Nearly Half of Colorado Counties Have Rejected a Comcast-Backed Law Restricting City-Run Internet (vice.com)
bumblebaetuna shares a report from Motherboard: In Tuesday's Coordinated Election, two Colorado counties voted on ballot measures to exempt themselves from a state law prohibiting city-run internet services. Both Eagle County and Boulder County voters approved the measures, bringing the total number of Colorado counties that have rejected the state law to 31 -- nearly half of the state's 64 counties. Senate Bill 152 -- which was lobbied for by Big Telecom -- became law in Colorado in 2005, and prohibits municipalities in the state from providing city-run broadband services.
Some cities prefer to build their own broadband network, which delivers internet like a utility to residents, and is maintained through subscription costs. But ever since SB 152 was enacted, Colorado communities have to first bring forward a ballot measure asking voters to exempt the area from the state law before they can even consider starting a municipal broadband service. So that's what many of them have done. In addition to the 31 counties that have voted to overrule the state restrictions, dozens of municipalities in the state have also passed similar ballot measures. Including cities, towns, and counties, more than 100 communities in Colorado have pushed back against the 12-year-old prohibition, according to the Institute for Local Self Reliance.
Some cities prefer to build their own broadband network, which delivers internet like a utility to residents, and is maintained through subscription costs. But ever since SB 152 was enacted, Colorado communities have to first bring forward a ballot measure asking voters to exempt the area from the state law before they can even consider starting a municipal broadband service. So that's what many of them have done. In addition to the 31 counties that have voted to overrule the state restrictions, dozens of municipalities in the state have also passed similar ballot measures. Including cities, towns, and counties, more than 100 communities in Colorado have pushed back against the 12-year-old prohibition, according to the Institute for Local Self Reliance.
What could possibly motivate state legislators vote for a law that restricts the ability of communities to compete with companies?
Is GOOD right?
What would Comcast be afraid.
I don't see how a county can vote to exempt itself from a state law. If I was Colorado, I'd prosecute anyone that violates State law, regardless of what any little counties might have said.
Yeah, how DARED Pai and Trump do this back in 2005!
-=This sig has nothing to do with my comment. Move along now=-
How does that free market taste, Cumcast?!
I hope you're Mr. Slave in the next 2Telcos1Cup!
The People have spoken: they're tired of ISPs and their autocratic bullshit. I look forward to more of this happening around the country.
It's one thing to huff and puff, it's another to take action. Did these communities that "rejected Comcast" actually build their own networks, or are they still using the service that they supposedly rejected?
How about prescribing laws for a change? Lot less wasted work on legislation that should have been unnecessary to begin with. Is the telecom market not important enough to finally regularize a reasonable federal legislation, or are the States really that different that such a thing doesn't make sense? Those limiting laws should have been simple resolutions of court cases, not something that goes through the legislative processes.
And what's up with the counties overriding States on arbitrary issues? How far on the issue list does that go in the US?
The irony of this--Colorado rejects Federal drug laws and goes rogue because the "war on drugs" has become nothing but pork for the prison-industrial complex. Now their counties reject the state's law because it's just pork for the telecoms.
My love is that there's a fight back against these things. My hate is that we even got here in the first place.
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
Comcast, Centurylink, you had your chance to build a faster service. You did not so we did it ourselves. Now you are losing customers left & right.
Perhaps you should learn from your experience here and actually provide the services your customers want on other places. The example has been set here. It can be done without you, you are not a necessary evil.
Imagine you're in a dark alley, when someone suddenly steps out from behind a dumpster, pulls out a loaded gun and sticks it in your face. You know he means it and something absolutely horrible could easily happen, and there's almost nothing you can do about it. Is this the end?
"Gimme your money or else I will fucking waste you right here, motherfucker!!"
"Holy crap! Um, yeah, sure..." and you reach for your wallet.
"Wait," says the mugger, and a cloud of uncertainty crosses over his face. "Before I use force against you, I want you to first ask yourself: do you want to be impacted by my decision to violence against you, or not?"
"What, are you kidding? No. Fuck no. I wish you weren't mugging me."
"Really? Is that your final decision? Think carefully. Are you sure you don't want me pointing a gun at you, and be bound by my evil desires to fuck you over?"
"Yes, really. I totally wish this wasn't happening. But I know you can't be serious--" and you hold your wallet out toward him.
"Dammit. I was hoping you'd accept this mugging. For some reason, about half of my would-be victims opt out. I gotta get a better job..." and he lowers his gun, turns his back, and walks away from you, without ever taking your wallet or hurting you.
Why does the state tell cities they can't do something, but also give them the option of opting out? That is totally not how you're supposed to impose your will on the people against their wishes. That's like if I could exempt myself from speeding tickets.
In about 2 years 5G wireless will begin rolling out and most Americans will start getting competitively priced, high speed, fixed point-to-point wireless broadband service offered to them. The cable monopoly will be ending for everyone with line of site to a wireless base station.
