
The Federal
Communications Commission's repeal of the Obama-era net neutrality rules is already harming the public, former FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler will suggest Thursday in Congressional testimony.
When
the FCC made its made the controversial decision to revoke net neutrality, it also transferred oversight over broadband providers to a different agency -- the Federal Trade Commission. But the FTC
isn't equipped to police broadband providers, Wheeler will argue.
“The FTC is a fine agency, but ... it lacks the resources and rulemaking authority, and it also lacks the
engineering expertise required for dealing with internet service providers.” he will testify to a subcommittee of the House Energy and
Commerce committee.
“Because of the decision by the Trump FCC to walk away from its responsibilities, when California firefighters couldn't use their mobile phones during the Mendocino
Complex fire, they could not turn to the FCC for help,” he will tell lawmakers. “When researchers discovered that mobile carriers were throttling streaming services -- something the
carriers had promised not to do -- the agency that should be responsible for the nation’s networks did nothing."
When Wheeler led the FCC during the Obama administration, the agency
imposed some common carrier rules on broadband carriers, including rules prohibiting blocking or throttling and charging higher fees for prioritized delivery of content.
Current FCC Chairman
Ajit Pai, who opposed those rules, shepherded their recent repeal.
Since then, broadband providers have faced criticism over their practices on several occasions. In one well-publicized
example, Verizon throttled firefighters as they attempted to combat blazes
in Mendocino.
Also, researchers at Northeastern University, University of Massachusetts-Amherst and Stony Brook University reported last year that the major wireless carriers were slowing
streaming video traffic.
Thursday's hearing --
the first related to net neutrality since Democrats regained control of the House -- is part of an initiative by Congressional leaders to closely scrutinize the FCC. Reps. Frank Pallone Jr. (D-New
Jersey), who leads the Energy and Commerce committee, and Mike Doyle (D-Pennsylvania) chairman of the Communications and Technology subcommittee, recently criticized FCC chairman Ajit Pai for being
“unresponsive” to oversight requests.
“Not only have you have failed on numerous occasions to provide Democratic members of this Committee with responses to their inquiries,
you have also repeatedly denied or delayed responding to legitimate information requests from the public about agency operations,” the lawmakers wrote to Pai Friday. “Under your
leadership, the FCC has failed repeatedly to act in the public interest and placed the interest of corporations over consumers.”