Commission is now considering both a restructuring of the rules by which it will enforce Net Neutrality and a possible pre-emption of state laws such as 2003 Wisconsin Act 278;

NOW, THEREFORE, BE I...

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