Municipal police dispatchers should get a slice of county 911 fee revenue in Washington state if they receive emergency calls transferred from the county, House Appropriations Committee Chair Timm Ormsby (D) said at a Local Government Committee hearing livestreamed Tuesday. Ormsby sponsored HB-2258, which would require counties collecting the tax to transfer some of the revenue to local governments operating municipal 911 systems. Currently, counties may impose a 911 excise tax of up to 70 cents monthly per line on landlines, wireless and VoIP; states may additionally impose a 911 tax of up to 25 cents. But in some areas, like Spokane, the county emergency communications center transfers calls requiring police to the city, which doesn’t receive any 911 fee revenue, said Ormsby. “This is about making sure that folks in our community that pay that excise tax get services for the larger portion of the 911 calls that are police, not fire related.” The bill wouldn’t raise the 911 tax, he said in response to a question by Rep. Cyndy Jacobsen (R).
The California Public Utilities Commission set a two-day evidentiary hearing April 9-10 on AT&T’s application to relinquish its eligible telecom carrier (ETC) designation across the state (docket A.23-03-002). The hearing starts at 10 a.m. PST each day, said Administrative Law Judge Thomas Glegola in a Friday ruling. Under the new schedule, AT&T remains required to file rebuttal testimony by Friday (see 2310200050). Opening briefs are due May 17, reply briefs June 7, said the ruling. The CPUC expects to post a proposed decision in September, it said.
State video franchise holders must submit data to the California Public Utilities Commission, including on previous and existing customer service standards and “information about material breaches” of those standards, Administrative Law Judge Margery Melvin ruled Thursday. The CPUC needs the information for a rulemaking (docket R.23-04-006) to consider changes to video franchise requirements under the state’s Digital Infrastructure and Video Competition Act (DIVCA). The rulemaking responds to a 2021 law that revised DIVCA to require the commission to adopt video and broadband customer service requirements and adjudicate customer complaints (see 2311300030). Data is due Feb. 12.
The California Privacy Protection Agency, the nation's first dedicated privacy regulator, has “many investigations underway,” Executive Director Ashkan Soltani said at a partially virtual CPPA board meeting Friday. Soltani estimated that the agency has received about 100 complaints from consumers since forming in 2021. The CPPA’s data broker registry is up and running after a 2023 bill transferred it to the agency from the California DOJ, Soltani said. Many have since registered and CPPA plans to publish a list of registrants in March, he said. Staff is preparing a proposed rulemaking package including cybersecurity risk assessments, automated decision-making technology for the next board meeting, said Soltani: Staff is incorporating feedback from board members after the Dec. 8 meeting (see 2312080064). In addition, staff is writing draft language and speaking with possible legislative authors for a potential bill that would require browser vendors to let users exercise their California privacy rights through a global opt-out signal, said Maureen Mahoney, deputy director-policy and legislation. “We’re confident that we have adequate resources to effectively sponsor the bill.” CPPA's board voted at last month’s meeting to advance the legislative proposal. The board considered a draft 2024-27 strategic plan with the mission statement: “Protect consumers’ privacy, ensure that businesses and consumers are well-informed about their rights and obligations, and vigorously enforce the law against businesses that violate consumers’ privacy rights.”
The Vermont Community Broadband Board is seeking proposals from ISPs for a broadband, equity, access and deployment (BEAD) subrecipient support program, the VCCB said Thursday. The $1 million program provides needs-based grants that assist entities prepare a BEAD application. Applicants can receive $10,000 to $200,000 for activities including planning, analysis and outreach. Eligible entities include municipalities, cooperatives, utilities and for-profit and nonprofit entities. The VCCB said it will accept responses Jan. 29, Feb. 19 and March 18, or until all funds are exhausted or the board suspends the program.
Arizona House Democrats want broadband and VoIP regulated by the Arizona Corporation Commission. Democratic Reps. Stephanie Stahl Hamilton and Mariana Sandoval this week introduced HB-2345, while Analise Ortiz, Cesar Aguilar and 11 other House Democrats introduced the identical HB-2265. The bills would direct the commission to adopt necessary rules to oversee broadband and VoIP, including ensuring resiliency, reliability, quality and public safety. Republicans control both Arizona legislative chambers, though Gov. Katie Hobbs is a Democrat.
