This bill hasn't passed but it's a proposal. Hopefully they have smaller
ISP exemptions.

California is a beautiful state with great weather and lots of things to
do. The biggest reason some people leave is because of high costs. High
costs are primarily because people want to live there.

If it was a bad place to live, the costs would be lower like red states.
I'm not picking on CA as a whole but I can question some of their policies
which is normal. No one should agree with everything each party does. I'd
rather live in a blue state any day over a red state which is plagued with
problems.

So many high profile or wealthy Republicans live in blue states and cities
while attacking them on Fox. I assume if blue states/cities were so bad,
they would choose to live in Arkansas, Alabama, Missouri, or any number of
other poor states that are routinely ranked the worst states to live in due
to low income, high crimes rates, low education rates, etc. For blue states
being so bad, Republicans sure like living in and visiting them.

Fox "news" is in New York by the way.

On Fri, Mar 21, 2025, 5:31 PM Dev <d...@logicalwebhost.com> wrote:

> Luckily CA has managed the most expensive diesel in the country (I think),
> raft loads of taxes and excruciating regulatory environment to deal with as
> a carrier, so this would be most welcome if the goal is to further reduce
> viability of small ISP's. They say the governor is the best salesman of
> U-Hauls leaving for other states, maybe his sales numbers dipped slightly,
> needs to make up for lost time.
>
> On Mar 21, 2025, at 3:20 PM, Darin Steffl <darin.ste...@mnwifi.com> wrote:
>
>
> https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/03/california-bill-would-force-isps-to-offer-100mbps-plans-for-15-a-month/
>
> This seems crazy. Not sure how many ISP's can afford to offer 100/20 Mbps
> for $15/month. If California wants to subsidize the monthly cost, then
> maybe this works. Say they chip in $25/month and the customer pays $15 for
> a total of $40/month revenue to the ISP then this works. But I could not
> remain in business if this was a requirement in MN.
>
> NY has something similar but they exempt ISP's under 100k customers in the
> state if I remember. This would cover wisp's or small providers.
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