Just FYI.
As a conservative, free market supporter I also support this. I think you will find that most conservatives support states, counties, and cities doing this. What we don't want is the federal gov imposing these kinds of things on everyone. I would also support state single payer health care, and any other social program as long as it is done at the state, or lower, level where the people actually have a say in what is going on.
at all? I actually have the answer. In my neck of the woods the local power company wanted a law that said they didn't have to pay solar owners for their excess power. This is obviously a ridiculous thing on the face of it, but low and behold it passed. How you say?
They ran commercials everywhere (seriously, I kept seeing them on Youtube) with a bunch of old people sitting around a table talking about something vaguely scary. At the end of the commercial they told you how to vote. No details whatsoever. I only know about it because I looked up the proposition to see what they were up to. They literally used the Old Glory Robot Insurance marketing method and it worked.
The basic problem is that as you get older your brain starts to go. It just does, whether we like to acknowledge it or not. And you become vulnerable to all kinds of scams. This is just one of them.
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When people realize they can vote themselves richer why would they ever choose not to?
The Citizens United verdict made bribery a perfectly legal item, as money is considered free speech.
Government does NOT make jobs. In fact, it destroys them, which is obvious when you look how FDR's socialism denied any chance of economic recoveries until the 40s, and how socialism eventually kills a country (Venezuela, for example).. In fact, because of Libertarian morals, and the purging of socialism out of the US, the stock market is at the highest ever, and the US is seeing the best economy in history. Ayn Rand and her philosophy has been proven correct, time and time again. It is a good read and an antidote to the calls of socialism.
In reality, government should step in with Colorado. The taxpayers should not be paying for Internet access. Companies who know what they are doing and can provide top tier service and support should be doing this. Not government bureaucrats who can't even spell "TCP/IP".
Yeah, how DARED Pai and Trump do this back in 2005!
No, they're just inspiring our resistance now.
They're fumble-fingered manner is exactly the means to reveal their defective moralities.
Thank goodness for their incompetence.
My city in Boulder county has been offering fiber broadband for over a year now. so happy to not have to choose between two too big to give a snot isps
I cannot figure out the opposition to this. Two companies with crappy service is not competition. And would you want two water pipes for "competition" to deliver water to your house? What about gas lines? So why would you want two fiber lines. And you know company A will accidentally cut company B's lines when laying their own fiber. I know there are people here who would vote against this and I wish they would explain themselves. Internet service is not a healthy competition.
In Longmont CO, you can purchase 1Gb up and down for $50 per month because it is city owned. And they are well ahead of schedule to pay off their debts---the city will soon be making a profit off rates less than what Comcast offers. Yeah... wouldn't want that in my city.
how else are elected officials supposed to know what their constituents are concerned about
I dunno, maybe ask the constituents, rather than the companies that profit by doing exactly what the constituents clearly don't want.
This company is evil. Have you seen what happens here? Their service is SO crappy that people start to think even a Pinko Commie idea like having the government run something is better than relying on them.
It's time we shut that fifth column down NOW!
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
You just gave an alternative explanation. However the parent post's idea has not been shown to be in any way incorrect. Nor does bribery preclude the parent posts' idea from being the motivation. Indeed it makes it worse. The bribery is never, then, seen as illegal, since the bribe has done nothing to make them change what they were going to do. There IS in the USA and pretty much the UK the religious dogma that the government CANNOT and therefore SHOULD NOT do anything if private business can do it:
a) it is "stealing" money from those businesses, "costing jobs"
b) it is going to be a waste of the cash because "government waste"
c) even if it;s competing, it's insisted that taxes paying for it is worse than paying for it, even if the tax payments are lower in their hike than the cost
d) even if there's competition, the givernment is always by definition unfair competition, because there's no choice, it's "the government" whilst you can "vote with your dollars" (but if ever you do, you're a maniac hippie who is out of touch with reality) for businesses.
I'm sure some minimal government supporter out there already exploded and graffitied "socialism" on the idea, but the state should be able to intervene and fix competition even if that means starting one or more state-run companies. The state-run companies should be privatised by IPO after a while, and the state should deny merger requests on competition grounds if necessary. Let's call it "Investment of last resort". It is possible that just hinting of starting such a company would make incumbents scramble for improvements, because "you can't let the commies win".
"Everybody's naked underneath" -- The Doctor
You can reason that the free market produces things most efficient. And you can reason that your socialism is suicidal by the fuckton amount of countries where it failed (or succeded if you count famine and devastation). BUT local gov could *compete* with a business (offer low price and acceptable service) and this does happen in many places happily. What you got there is government refusing to compete....
I'm sure Dear Leader will stop the dirty, evil, liberal, pot-smokers from taking your money.
Sheep need to know their place.
#maga