California backs down to Trump admin, won’t force ISPs to offer $15 broadband

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Summary

Boerner said her goal with the bill "was always a basic broadband service" that would be affordable. "There are lots of packages out there in the world that people choose to get because they're being price-conscious and they choose the service level that they need," she said. We asked Boerner about pressure from broadband industry lobbyists. She replied, "Most industries are against rate regulation. We were trying to find a balance between meeting a need, which I think all of the companies see that need, right? They see the need for low-income Californians to get online. They want to be part of the solution, and also almost every industry in California hates rate regulation. So how do you balance those interests?" While Boerner's bill won't be moving forward this year, a different bill in the state Senate would encourage ISPs to offer cheap broadband by making them eligible for Lifeline subsidies if they sell 100/20Mbps service for $30 or less. Unlike Boerner's bill, it wouldn't force ISPs to offer low-cost plans. Boerner criticized Congress for discontinuing a national program that made $30 discounts available to people with low incomes. Her attempt to impose a low-cost mandate in California began after the nationwide Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) was eliminated. "We all saw the photos of kids outside of Taco Bell or McDonald's using their Wi-Fi to turn in homework during the pandemic, and none of us wanted to go back to that," she said. The ACP's $30 discounts temporarily alleviated that problem. The ACP "was one of our most successful public benefit programs, and it wasn't partisan," Boerner said. "It was rural, it was urban, it was Democrat, it was Republican... every American who was low-income benefited from the ACP. And I'd really like to appeal to Congress to act in the interests of Americans and find a way to have federal subsidies for low-income access to broadband again. I wouldn't need to do state regulations if Congress had done their job." It i...

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