Ohio Republicans Are Using State Budget Battle To Kill Community Broadband

from the do-not-pass-go,-do-not-collect-$200 dept

Frustrated by high prices, a lack of competition, spotty coverage, and terrible customer service, some 750 US towns and cities have built some form of community owned and operated broadband network. While not some silver bullet, studies have shown these networks often provider faster, cheaper, better service than most apathetic regional telecom monopolies. They also tend to put money back into the local community, as well as being somewhat more accountable given they’re run by folks with a vested interest in the community they live in.

Instead of preventing such efforts by offering better, faster, cheaper service, giant regional mono/duopolies ISPs like AT&T, Charter, and Comcast have historically found it cheaper to write and lobby easily corruptible state lawmakers. There are currently laws in 17 states either hamstringing or outright banning cities from building their own networks, almost all of them ghost written by industry.

As COVID highlighted the essential nature of broadband, some states have realized the counterproductive nature of such proposals. For example Arkansas and Washington both eliminated their state restrictions earlier this year, arguing that such creative, local niche solutions can go a long way in shoring up access and lowering prices.

But Ohio is taking a different tack. State Republicans embedded a new amendment in the state budget earlier this month that would effectively outlaw community broadband in the state. The provision is so unpopular among consumers, none of the Republicans pushing for it are willing to affix their name to it:

“On June 9, the Ohio Senate approved a new budget bill. But a last-minute amendment shoveled into the bill is angering state residents and locally-owned ISPs, who say it?s an underhanded effort by AT&T and Charter to protect their regional broadband monopolies…Ohio?s restrictions were implemented without any public notice or input. One local Cleveland outlet noted that the effort is so unpopular, Ohio Republicans sponsoring the amendment are refusing to even officially acknowledge their support.

Like many ISP-backed proposals, it’s a “death by a thousand cuts” approach that pretends to not be an outright ban. The Ohio restrictions would for example prohibit the building of any community broadband in areas where 10 Mbps down, 1 Mbps up broadband is already available. But such a standard doesn’t even meet the FCC’s already fairly pathetic definition of broadband (25 Mbps down, 3 Mbps up), and given that expensive, capped satellite broadband is available in most areas, it allows a regional cable broadband monopoly like Charter to proclaim most places as already “served,” and therefore bans community broadband.

The restrictions also prohibit any community-owned and operated ISP from utilizing taxpayer resources (even if voters wanted to), as well as prohibiting such operations from using federal money to fund operations (something that undermines the point of many COVID relief initiatives, and attempts to scuttle planned community broadband funding in the looming Biden broadband plan). While nobody wants to acknowledge their support of the amendment, several Ohio lawmakers previously worked on government policy and lobbying for Time Warner Cable, now Charter.

If you sit down with most voters and ask them whether Comcast or AT&T should be dictating what their town or city can or can’t do with their own infrastructure and resources, they’d quite correctly tell you that AT&T and Comcast should go to hell. So instead, large ISPs hire an army of economists, consultants, and think tankers (usually via dodgy proxy organizations with names like “Very Sincere Taxpayer Lovers United”) happy to try and claim that community broadband is always a taxpayer boondoggle — unnecessary because private sector US broadband is just that innovative and wonderful.

Most of these critics fixate relentlessly on the idea that community broadband is “government run amok” (it’s not) or “socialism” (it’s not, many such efforts are public/private partnerships or utility backed), while ignoring that incumbent ISPs like AT&T are not only bone grafted to the government (see: the NSA) but get countless billions in tax cuts, subsidies, and regulatory favors in exchange for fiber networks that always mysteriously wind up half deployed.

As in, these telecom-backed stunt policy groups and consultants really care about taxpayer waste when it’s a frustrated town and city forced to get into the broadband business due to market failure, yet disappear from the conversation entirely when it comes to discussing how far, far more state and federal taxpayer money is going to giant national ISPs which then waste it with minimal accountability.

But honestly Ohio Republicans couldn’t even be bothered to take this usual disingenuous route. They just shoveled Charter and AT&T’s agenda into a budget bill without telling the public, and hoped nobody would really notice. The Ohio House and Senate now have until June 30 to reconcile House and Senate budget bills and strip out the offending language. Local community owned ISPs like Fairlawn Gig (which runs on the back of a local utility) are begging Ohio residents to call their representatives to complain, but it’s not sure their concerns will be heard over the din of the daily US news cycle.

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Comments on “Ohio Republicans Are Using State Budget Battle To Kill Community Broadband”

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21 Comments
This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
That One Guy (profile) says:

'If it's not one of you it's all of you'

Ohio’s restrictions were implemented without any public notice or input. One local Cleveland outlet noted that the effort is so unpopular, Ohio Republicans sponsoring the amendment are refusing to even officially acknowledge their support.

