The Washington state House voted 96-0 last week to pass an amended bill (SB-6308) to extend timelines for implementing the 988 mental health hotline. That would include providing the state health department until Jan. 1, 2026, to develop the technology platform, which is currently due July 1 this year. Also on Thursday, the House voted 68-28 to approve SB-5838, establishing an AI task force. The Senate passed both bills on Feb. 8 (see 2402090055) but now must concur with House changes.
The South Dakota Senate voted 30-4 Wednesday in favor of an amended 911 bill that increases South Dakota’s emergency service fee on monthly phone bills to $2, from $1.25. HB-1092 failed to pass in an earlier Senate vote (see 2402150042). The House previously passed the bill but must vote again to agree with Senate changes related to 911 oversight.
A bill requiring content filters when minors use tablets and smartphones passed the Utah legislature Wednesday. The Senate concurred with the House, which approved an amended version of SB-104 on Tuesday (see 2402280046). The bill needs approval from Gov. Spencer Cox (R). Meanwhile, Thursday the Missouri House passed and sent the Senate a bill (HB-2057) clarifying that streaming content is exempted from paying video franchise fees. Municipalities earlier raised concerns about the proposal (see 2402270055)
The Kansas House Telecom Committee considered if counties should be covered by broadband infrastructure rules like those that apply to cities. The panel heard support for HB-2806 from ISPs at a livestreamed meeting Thursday. HB-2806 would allow telecom, broadband and video service providers to "construct, maintain and operate poles, conduit, cable, switches” and other facilities in counties’ rights of way (ROW). It would require counties to apply ROW access and permit processes “in a nondiscriminatory and competitively neutral manner to all similarly situated providers." That would include fees, required documents for permit applications, permitting time frames and waiver options, the bill said. "No county shall create, enact or erect any discriminatory, unreasonable condition, requirement or barrier for entry into or use of the public right-of-way by a provider." Counties could assess fees for construction permits, excavation and inspection only for reimbursing "the county's reasonable, actual and verifiable costs of managing the public right-of-way,” it said. The bill would also let counties assess repair costs for provider-caused ROW damage and require providers to furnish performance bonds. "We all want to be treated the same [and] fairly,” said Cox Director-Government Affairs Megan Bottenberg. But some Kansas communities have offered benefits to some providers and not others, she said. The “equity-based bill” stops excessive county taxes on broadband while giving explicit authority to collect repair costs for damages and require bonds, said IdeaTek co-founder Daniel Friesen. A rural county once tried to charge his company an excessive $20,000 in permit fees, he said. Requiring counties to explain how their fees are based on cost could reduce litigation, he said. AT&T Kansas State Director Darin Miller supported the bill in written testimony. Kansas Association of Counties General Counsel Jay Hall wrote that the bill's rules for counties would differ slightly from those for cities. "This is particularly important given that HB 2806 would take this issue out of local hands and make it a statewide standard,” Hall said. “If the standard is statewide, should the requirements for cities and counties match?"
The California Public Utilities Commission sought comment by March 8 on a revised proposed decision to establish a permanent California LifeLine foster youth program. Replies are due March 13, Administrative Law Judge Stephanie Wang said in an email ruling Thursday. The CPUC postponed voting on the item at its Feb. 15 meeting (see 2402150067). Among other changes, the revised proposal clarifies that non-minors in extended foster care could participate in the program until they turn 21. Responding to concerns that no service provider may participate in the program after the current pilot expires, the CPUC said it would encourage but not require providers to offer free devices and chargers. “We will also remove requirements for service providers to configure devices,” it said. It also won’t require providers to provide special plans in certain circumstances.
The NARUC board accepted a telecom resolution about keeping phone number exhaustion at bay during its Washington meeting Wednesday. NARUC will ask the FCC to update “guidance on how states should bring cases of telephone number resource mismanagement or suspected robocalling using rented telephone numbers” through audits under Section 52.15(k) of the Telecom Act, said the final resolution from Telecom Committee Chair Tim Schram. The resolution drew no opposition in the committee Monday (see 2402260071).
Alabama and Arizona received NTIA approvals on first volumes of their initial plans for the broadband, equity, access and deployment program. NTIA updated its "Initial Proposal Progress Dashboard" on Wednesday. The two states can now start their challenge processes. NTIA has approved 17 states’ first volumes, but volume 2 only for Louisiana. NTIA said four states are accepting challenges, while six states closed their challenge portals.
The Utah House voted 64-0 on Wednesday for a bill that requires content filters when minors use tablets and smartphones. Eleven members were absent or didn’t vote. Because the House amended the bill, SB-104 must return to the Senate. Utah senators previously voted 25-3 in favor of the measure (see 2402070074). Meanwhile, lawmakers in other states advanced privacy and social media legislation this week. The West Virginia House voted 91-0 Wednesday for a consumer privacy bill (HB-5338) and sent it to the Senate. On Tuesday, the Georgia Senate voted 37-15 for another comprehensive privacy bill (SB-473), sending the measure to the House. On Monday, the Georgia Senate voted 51-1 for a measure requiring education for children about social media and the internet (SB-351). On Tuesday in Virginia, the House Commerce Committee voted 21-0 to advance a kids’ privacy bill (SB-361) that would add children-specific protections to the state’s comprehensive consumer privacy law. The Senate previously passed the bill 40-0 (see 2402120072). Also that day, the Missouri House Innovation Committee cleared HB-2141, which would prohibit state employees from using TikTok (see 2401030014). In Florida, the Senate Fiscal Policy Committee approved SB-1448 Tuesday, requiring platforms that foreign adversaries own to disclose how they curate, personalize and target content and how they address misinformation and harmful content. A House version of the bill advanced last week (see 2402220051).
The Vermont Senate approved a telecom bill Wednesday updating merger rules for communications union districts (CUDs), groups of two or more municipalities that build infrastructure in rural parts of the state. Proposed changes in S-199 will “simplify the process by which two or more CUDs can merge and provide additional flexibility related to CUD governance and business practices.” The measure next needs House approval.
Alabama awarded $148.3 million for last-mile broadband through the U.S. Treasury Capital Projects Fund, the governor's office said Tuesday. The state awarded 66 grants to 16 internet service providers across 48 counties, it said. Grant winners included AT&T ($7 million), Charter Communications ($44.8 million), Mediacom ($22.8 million) and Central Alabama Electric Cooperative ($22 million). The last-mile awards follow $188.5 million in middle-mile grants announced by Gov. Kay Ivey (R) earlier this month (see 2402050059).