-Caveat Lector-

 -----forwarded message-----
 From: Gary Chapman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Date: Mon, 21 Jun 1999
 Subj: L.A. Times column, 6/21/99

 DIGITAL NATION

 Telecom Reins Belong in Hands of Local Citizens

 By Gary Chapman

 Last week, Federal Communications Commission Chairman William
 Kennard took the podium at the National Cable Television Assn.
 convention in Chicago to rail against local control of high-speed,
 broadband telecommunications and assert that only the FCC should
 have the authority to regulate this business.

 "The information superhighway will not work if there are 30,000
 different technical standards or 30,000 different regulatory
 structures for broadband," he said.  "The market would be rocked
 with uncertainty.  Investment would be stymied.  Consumers would
 be hurt."

 With all due respect, Mr. Chairman, you're wrong on this issue.

 Local control of telecommunications is an important right for
 citizens.  And local control, contrary to Kennard's assertions,
 will stimulate competition and innovation and help preserve the
 open character of the Internet.

 The background for Kennard's remarks, which were greeted by loud
 applause from the cable company executives in attendance, was
 provided by a recent federal court decision in Portland, Ore.,
 where AT&T requested routine approval of its takeover of TCI,
 the city's dominant cable provider.  The city of Portland and its
 surrounding county, Multnomah, conditioned the approval on AT&T
 assurances that its cable network would be opened to alternative
 Internet service providers [ISPs].

 AT&T immediately sued both Portland and Multnomah County.  But on
 June 4, U.S. District Judge Owen Panner sided with the two local
 governments, ruling that "the open-access requirement is within
 the authority of the city and county to protect competition."
 AT&T's attorneys called the decision "inexplicable."  Last week,
 AT&T said it would appeal.

 Meanwhile, a new public interest coalition called No Gatekeepers
 (http://www.nogatekeepers.org/) took out a large ad in the
 Portland Oregonian headlined: "Thank You, Portland, for Breaking
 the Chains of Monopoly Control Over the Internet."  The ad hailed
 the judge's decision as an important step in "upholding the right
 of the people to an open, diverse and affordable Internet."

 No Gatekeepers is a coalition of national and local organizations
 that includes the Center for Responsive Law, Computer
 Professionals for Social Responsibility, the Center for Media
 Education, Consumer Federation of America and the Media Access
 Project.

 The Portland dispute is the leading edge of a fight over open
 access to broadband telecommunications, especially cable.  Cable
 operators such as AT&T want their multibillion-dollar investments
 in new Internet connections to pay off by locking customers into
 their own information services, such as the @Home service in which
 AT&T now has a large stake.  They're opposed by America Online,
 Mindspring and other independent ISPs, which argue that they will
 be devastated if consumers have to buy the cable company's
 Internet service when they sign up for a cable modem connection.

 So far, the FCC has declined to change the rules, even though many
 communities, including Los Angeles, are looking for guidance from
 the agency.  Kennard seems to hope that cable companies will open
 their networks voluntarily, without regulation, although many
 people wonder where he finds reason for such hopes.  But his
 comments last week raised an equally important issue, one that is
 also close to the hearts of cable executives.  That is, how much
 regulation can be imposed on telecom companies by local
 governments and citizens acting in local organizations?

 Telecom leaders simply hate allowing local governments to have
 authority over telecom franchises, because local governments
 control the rights-of-way, or the land used for wiring networks.
 Rights-of-way typically apply to underground space for wires, or
 the lines on telephone poles, as well as the ability of companies
 to tear up streets or other parts of a community to bury or string
 new wires.  Companies pay for rights-of-way access, which in most
 communities is a nontrivial share of municipal revenues.

 Local governments can also impose limited content requirements,
 such as by requiring cable companies to carry TV channels for
 public access, local government, schools, churches, etc.  The
 reason telecom companies find this irritating is that it means
 they spend a lot of money on attorneys and negotiators who have
 to deal with thousands of separate municipalities and their
 individual requirements.  Cable executives, in particular, would
 like to see this feature of the U.S. political scene go away.
 They would rather aim their big guns at Washington, with the FCC
 as a single, fat target.

 Chairman Kennard seems to have adjusted to this idea as well.
 But local control of telecommunications has the potential to
 foster more innovation and competition than the big telecom
 carriers have so far demonstrated.  Most local leaders now
 understand the importance of the Internet and quite correctly view
 telecommunications as a component of community infrastructure
 every bit as significant as streets, water, power or public
 transportation.  Implementing high-speed telecom infrastructure
 is by now an essential part of strategic economic planning for
 local governments.

 Miles Fidelman, editor of the Journal of Municipal
 Telecommunications in Newton, Mass., said:  "If you think of the
 Internet as just 'infotainment,' then government probably doesn't
 have a role.  But if you think of it as critical infrastructure,
 then government certainly does have a role."

 That's really the crux of the problem.  The big telecom companies
 view the Internet not as public infrastructure, but as a means for
 capturing a consumer market and for vacuuming people's wallets --
 not unlike television, a business they understand.  It is now
 local public officials who grasp the importance of the Internet as
 infrastructure, and that's why the most innovative experiments are
 being conducted by local governments and citizen groups.

 In Harlan, Iowa, for example, a community of only 5,000 people,
 the municipal utilities company and the local telephone co-op have
 built a fiber-optic network that gives the town, according to
 Fidelman, "the most advanced telecommunications infrastructure on
 the planet" (http://www.harlanchamber.org/techserv.htm).

 Small communities, in particular, are increasingly fed up with
 waiting for telecom companies to build state-of-the-art networks,
 so they're doing it themselves.

 Moreover, it is at the local level where citizens can have the
 most impact on policies that shape the character and future of
 their communities.  If we relocate authority for telecom to the
 federal level, citizens will face the combined resources of
 immense companies with enormous stakes on the table.  This may
 enhance the influence of the FCC, but it will drive a stake
 through the heart of democracy.

 What has made the Internet so powerful is that it dramatically
 improves communications for everyone, while favoring no single
 actor.  But that could change, and the recent trends are not
 encouraging.  It's ominous that Kennard, who is charged with
 protecting the public interest, doesn't seem to understand how
 to do that yet.



 Gary Chapman is director of the 21st Century Project at the
 University of Texas at Austin.  He can be reached at
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]


 Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved






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