New York politicians and public interest groups planned a hearing Monday night on the FCC net neutrality rulemaking and Comcast's planned purchase of Time Warner Cable. Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, a Democrat, New York City Mayoral Counsel Maya Wiley and former FCC Commissioner Michael Copps were to host the hearing because FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler has “ignored” requests for a field hearing in the state, they said. “After waiting months for the FCC to get out of the Beltway, advocates are taking initiative,” Copps said in a Free Press news release. “The voices of millions of Americans must not be ignored. A cloistered conversation in Washington, D.C., advances the special interests, not the public interest. It's time for everyone to speak, and be heard.” The FCC didn’t comment. Interest groups Common Cause, Consumers Union and MAG-Net are also involved in the hearing. Computer & Communications Industry Association President Ed Black said in a statement that “it’s encouraging that Internet users are raising their voices against these threats to the Open Internet and that public officials are listening.”
Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal awarded $36.7 million in Connections for Classrooms grants Monday to 103 of the state’s school districts to upgrade their broadband access. Top grants included $8.43 million to DeKalb County Public Schools, $1.53 million to Gwinnett County Public Schools, $1.5 million to Laurens County Public Schools and $1.42 million to Atlanta Public Schools, said the Governor’s Office of Student Achievement. Deal, a Republican, announced the grants based on recommendations from the state’s Digital Learning Task Force. “A key portion of its recommendations was to build out the technology infrastructure necessary for effective digital learning, and these funds will go a long way toward helping us achieve that goal and bridge the digital divide” in schools, Deal said in a statement.
Frontier Communications is offering gigabit-speed broadband in several neighborhoods in Beaverton, Oregon, it said Monday. The deployment fulfills CEO Maggie Wilderotter’s promise in July to provide gigabit speeds in the Portland area in the near future, Frontier said. “Frontier has invested more than $128 million in recent years to upgrade and enhance our Oregon network,” Wilderotter said Monday in a news release. Frontier said it will deploy gigabit service in other parts of the state as continued network upgrades occur into 2015. The telco said it offers speeds of up to 100 Mbps in other parts of Beaverton, as well as in Forest Grove, Gresham, Hillsboro, McMinnville, Newberg, Sherwood, Tigard, Tualatin and Wilsonville.
A well-trained and stable cybersecurity workforce is “critical” to protecting states against mounting cyberthreats, the National Governors Association (NGA) said Monday in a paper. Governors should ensure that their existing workforce has the “requisite skills to protect and defend state networks and critical infrastructure,” which could in the long term require realigning state education and workforce programs to support cybersecurity training, the NGA said. The group also encouraged governors to utilize the National Guard’s cyber resources for training and incident response purposes. Maryland has “worked aggressively to develop our highly skilled cyber workforce -- this will help address both the state’s and the nation’s cybersecurity challenges, and will also foster growth in our innovative and job-creating cybersecurity business sector,” said Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley, co-chairman of the NGA’s Resource Center for State Cybersecurity, in a news release.
Frontier Communications said it completed its buy of AT&T’s Connecticut broadband, video and wireline assets Friday, along with Dish Network’s satellite TV customers in the state (http://bit.ly/1tkx5HE). Connecticut’s Public Utilities Regulatory Authority approved the deal earlier this month (see 1410150070). Frontier separately said Friday that it has made gigabit fiber service available to business and residential customers in six areas of Durham, North Carolina.
The New York Police Department said up to 41,000 mobile devices, including tablets, are being distributed to officers (http://bit.ly/1zmIMks). The devices were paid for using criminal asset forfeiture funds, which funded a $160 million NYPD Mobility Initiative, the department said in a Thursday news release. “We must have 21st century tools to deal with 21st century threats, and this infusion of new resources will arm our officers with the technology and information they need to fight crime and protect the City against terrorism more efficiently and more effectively,” said New York Mayor Bill de Blasio.
Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack announced $190.5 million in Department of Agriculture (USDA) funding Wednesday for broadband deployments and other advanced communications infrastructure improvements in 19 states, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The 25 projects being funded through the USDA grants and loans include a $24 million loan to Arkansas’ Arkwest Communications to provide voice, broadband and Internet TV service to almost 4,000 customers and make other system improvements. Other projects include a $2.5 million grant to Nexus Systems to provide broadband in Powhatan, Louisiana, and a $750,000 grant to public TV broadcasters in the U.S. Virgin Islands to replace analog production and satellite equipment with high-definition equipment, USDA said (http://1.usa.gov/ZOODPu).
FairPoint Communications said Tuesday it's “concerned” that employees affiliated with the Communications Workers of America (CWA) and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW), who are currently on strike, are disrupting services and intimidating employees and customers (http://bit.ly/1ouXtgZ). More than 1,700 CWA- and IBEW-affiliated workers went on strike Friday in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont (see 1410170025). Some of the striking employees “have followed and intimidated contractors and employees, blocked our trucks, surrounded our workers on job sites, trespassed on customer property and engaged in conduct that impedes the work FairPoint is doing to meet customer needs,” FairPoint said in a news release. The unions said in a statement that they will “continue to work hard to ensure that our labor action is safe and respectful to our neighbors and friends throughout northern New England, but we will not let the company use these spurious and unfounded allegations to take the spotlight off of the company's unfair practices.”
Comcast and Time Warner Cable officials urged the New York Public Service Commission to exempt information on call center operations at Comcast and TWC from public disclosure laws in connection with PSC review of the first company's plan to buy the second. The PSC remanded the companies’ appeal of a July decision by Administrative Law Judge David Prestemon that the call center operations information shouldn’t be exempted. Prestemon said he would issue a ruling on the remand after parties submitted responses, which were due Monday. Officials for both companies said they view information on their call center operations as a trade secret and its release would “unfairly advantage” competitors. Information about Comcast’s call center operations “identifies the number of employees at each Comcast call center in the Northeast, describes Comcast's call interflow parameters that direct calls to sister call centers, and sets forth also detailed facility-by-facility hours, staffing and operational information,” said Don Laub, Comcast senior director-Northeast Division regulatory affairs (http://bit.ly/1DxiUky). Information about TWC’s call center operations “identifies the number of employees at each Time Warner Cable call center in New York and sets forth also detailed facility-by-facility hours, staffing and operational information, including call interflow parameters,” said Terence Rafferty, TWC Northeast regional vice president-operations. Other information the PSC sought involved TWC’s broadband deployments. TWC said it opposes publication of an un-redacted version of that information, which shows “detailed build-out and deployment plans for individual projects in each affected Time Warner Cable franchise area,” Rafferty said. “The information is particularly granular, showing the plant mileage to be built out, the number of premises to be passed by the buildout, and the expected completion date” (http://bit.ly/1FxVayA). The Public Utility Law Project of New York said the Comcast and TWC interpretation of what constitutes a trade secret is overly expansive, and the PSC should release the information under the narrower definition used under the federal Freedom of Information Act (http://bit.ly/1sLK0Q8).
The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) is considering a draft resolution that would raise the state’s LifeLine program surcharge to 2.4 percent beginning Jan. 1. The current LifeLine surcharge in the state is 1.15 percent, which the CPUC set in 2007. The raised surcharge would be applied to revenue collected from all California end users of intrastate telecom services, including VoIP, the CPUC said in the draft resolution, filed Monday. The commission’s staff have estimated that if the surcharge rate remains unchanged, the California LifeLine Fund won’t be able to meet its budgeted expenses for this fiscal year due to an increase in carriers’ claims. A 2.4 percent surcharge would leave the California LifeLine Fund with an estimated $97 million balance at the end of the current fiscal year and an estimated balance of $89 million at the end of the next fiscal year, the CPUC said. The commission is to vote on the resolution at its Nov. 20 meeting (http://bit.ly/1CQH4Ey).