[telecom] Fiber Is the Key to U.S. Telecom Diet

Fiber Is the Key to U.S. Telecom Diet

By Susan Crawford

07.04.12 Wired

It's big news that a 68-year-old bus monitor has been gifted more than half a million dollars by the People of the Internet. The online headlines are full of the Obama-Romney tussle, even though we have months to go before the election itself. Meanwhile, an extraordinary story that will actually have an impact on the day-to-day lives of tens of millions of Americans is rolling efficiently forward in dozens of state legislatures. And neither mainstream media nor the public is paying much attention.

The National Regulatory Review Institute reported earlier this month that between January 2010 and April 2012 intense industry lobbying had resulted in passage of laws removing or reducing oversight of telecommunications providers in 20 states. It's a deregulatory tsunami. So many state bills are pending that it's hard to keep up:

14 more states are now considering legislation, and new bills are likely before the end of the year in several other places.

In Michigan, a local phone company no longer has to provide wired service and is no longer subject to any quality-of-service requirements or rate regulation. A carrier in that state doesn't have to build lines to any household if it doesn't want to, and can stop selling services to you if you just want a phone line. Although every state is slightly different, and some states have hung on to the authority to require lines to all of their inhabitants, Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Missouri, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and Wisconsin have also passed flavors of deregulatory bills.

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Reply to
Monty Solomon
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In Monty Solomon writes: [snippeth, quoteth from Wired]

If that's the case, then why are they still entitled to the various federally approved bill enhancements such as (among others) the Universal Service Fund? `

Reply to
danny burstein

Which is unfortunate, considering the problems that new technology has brought us, such as the flood of illegal telemarketing calls (see separate thread). As discussed here, since there is no incentive for any carrier to do anything about the problem, they won't.

It's too bad legislators don't know the history and can't look back at the problems a "free-for-all" marketplace created circa 1900 in the utilities of that era, such as the railroads.

Reply to
HAncock4

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