Hearing generates ideas for Telecom Act rewrite
more on the topic
Most attention focused on the U.S. Senate this week was devoted to
the passage of a bill that would extend the Internet tax moratorium
four years and eliminate state and local taxes on DSL in November 2005.
But lost in the shuffle were a couple of Senate Commerce Committee
hearings conducted as a precursor for Congress revisiting the Telecom
Act beginning next year.
Some of the more interesting ideas proposed by those offering testimony
included the following:
(1) Keep it as simple as possible. Much of the telecom industry's
problems were attributed to broad, vague language in the act, leading
to an "incredible maze of litigation," according to George Gilder,
senior fellow for the Technology and Democracy Project at the Discovery
Institute.
(2) Write laws, not delegation orders--a corollary to the first item.
Too often, the Telecom Act delegated to the FCC instead of clearly
stating a law for the agency to enforce. "You can't deregulate an
industry by granting regulators more power," said Adam Thierer,
director of telecommunications studies at the Cato Institute.
(3) Streamline regulation. Gilder called for the FCC to be the lone
regulatory body for telecom, so a national telecom policy could be
pursued. However, leaving state commissions out of the mix was not a
consensus viewpoint, with AT&T CEO David Dorman expressing support
for their efforts. Meanwhile, Charles Ferguson, senior fellow of
economic studies at the Brookings Institution, said the fact that the
telecom industry spends more on litigation and regulation than on
research and development is evidence that the regulatory structure
needs to be revamped.
(4) Establish regulatory parity between technologies. This theme was
repeated often. "A bit is a bit is a bit and should be regulated as
such," said Raymond Gifford, president of the Progress & Freedom
Foundation.
(5) Set a universal service goal. Gifford said one problem with the
Telecom Act is that it tried to achieve the "incompatible goals" of
market competition and universal service. Congress needs to determine
what, if any, services should be subsidized to ensure ubiquity, he
said. Meanwhile, Qwest Communications CEO Richard Notebaert said
Congress should decide on a universal service goal and then determine
how to fund it. Currently, Congress wants to identify ways to expand
contributions for the universal service fund before determining uses
for the money.
It will be interesting to see how many of these ideas become part of
the next telecom legislation package, if one ever gets passed in the
next couple of years. Many of these notions sound good in a hearing,
but may not play as well in the harsh arena of political reality.
E-mail me at djackson@primediabusiness.com.
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