ISPs fear wave of state laws after New York’s $15 broadband mandate
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New York’s law requiring Internet service providers to offer broadband for $15 or $20 a month has spurred legislative efforts in other states to guarantee affordable service for people with low incomes. So far, legislators in Vermont, Massachusetts, and California have proposed laws inspired by the New York requirement.
Christopher Morrow, a newly elected Democratic state legislator in Vermont, introduced a bill on January 29 that is modeled on New York’s law. “Affordability is a big issue in Vermont and there are many stories of children who couldn’t study properly during COVID for lack of Internet,” Morrow told Ars. “It exposed the digital divide. This is a small gesture to help folks out.”
Despite industry attempts to block the New York law and other broadband regulations, courts have made it clear that states can impose stricter requirements on Internet service when the Federal Communications Commission isn’t regulating Internet providers as common carriers under Title II of the Communications Act. That’s the situation right now after a federal appeals court blocked a Biden-era FCC order that classified ISPs as common carriers and imposed net neutrality rules.