FCC Moves To Convert Phone Fund To Broadband Fund
medv4380 writes "The Federal Communications Commission is expected to change the Universal Service Fund so that the funds are directed toward broadband infrastructure instead of rural phone infrastructure. '... while the world has changed around it, USF – in too many ways – has stood still, and even moved backwards. The program is still designed to support traditional telephone service. It’s a 20th century program poorly suited for the challenges of a 21st century world.' You can see a transcript of what was presented to the FCC (PDF) online."
Great! Now we can look forward to another "Fee" being added to our monthly broadband bill! Big government GO AWAY!
USF is used to provide phone service at the same price for everyone anywhere even if it costs the phone company to provide the service. Anyone anywhere in rural area can get phone service at the same price. Does this mean the same will happen to broadband?
Another program that should have been dismantled instead of
stealing our hard earned money years ago.
Get ready for the V.A.T., sheep.
You go in that pot next.
jr
Giving funds to telecom companies always turns out productively, right?
Okay, that's step one. Now how about collecting the USF from cable companies the same as telcos? Or treating broadband providers as common carriers?
The federal fund, known as the Universal Service Fund, comes from a line-item charge for phone customers, usually about $2 a month. That money goes toward building and maintaining copper-wire phone connections to remote areas that would be too costly to serve otherwise. The subsidy was created by the 1934 Communications Act, and regulators today say the fund needs to be used for high-speed Internet connections as people increasingly rely on the Web to gather information and communicate.
So, instead of paying $2 a month, so that yokels in the boonies can call each other and gossip, all them them city folks will now pay $20 a month, to subsidize broadband for folks who live on in the boonies can download porn to their ranches!?!?
[Checks Slashdot name] . . . Oh, wait, maybe it is a good idea to subsidize folks who live on ranches in the boonies.
Although, I read an article in The Economist about UNESCO: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UNESCO#Controversy_and_reform . The article said that half of the UNESCO budget never made in out of Paris, France, where the headquarters are located. I thought that was pretty amusing, until I was on a business trip in Geneva. Then we went out for lunch and waiter asked us if we worked for the UN (which was just down the road). When we said no, he treated us like unwanted, unwashed infidels. We noticed that the UN folks there were chowing down on kings' portions of food, and just got a bill for their meals, which the UN would pay for. Well, who pays the budget for the UN . . . ?
This is another trick in politics: Get someone else to pay for what you consume. When this FCC "reform" passes into law, I would be interested to see where all those dollars were being spent. But, alas, politicians do their best to avoid transparency . . .
Oh, well.
Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
No. No free lunch. No free broadband, no free Cadillac from Jesus.
Hopefully this will mean a rollout of DSL in remote locations. DSL actually is the best way to bring internet to rural areas, as most of the cable is already laid, all that needs to be done is to install some signal regeneration/loop extender equipment. Fiber optics can also be brought to a node part of the way, but the amount of cable that needs to be replaced is still less. It is amazing the bandwidh that can be seen with newer DSL modems, its enough to even carry video. Its amazing what can be squeezed out of a twisted pair.
Don't redirect the output of this "fund", but instead remove the charge all together.
Most rural areas have access to these things and eventually as consumer demand drives it they will get access to other things like broadband.
We do not need stimulus programs from the 1930s these days, we need cost cutting. I'd rather put that $8 billion towards the national debt even for the next 5 years to help out there then cut it off entirely.
So let me get this straight. Congress back in 1934 passes a bill to fund rural phone lines by charging city slickers an extra tax on their phone bill.
Now 70 years later the FTC decides on its own that it can levy any tax it wants to against anyone it wants to and put the money towards any program it so desires.
Does Congress' power to tax and make law have little meaning anymore? Is our form of government becoming one in which bureaucrats decide for themselves what taxes to levy and what laws to create?
I'm hoping at least a few people on SlashDot recognize the types of precedents that have been set over the last several years in how it undermines the intentional separation of powers in the US Constitution. It's more insidious and the long-term consequences more dire than I'm sure most people here realize.
They are directing Federal funding to broadband services. Federal funding is a fun thing. It comes with all sorts of stipulations.
In other words, the administration has found another way to jack our taxes while claiming to "help" us be "neighborly".
Does that mean i'll finally get a broadband connection..this $79 a month for 26kbps speed is killing me. At&t wireless broadband is nothing but dial up at half speed :( for 3X the cost
So this means ISPs will finally fall under Common Carrier laws like telephones right? Right?
Why yes, I am rather interested in purchasing your bridge.
Congress created this tax. When they did they also specified what it would be used for. The FCC does not have the authority to decide to use this money for something else, no matter how worthy that something else might be, nor how obsolete the original purpose might be.