California must ensure a permanent affordable broadband option for residents should the affordable connectivity program (ACP) run out of money, Assemblymember Lori Wilson (D) said during an Assembly Communications Committee meeting Wednesday. The committee voted 7-3 for Wilson’s AB-1588, despite concerns from some that the legislation could be stronger. The bill would allow the state to do business only with ISPs that have affordable plans costing at most $40 monthly for at least 25 Mbps download and 3 Mbps upload speeds. Assemblymember Mia Bonta (D) stressed that she will support the bill only if it’s amended to require at least 100/20 Mbps speeds. Wilson said she’s open to raising the floor to 100/20 Mbps and lowering the price ceiling to $30 if it helps pass the bill. Assemblymember Stephanie Nguyen (D) said she couldn’t support the bill because of worries about its unintended harms to low-income residents. Nguyen suggested waiting until April to see what happens with ACP. The California Emerging Technology Fund supported the bill, but USTelecom, CTIA, Wireless Infrastructure Association and the state cable association opposed it. “Attempting to rate regulate the industry ... does not resolve federal inactivity” to renew ACP, said Amanda Gualderama, California Broadband and Video Association legislative and regulatory director. USTelecom lobbyist Yolanda Benson noted that Congress earlier that day introduced a bill to fund ACP (see 2401100056). Broadband prices have declined without government invention, she said. Also, the committee voted 10-1 for a bill that discourages Californians from calling state agencies’ toll-free numbers. AB-1135 wouldn’t force agencies to decommission their 800 numbers but would require they advertise local area code numbers instead, said sponsor Assemblymember Josh Lowenthal (D). He said California spends $7 million annually for toll-free numbers, even though most residents have phone plans with unlimited minutes. The government pays only when someone uses the 800 number, so encouraging use of toll numbers would save cash, he said. Toll-free numbers remain important for those still relying on landlines, said The Utility Reform Network lobbyist Ignacio Hernandez. The consumer advocate is glad the bill wouldn’t get rid of toll-free numbers, but believes it should direct agencies to continue displaying them as an option.
The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities voted 4-0 to clear a settlement resolving the board’s Altice service quality probe (docket CX21020139). At the livestreamed meeting Wednesday, commissioners also voted unanimously to authorize staff to submit New Jersey’s digital equity plan to NTIA by Friday. Altice had pledged to spend $11 million on its network and make other broadband adoption, network resiliency and customer service commitments (see 2312210077). “We really look forward to the improved service that we will see going forward with Altice,” said BPU President Christine Guhl-Sadovy. Staff recommended approving the “just and reasonable resolution” to the board’s investigation, said Cable and Telecommunications Director Lawanda Gilbert. The cable operator values its longtime relationship with New Jersey, an Altice spokesperson said. More broadband access is a big benefit of the deal for Altice customers, said New Jersey Division of Rate Counsel Director Brian Lipman: Continuing talks among Altice, the division, municipalities and the board "will ensure that the parties work together to provide [Altice's] customers with the broadband services they need."
Ohio will support a broadband network in Cleveland with $10 million from the state broadband office, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) and Lt. Gov. Jon Husted (R) said Tuesday. Cleveland-based nonprofit DigitalC plans to sell fixed wireless service for $18 monthly. The city in September approved $20 million through the American Rescue Plan Act for the project, which is estimated to cost $53 million. More funding will come from the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Foundation, the David and Inez Myers Foundation and other sources, the governor’s office said. The plan is for DigitalC to break ground this month and connect all the city’s 170,000 households to the network by mid-2025, DeWine's office said. “We are committed to closing the digital divide in Ohio -- not just in rural parts of the state, but also right here in urban centers like Cleveland where affordability can be more of an obstacle than access,” said the governor. Husted added, “While many underserved communities are in rural Ohio, Cleveland is an example of an underserved urban community.” The National Digital Inclusion Alliance listed Cleveland as the worst connected large city in the U.S. in a 2019 report. DigitalC expects to provide minimum 100 Mbps symmetrical speeds using a next-generation fixed wireless access network, without data caps, a spokesperson said.
The Oregon Public Utility Commission voted 2-0 Tuesday to approve a staff recommendation finding Lumen in compliance with PUC orders during outages on Sept. 2 and 3, a PUC spokesperson said. The orders required Lumen to make repairs within 48 hours, provide a customer support line and perform a post-incident assessment.