Seems there’s only one reasonable response to such a grossly dishonest action then, blame all of them until it’s removed. If they want to hide who slipped the clause in then every last one of them should be assumed to be guilty of doing so or assumed to support the person(s) responsible since if they had a problem with it they’d have objected or be pushing to gut that clause.

ECA (profile) says:

Re: 'If it's not one of you it's all of you'

Can I add a few notes?

Term length: 4 years
Term limits: 2 terms (8 years)

Ohio has a Republican state government trifecta. A trifecta exists when one political party simultaneously holds the governor’s office and majorities in both state legislative chambers. As of June 22, 2021, there are 23 Republican trifectas, 15 Democratic trifectas, and 12 divided governments where neither party holds trifecta control.

They have been controlled by Repubs, before history decided to be called history.

Then can we find out what they mean by Political subdivision?

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

If no one added the amendment it must be a mistake

Should be easy to remove… just ask a simple question… who did this?
If no one owns up just strip the amendment as it must have been a mistake.
And then pass a rule… if there is no way to trace the hack that put added the amendment then it is null and void and not included. These are lawmakers that supposedly work for the people that elected them. Last I checked, event though corps are "people", none of those "people" actually voted.

ECA (profile) says:

Re: If no one added the amendment it must be a mistake

people got board.
People got the idea that ‘They are supposed to represent them, Properly.
People forgot, that Idiots only do what they are told.
People forgot to send Letters to the representatives.
People forgot that WE are responsible For our gov.
People that dont have good internet, tend to not NOTICE, you can Contact your Government.
Corps love People.

ECA (profile) says:

'If it's not one of you it's all of you'

Can I add a few notes?

Term length: 4 years
Term limits: 2 terms (8 years)

Ohio has a Republican state government trifecta. A trifecta exists when one political party simultaneously holds the governor’s office and majorities in both state legislative chambers. As of June 22, 2021, there are 23 Republican trifectas, 15 Democratic trifectas, and 12 divided governments where neither party holds trifecta control.

They have been controlled by Repubs, before history decided to be called history.

Then can we find out what they mean by Political subdivision?

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
sumgai (profile) says:

…. but it’s not sure their concerns will be heard over the din of the daily ration of coins hitting the wallet, due to "campaign donations."

T, FTFY

*Note to whoever’s in charge: We need the strikethrough codes to work, as called for in the standard Markdown langauge – double tilde marks (~~) before and after, just like the asterisk for italics. I wanted to write the word "graft" before "campaign donations", with an obvious strikethrough.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
R.H. (profile) says:

Re: Re:

John Gruber’s original Markdown syntax doesn’t actually support strikethrough (even though many forks do). TechDirt seems to use CommonMark and there’s a long-running argument in their feature requests (the first post in that thread was in October 2014 with the most recent being this February) about whether or not to add strikethrough.

Put simply, it’s unfortunately not as simple as you may think to just "add strikethrough support".

sumgai (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

R.H.

Thanks for that link, I was unaware of that particular conversation. And sadly, I have to admit that I know at two of those participants, from other sites.

But the fact remains – a person or a team that writes a language has the ability to include or exclude whatever they wish. Users, such as Mike and TD, don’t have any more "say" in the matter than what a ‘suggestion box’ might permit… all of that is true. But in the end, ease of implementation is not at issue – that’s simply a programming design goal, subject to the same compromises as any other goal.

My argument would be (and since that particular discussion took place nearly 9 years ago!), the basic "CommonMark Standard" really should’ve been decided by now. Overwhelmingly, stating that the strikethrough is a crutch for those who are lexicologically challenged is an insult, nothing more. If even a modest segment of users request a "feature", then serious thought should be given to the idea, and not flippantly dismissed with "let’s get the basics settled first". That was stated in a civil manner, but it wasn’t actually civil… at least not in my mind.

Mike (or other responsible parties) might wish to discuss and investigate use a different Markdown implementation, one that includes my requested feature, or they might not, either way is cool with me. But if I don’t ask, it’s a sure bet that the feature will never show up. At least not in my remaining lifetime, if that 9-year-old conversation is any indication of how fast things happen. 😉

Let me close with another thanks for that link and site, I’ll be habituating that domain more often, trust me.

JBDragon (profile) says:

Get Government out!

I’m really not for these Local City’s having their own Broadband service. Now it’s basically a Government monopoly. I get that service stinks.