The U.S. Constitution says that only Congress may decide how Federal money can be spent.
The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
So let me get this straight. Congress back in 1934 passes a bill to fund rural phone lines by charging city slickers an extra tax on their phone bill.
Now 70 years later the FTC decides on its own that it can levy any tax it wants to against anyone it wants to and put the money towards any program it so desires.
Nope.
First of all, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) isn't involved in this story at all, the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) is.
Second, the provision of law governing the universal service fund (47 USC Sec. 254) has been amended by Congress since 1934, and the current version adopted by Congress states:
Universal service is an evolving level of telecommunications services that the Commission shall establish periodically under this section, taking into account advances in telecommunications and information technologies and services.
See, the thing with Congress' ability to make law is that it keeps being exercised, its not just something that happened once in the distant past.
Does Congress' power to tax and make law have little meaning anymore? Is our form of government becoming one in which bureaucrats decide for themselves what taxes to levy and what laws to create?
I'm hoping at least a few people on SlashDot recognize the types of precedents that have been set over the last several years in how it undermines the intentional separation of powers in the US Constitution. It's more insidious and the long-term consequences more dire than I'm sure most people here realize.
I'm hoping that at least a few people on Slashdot will recognize the importance of actually having some idea of what the facts are before launching into crazed rants.
Congress created this tax. When they did they also specified what it would be used for. The FCC does not have the authority to decide to use this money for something else, no matter how worthy that something else might be, nor how obsolete the original purpose might be.
Really? So what do you think Congress defined the tax as being for? Telephone service alone? Nope, not under the current version of the law adopted by Congress governing the USF. 42 USC Sec. 254(c)(1):
Universal service is an evolving level of telecommunications services that the Commission shall establish periodically under this section, taking into account advances in telecommunications and information technologies and services.
Seems to me that Congress has specifically granted the FCC authority it has proposed using.
Next time you want to accuse someone of breaking the law, try checking what the law is first.
On my last months' bill the Federal Universal Service Fund charge was $2.18 for Long Distance, and $0.94 for Local Service. Add to that the $6.07 Federal Access Charge (which Qwest basically pays to itself for access to the long distance network), the 3% Federal Excise Tax (which was put into place to fund the Spanish-American War in 1898, repealed and reinstated several times since), and various other Universal Service Funds, Relay Service Funds, 911 Fund, Regulatory Surcharge (a faux tax put in place to recoup the costs of complying with regulations) and state, county and city sales taxes. And that's just for my land line, not my mobile. All amounting to about 11-12% of my phone service bill. What does all this get us? A bunch of overpaid union employees, an increasingly outdated and fragile telecommunications infrastructure, and the slowest, most expensive broadband speeds in the developed world. $8,000,000,000 could buy a lot of fiber infrastructure, if it was managed properly. Which it won't be. ...
Nothing to see here but us trolls...move along...
42 USC Sec. 254(c)(1):
Actually, that's wrong. It's title 47, not title 42, so that should be 47 USC Sec. 254(c).
If there's a USA wish/murmur to combat bad things on the internet, why not pull another Tor and fund development of things like DNCCurve/CurveCP through this?
MilkMiruku
I know that it is rather routine for Congress to write bad laws like this one.
I really don't think the alternative you seem to be offering -- Congress essentially abolishing all executive branch regulatory bodies and doing everything currently done through regulation as legislation -- is really desirable.
"Improving access to advanced telecommunications services" is entirely too subjective
That's the high level purpose. The law (47 USC Sec. 254) provides additional detail on both the substance (factors to be considered in deciding what should be encompassed ) and procedure (mechanisms by which changes shall be considered and adopted) associated with the determination of "universal service".
You would know that, if you knew what the law was before criticizing it; you didn't, and you still apparently don't.
I do know that Congress often delegates quite a bit to regulatory agencies. I beleive that that is bad policy .It encourages people to blame bureaucrats for things that they should be blaming their Congressperson for.
Everything that is within the jurisdiction of a regulatory agency is so because of Congressional action. Whether people "should" blame Congress or the regulatory authority depends on whether the problem they have is with the regulatory agency having the scope of authority Congress has delegated it or whether the problem they have is with the way the regulatory agency is exercising its authority; those are two separate questions. But it makes no sense to say that this delegation is bad policy on the basis that it supposedly encourages people to blame the wrong set of decision makers, since it does no such thing. Anyone who blames the wrong set of decision makers does so based on ignorance of who is responsible for the decision that they specifically disagree with, and this does not encourage (or discourage) that kind of ignorance.