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By Anne Broache
Posted on ZDNet News: Apr 25, 2006 4:04:00 PM

WASHINGTON--More Americans would be forced to pay taxes subsidizing broadband service in "unserved" locales, and cities would be free to go into the Wi-Fi business under an upcoming U.S. Senate bill.

Later this week, Sen. Gordon Smith, an Oregon Republican, plans to introduce a legislative package called the Broadband for America Act of 2006, he said Tuesday morning at a conference here hosted by the National Telecommunications CooperativeAssociation, which represents small and rural carriers.

Net taxes on the way?
Sen. Gordon Smith's proposal would force Americans to pay more to log in. Here's why:
Currently telephone companies are forced to cough up a percentage of their revenues to the so-called Universal Service Fund, which subsidizes school and library Net connections and has been plagued by fraud--$4.7 billion was distributed during the first nine months of 2005.

While some details remain unclear, Smith wants to levy this tax on broadband providers too--and they're expected to turn around and pass it on to their customers in one of those fine-print notices at the end of their monthly bills.

Because Universal Service taxes are diverted to pay for rural telecommunications access, Democrats and Republicans from rural states tend to see eye-to-eye. A Democratic proposal, for instance, would levy Universal Service taxes on Internet chat services as well.

Conspicuously absent from the bill, however, is any mention of Net neutrality, which refers to the idea of the federal government forcibly preventing broadband providers from favoring some Web sites or video streams' connection speeds over others. The concept has generated significant controversy in the House of Representatives' version of a telecommunications reform bill. The House Energy and Commerce Committee is scheduled to take up its own proposal again on Tuesday evening, with a vote expected later in the week.

A copy of the 41-page bill seen by CNET News.com is essentially a combination of existing proposals introduced by Smith and his colleagues on the Senate Commerce Committee. That committee's Republican chairman, Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, has also been readying what Smith called "an even more comprehensive bill" intended to overhaul the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which has been criticized as outdated for failing to account for the Internet's vast new influence.

Smith's bill is not intended to rival Stevens' proposal, he said, but he hopes that its "targeted" nature will allow it to pass more speedily through committee and to the Senate floor. "The bigger it is, the more comprehensive it is, the more likely it is to get bogged down," he said.

As network operators roll out more advanced broadband services, particularly video, they've argued that they should be able to finance those efforts by charging bandwidth-hogging content providers extra fees for the privilege of faster transmission or other preferential treatment. Net neutrality supporters say they're concerned such a practice would amount to unprecedented Internet "gatekeeping" that could raise consumer costs and inhibit innovation, and they've called on Congress to legislate against it.

Smith, for his part, told reporters after his speech that he'd rather "wait and see whether there's a problem before we legislate (on Net neutrality). I'm not convinced we're there yet." Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Stevens has also voiced reluctance to include Net neutrality in his broad telecommunications reform bill. A committee aide said Tuesday that Stevens is still wrestling with whether to include any such language.

Smith's bill instead focuses on four major areas. It would require the FCC to establish rules requiring that all companies "capable of supporting two-way voice communications" pay into the Universal Service Fund, a multibillion-dollar pool of money that's currently used to subsidize telecommunications services in rural and other high-cost areas, schools and libraries.

Right now, long-distance, wireless, pay-phone and wireline telephone services are required to pay a fixed percentage of their revenues to the fund, which they typically do by tacking an additional fee onto their customers' bills. A number of the larger voice over Internet protocol providers, including Vonage, have said they already pay into the fund, but there doesn't appear to be a formal regulation requiring them to do so.

Smith's bill also proposes allocating up to $500 million per year for supplying broadband service in areas where private investors are "reluctant" to set up networks. Certain users, such as low-income households, would be exempt from the fees under Smith's proposal.

A second portion of the bill, rooted in two earlier proposals, would give the Federal Communications Commission 180 days to establish rules for unlicensed use of so-called "white spaces" on the broadband airwaves--that is, empty, unused channels in the broadcast TV bands. Consumer advocates say using those slices of the radio spectrum would enable cheaper and easier setup of broadband networks, but the broadcasting lobby has voiced fears that such uses would muddle their stations' reception.

A third provision comes from the Community Broadband Act introduced last summer by Sen. John McCain of Arizona and Sen. Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey. That bill, aimed at preventing states from blocking public-sector entrants into the broadband business, appears to be targeting more than a dozen states that have already passed laws bearing such restrictions or prohibitions.

Another provision is designed to relieve new entrants to the video services market from negotiating franchise agreements with individual cities and towns--a matter that has sparked controversy among cable companies, which have historically had to negotiate such deals, and phone companies seeking relaxed regulations so that they can roll out their own video services more quickly.

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  • Most Recent of 92 Talkback(s)
9/11 on Bush's watch, so it's Bush's fault
Stop blaming Clinton for everything. Duhbya was on watch when 9/11 happened and history will remember that, not neocon ravings about Clinton.

