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posted by martyb on Thursday August 11 2016, @05:49PM   Printer-friendly
from the about-headlines:-don't-use-no-double-negatives dept.

The Register has a story about a court ruling that possibly puts one nail in the coffin of the attempt by the FCC (Federal Communications Commission) to prevent states from banning municipal ISPs.

The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals said on Wednesday [PDF] that the American regulator lacks the authority to overrule state laws that prevent cities from operating their own ISPs.

Last year, the watchdog declared it was unfair of North Carolina and Tennessee to block community-run broadband. Now an appeals court has said the FCC overstepped the mark by trying to undo that block with a preemptive order. In other words, in this case, the US states can't be pushed around and overruled by the communications regulator as it lacks the clear authority to do so.

"This preemption by the FCC of the allocation of power between a state and its subdivisions requires at least a clear statement in the authorizing federal legislation," the judges noted.

"The FCC relies upon S706 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 for the authority to preempt in this case, but that statute falls far short of such a clear statement. The preemption order must accordingly be reversed."

We obviously have not seen the last of this, especially since the amateur lawyer in me believes the court decision was in error.


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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Runaway1956 on Friday August 12 2016, @01:40AM

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Friday August 12 2016, @01:40AM (#386859) Journal

    "As to whether a state can ban a city from municipal ISP, that would depend on that state's own constitution."

    Except, I'm not aware of any cases in which a community run ISP was beaten down based on some vague constitutional issue. Each and every case of which I'm aware is based on the vague idea that the community run ISP would compete, that is, threaten the profits of, some corporation. In fact, most of those community run ISP's are LESS cutthroat than the corporate counterpart. The city's ISP is more than happy to finance fiber into the city, then lease service to smaller players, which then act as ISP's for smaller areas of the county/city/town.

    The only cases in which corporations should have any standing to even challenge the city, is when those corporations are actually serving customers that the municipal authority hopes to serve. If there is no fiber in my area, and the county is considering running fiber, then no corporation has standing to even consider filing a suit.

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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by mcgrew on Friday August 12 2016, @04:27PM

    by mcgrew (701) <publish@mcgrewbooks.com> on Friday August 12 2016, @04:27PM (#387076) Homepage Journal

    I agree with you. I think ALL services like water, sewer, gas, electric, should be run by the city or county. Here in Springfield the city owns the electric company, and we have the best uptime and lowest rates in Illinois. Electric rates go up or dependability or customer service goes down, the Mayor loses his job.

    If we were stuck with Amerin we would have no say, only Amerin's stockholders and state government do.

    --
    mcgrewbooks.com mcgrew.info nooze.org