New York City’s Franchise and Concession Review Committee plans a hearing Monday on the CityBridge consortium’s plan to install a Wi-Fi hot spot system in place of up to 10,000 obsolete payphone booths across the city. The agreement, announced last month, would end June 24, 2026, and would initially give New York City 50 percent of gross revenue. The city would later receive 55 percent of gross revenue, with a minimum annual guarantee of $20 million per contract year, the review committee said. The hearing begins at 2:30 p.m.
National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates members passed a resolution at NASUCA's annual meeting last month in San Francisco that urges federal and state regulators to ensure the continuation of carrier of last resort obligations “regardless of the facilities or transmission used to provide service” and to require network owners to “implement an open Internet,” the group said. The NASUCA resolution also urges regulators to require network owners to prohibit discrimination and blocking, support fiber unbundling and reasonable rates for mobile data roaming.
A Communications Workers of America (CWA) meeting in July with New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio violated state education laws and city Department of Education (DOE) regulations, the city's Department of Investigation (DOI) and DOE Special Commissioner for Investigation Richard Condon said Tuesday in a report. The meeting, held at Public School 66 in Brooklyn while CWA Local 1182 was negotiating a new contract with Cablevision, was billed as a way for CWA workers to tell de Blasio about their dispute with the cable company. De Blasio, a Democrat, said in prepared remarks for the meeting that he was with CWA workers “every step of the way.” CWA barred media and the public from the meeting, which violates state laws regarding access to public school property, New York City DOE and DOI said in the report. The meeting also may have violated New York City Charter rules on conflicts of interest, the state DOI said. A de Blasio spokesman said the mistake was “inadvertent” and that de Blasio’s office will work to ensure it’s not repeated. CWA apologized for violating New York City DOE rules on open meetings and “will be sure to comply with such rules in the future,” Bob Master, CWA political director-District One, said in a statement. “We hope that likewise, Cablevision will move expeditiously to comply with federal labor law, which it has repeatedly and flagrantly violated for the last three years.” Cablevision criticized de Blasio and CWA in a statement, saying they had “cooked up this secret political meeting on behalf of the CWA in a New York public school.” Cablevision employees in Brooklyn have twice sought and failed to receive National Labor Relations Board approval of a vote to decertify from CWA, the company said.
Google Fiber filed for a Tennessee franchise license Friday, telling the state's Regulatory Authority it intends to begin offering broadband service in Nashville and surrounding Davidson County within 24 months after the TRA issues a license. Google has identified Nashville as a potential expansion city for its Google Fiber service. A Google Fiber spokeswoman said there’s “still a lot of work to do” before the company decides whether to expand to Nashville. Google hopes to provide an update on its decisionmaking regarding Nashville by year's end, the spokeswoman said.
A group of officials from Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco urged FCC officials last week to raise the E-rate funding cap and consider increasing E-rate’s internal connection budget for urban libraries, along with allowing flexibility for capital improvements and supporting schools and libraries in operating their own networks. The cities’ representatives also urged the FCC to adopt “the strongest possible net neutrality protections,” during their meeting with Special Counsel for External Affairs Gigi Sohn and aides to FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler and Commissioner Mignon Clyburn, the cities said in an ex parte filing posted Wednesday.
The California Public Utilities Commission voted Thursday to approve increasing the state’s High Cost Fund-A surcharge rate to 0.35 percent from 0.18 percent and the LifeLine Program surcharge rate to 2.4 percent from 1.15 percent. The High Cost Fund-A surcharge hike will cost end users an additional 17 cents per $100, while the LifeLine program surcharge hike will cost an additional $1.25 per $100, CPUC said. Both surcharge rate changes take effect Jan. 1, CPUC said.
NARUC members elected Florida Public Service Commissioner Lisa Edgar the group’s president Monday, as expected, here at the association's meeting in San Francisco (see 1411140060). Edgar was first vice president for the past year. Commissioners elected Montana Public Service Commissioner Travis Kavulla first vice president and Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission Chairman Robert Powelson second vice president. Telecom observers identified Kavulla's re-election to the Montana PSC earlier this month as one of the key races for the telecom industry (see 1411040055). Edgar, Kavulla and Powelson are set to begin their terms Wednesday.
Broadband remains the “elephant in the room” as the FCC’s Federal-State Joint Board on Universal Service examines possible recommendations for changing the USF contributions methodology, said Universal Consulting consultant Billy Jack Gregg during a NARUC panel discussion Monday. Former FCC Commissioner Harold Furchtgott-Roth said that contribution changes should bring contribution rules in line with the statute, but said he’s unsure if requiring USF contributions on broadband services is a “survivable” approach. The issue could become moot if the FCC chooses to pursue Title II reclassification as part of its net neutrality NPRM, as that would automatically bring broadband under the USF umbrella, Furchtgott-Roth said. National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates Counsel David Bergmann said he believes it would be “inequitable” for the FCC to continue to exclude broadband from the USF pool if it pursues Title II reclassification. Retiring Nebraska Public Service Commissioner Anne Boyle said she believes the FCC will be forced to add broadband to the USF pool because of shrinking contributions from other services, but noted that adding broadband would not be akin to taxing the Internet.
C Spire activated gigabit fiber service in two Mississippi cities Wednesday: Ridgeland and Starkville. “We’re determined to show the world that Starkville and these other cities are ready to be a catalyst for technology investment, economic growth and job creation,” said C Spire Chief Operating Officer Kevin Hankins in a news release. Deployment in Ridgeland will attract additional business and residents to the city, said Mayor Gene McGee, a Republican, in a news release. C Spire activated gigabit fiber service Monday in Quitman, another Mississippi city (see 1411100039). The three cities were among those C Spire selected last year as sites for gigabit deployment (see 1311050028).
The Estes Park Town Board approved the Estes Park Economic Development Corporation’s (EDC) request for a Feb. 3 special election on a ballot measure to let Estes Park exempt itself from Colorado’s municipal broadband law. Exemption from the law would allow Estes Park to more effectively use the fiber network it operates in conjunction with the Platte River Power Authority, the EDC said Thursday. Eight Colorado communities approved ballot measures during last week’s election to exempt themselves from the state’s municipal broadband law (see 1411060030).