The Republicans are part wrong in this matter. It’s the government that created these Monopolies in the first place. This is why you only have Comcast in these areas and TWC in these other areas and so on and so on. There is no competition. I saw what happened when Google Fiber was coming along. Besides doing all they could to stop it, they increased speeds and dropped prices!!!! Because they had competition!!!

I say let Comcast, TWC, AT&T, and anyone else who wants to bring in broadband to any and all cities. Make it much easier for companies to come in and hang their wires. Coax or Fiber. Let’s have 2,3,4+ company’s fighting it out for every last customer. That means dropping caps, Dropping prices, faster speeds. Better customer service!!!

The government created this mess by listening to these company’s in the first place and letting them set the rules and have their way. Nothing has changed. When these company’s get special deals if they do such and such and they don’t do it, nothing happens to them!!!! Why???

So I find it hard to believe a Government-run system is going to be any better in the long term.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Get Government out!

I’m really not for these Local City’s having their own Broadband service. Now it’s basically a Government monopoly. … Let’s have 2,3,4+ company’s fighting it out for every last customer.

There are certainly community broadband designs that allow this, including in Ammon, Ohio where one signs up for a private ISP that uses the city’s network. Not all that different from the dialup days, where anyone could set up an ISP without worrying about any infrastructure beyond the modems in their office. Another model is that the city runs a fiber line, or a conduit, from every house to various "central office"-type buildings, in which ISPs can lease space for their OLTs. A big benefit with this one is that the cities don’t have to stay "up to date" with any technology beyond ditch-diggers: they don’t own or manage any network equipment. (A fiber line can carry terabits per second, if one is willing to pay for the right equipment at both ends. There’s no real concern the fiber will become outdated.)

Don’t buy into the arguments from incumbent ISPs who more or less equate municipal broadband with a government takeover of the internet. They’re trying to keep capital and bureaucratic costs high, to prevent new competitors from springing into existence. It seems that most markets can only support about 2-4 networks coming into each residence (and the incumbents are already there!); overbuilding is just not a particularly efficient use of resources.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Get Government out!

Let’s have 2,3,4+ company’s fighting it out for every last customer.

Does that mean every company runs fibre to every house in a city? Does every company overbuild to allow for future expansion? Who decides who goes first when multiple trucks turn up to repair the broken fibres from where someone drove a 40 tonner over a pole? What happens to their fibre when the bottom company folds, as the other do not need it?

The sensible solution is a regulated monopoly for the infrastructure, and competition at the ISP level using that Infrastructure.

Anonymous Coward says:

You know, in the past something happened when people found they were being taxed with no representation. Happened over tea.

Now you have another item where the people don’t have realistic representation. How long before they decide a similar action is seen as the solution?

While I’m not for such, it seems that it may wind up being the only solution. Unless the politicians are threatened with losing their power, no one seems to listen to the public.

Anonymous Coward says:

What if?

So what prohibits some enterprising soul to group fund a project using private money and donations to fund a local broadband effort? Or local municipalities using the federal dollars for "other" programs while routing more "non-federal" funds into their municipal efforts? Just pay for the projects from a different pot of money. You know, some creative accounting tricks!

Anonymous Coward says:

Term limits are great, for the lobbyists.
When the members of an institution aren’t there for much longer than it takes to become an effective representative, then who does help guide these new members through the process?
It is no longer the more experienced members of their party. Its left to the staffers and the lobbyists. They are the only ones left who know how the system works and can get things passed.
So if you want a system ran by the lobbyists, for the benefit of the businesses and interests they represent then insist on term limits.
Term limits are usually pushed by people who don’t like who is being elected in other districts. Or by well meaning people who believe in miracles.

sumgai (profile) says:

Re: Re:

That was pretty negative.

If I’m elected for only so long (term limits), why should I seek your "campaign donations" if I can’t use them?? Why shouldn’t I just do what my constituents ask of me, and be able to hold my head high when I return to the fold?s

And keep in mind that the bureaucrats that you speak of are already getting their money, regardless of who’s in "elected" power. As for the rest of the staff, they are replaced with people that the newly elected bring with them, so that’s not much help either.

Together, term limits and public funding of political advertising are likely the only way that we might get out of the current jam. I don’t claim it will be a sinecure, but it’ll go a long ways toward sanity in our leadership.

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

If I’m elected for only so long (term limits), why should I seek your "campaign donations" if I can’t use them??

What they’ll seek instead is a cushy job after the term limit is up (a sinecure, you might call it).

Why shouldn’t I just do what my constituents ask of me?

Either an office holder took the office to do that, in which case anti-corruption measures are not necessary, or they did it to enrich themselves, in which case I don’t see how term limits would prevent them from doing so.

I don’t claim it will be a sinecure

I think you mean panacea.

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