And any response/nonresponse by Gore would have bee... (Read the rest)
Posted by: BobCratchet Posted on: 11/12/06 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
A whole series of trade-offs.  Anton Philidor | 04/25/06
Well that's socialism for you  Omch'Ar | 04/25/06
Well, yes.  Anton Philidor | 04/25/06
Standard Oil and San Fransico quake 06  Bryn | 04/26/06
I suspect it's like this to make it so confusing...  BitTwiddler | 04/25/06
Senator plans Net taxes but no Net neutrality  mikepal | 04/26/06
Universal Service Fund  James T. Kirk | 04/25/06
Not Joe Six Pack and Inner City Slackers.  RobertoSalazar | 04/25/06
I aready am taxed enough  clockmendergb@... | 04/26/06
"Five welfare families"? What country do you live in?  orange_z | 04/27/06
Sounds good  gordon@... | 04/25/06
Subsidy  scarpezio | 04/26/06
Rights by subsidy  LBean | 04/26/06
subsidies for areas, not individuals  Piper8 | 05/01/06
When did "superhighway" access become a right?  orange_z | 04/27/06
The internet is practically dead...  BitTwiddler | 04/25/06
Dead.  LBean | 04/26/06
"plagued by fraud..."  gordon@... | 04/25/06
Redistribution of wealth r8.1.06  An_Axe_to_Grind | 04/25/06
Net Taxes and Lack of Net Neutrality  alaudel | 04/26/06
Not much better . . .  gafisher@... | 04/26/06
Mr. "I invented the 'Net" Gore? Sheesh![txt]  BlazeEagle | 04/26/06
I am sick up and fed of hearing this LIE!  Joel R | 04/26/06
Mis-understanding of "I invented the Internet"  Update victim | 04/26/06
Oh, I agree with you  Joel R | 04/27/06
Cerf is a Prince  gafisher@... | 04/26/06
I guess some lies are better than others  critic-at-arms | 04/26/06
Not synonyms.  Joel R | 04/27/06
Republicans are Evil  RickyF | 04/26/06
Not so fast there, cowboy!  dcso580 | 04/26/06
DEMOCRATS OR REPUBLICANS.  padj22 | 04/26/06
As if Democrats are any better...  Carrion | 04/26/06
Yes, they are  timbc | 04/26/06
You sound like a repub!  mjm3iii | 04/26/06
Change that to POLITICIANS  Update victim | 04/26/06
All of them . . .  gafisher@... | 04/26/06
Republicans are the true evil in America!!!  mjm3iii | 04/26/06
The truth  stan@... | 04/28/06
Since I posted the above  stan@... | 04/28/06
Neutral mind and Neutral Net both good ideas  yogamaster@... | 04/27/06
The evil is in......  Sysop1984 | 04/27/06
YOU'RE KIDDING  HERCULES123 | 04/28/06
Steven's Bill  alphawiz | 04/26/06
Ridiculous  blenky | 04/26/06
Senate pay for it  thehaysgroup@... | 04/26/06
Why?  nkclark | 04/26/06
What Rs have done...  richmondeagle@... | 04/26/06
Amen!!!!  dcso580 | 04/26/06
What Rs have done  RickyF | 04/26/06
moslem?  heyfool | 04/26/06
Unwarranted Personal Attack  RickyF | 04/26/06
9/11 on Bush's watch, but Clintoon's fault  critic-at-arms | 04/26/06
9/11 on Bush's watch, so it's Bush's fault  BobCratchet | 11/12/06
Short Memories  PJBski | 04/26/06
Somewhat wrong on this  kb1493 | 04/26/06
1st 2nd 3rd 4th etc etc etc  clockmendergb@... | 04/26/06
No Cowboys here.  RickyF | 04/26/06
WHAT A POTENTIAL DISASTER!  el vego | 04/26/06
Agreed! They're greedy! [txt]  BlazeEagle | 04/26/06
Tax the Bathroom visits.  clockmendergb@... | 04/27/06
http://www.senate.gov - Use it  kb1493 | 04/26/06
What have the R's done  jlzimm | 04/26/06
What a ComuCratic Idea !!  bravescott@... | 04/26/06
support the republicans  Bryn | 04/26/06
But it will go to the empty quarters  orange_z | 04/27/06
Viva Net Neutrality  rmcguire | 04/26/06
Net Taxes  virg | 04/26/06
Really, the internet should be taxed  Leria | 04/26/06
This bill is Republican only  Leria | 04/26/06
Actually, that's not quite correct...  ntwkguy | 04/27/06
Exactly right!  Leria | 04/26/06
Actually, the internet is still pretty good  Leria | 04/26/06
Go figure.  padj22 | 04/26/06
Animal Farm in Action  twhditto | 04/26/06
Wrong Century  bowenw@... | 04/26/06
Can't get there from here?  petewagner33 | 04/26/06
Taxes  KyRidgeRuner | 04/26/06
ACTUALLY, THIS TAX IS ON LIBERALS IN BLUE STATES TO PROVIDE INTERNET ACCESS  iconoclastt | 04/26/06
SOME CLARIFICATIONS..........  iconoclastt | 04/26/06
While it's true...  Joel R | 04/27/06
"Government is not the solution to the problem . . .  critic-at-arms | 04/26/06
Tricle Down to China...  s_gamgee | 04/27/06
Reaganomics was called "Voodoo Economics."  Joel R | 04/27/06
When will people get wise and look at HISTORY  graphx | 04/27/06
Why taxes are actually good  quantumstate | 04/27/06
38 States, not 3.  Joel R | 04/27/06
I'm familiar with lots of anti-tax wingnuttery, but this one's new!  orange_z | 04/27/06
Taxing the Internet  interested_amateur@... | 04/27/06
The Man Who Would Be...  s_gamgee | 04/27/06
Good?  stan@... | 04/28/06
DANCE PROSTITIUTE DANCE  HERCULES123 | 04/28/06
Pick our pockets - again  phweiss | 05/09/06

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