https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2022/04/what-low-income-people-will-lose-deadlocked-fcc

When the massive, bipartisan infrastructure package passed Congress, the 
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) was tasked with ensuring equal access 
to broadband services. That provision is called “Digital Discrimination” and it 
states, for the first time in federal law, that specifically broadband access 
cannot be built along the lines of race, income, and other protected classes 
unless an ISP has an economic or technical justification for the 
discrimination. In other words, it is now a matter of federal law that digital 
redlining is banned.

Major ISPs fought hard to remove this provision, mostly because they’ve engaged 
in discrimination based on income status for many years. It is why EFF and 
dozens of organizations have called for a ban on digital redlining of broadband 
access back in 2020. Study, after study, after study has shown the same result. 
Wealthy Americans are getting fiber optic connectivity pushed closer to their 
homes starting as far back as 2005 while low-income people have been forced to 
stay on legacy copper and coaxial cable connections built as far back as 30 
years ago.

But despite the evidence, the law, and the command by Congress, it is still a 
possibility that equal access for all Americans will be denied if the Senate 
does not confirm the Biden Administration’s FCC nominee, Gigi Sohn, to the 
agency. That is because the current four commissioners on the FCC have deep 
ideological differences of opinion with two believing broadband should be a 
regulated service with the other two supporting the full deregulation of 
broadband providers that started under the Pai FCC. Ms. Sohn’s public 
commitments have made clear she would support regulating broadband as an 
essential service, which aligns with where most Americans are today with 80 
percent of people believing broadband is as important to their lives as 
electricity and water. If you support the idea that broadband should be treated 
as importantly as water and electricity, you should call your two Senators now 
and ask them to vote yes on Ms. Sohn.

Reply via email to