Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Maryland Ranks Bad for Business: Even This Left-Leaning Study Can’t Save It

On CNBC’s 2026 Top States for Business list released last week, Maryland ranks #36 overall for best business climate in the nation for business, worse than it ranked last year at #32 (1st=best for business; 50th=worst). The study evaluates all 50 states using 138 metrics across 10 categories of competitiveness.

Maryland has long struggled in similar business climate rankings (many of which CNBC incorporated into its scoring for this year). For example, on the Tax Foundation’s State Tax Competitiveness Index, Maryland ranked #46 in FY26. And on Cato Institute’s 2023 Freedom in the 50 States index, Maryland ranked #47 regarding regulatory freedom and #35 regarding fiscal freedom.

What stands out about the CNBC study is that its scoring leans "left" in several categories. Even with this progressive scoring boost, Maryland still stands at a mediocre overall (#36). Maryland avoids the bottom 10 ranking thanks primarily to "Quality of Life," "Technology and Innovation," "Education," and "Infrastructure" – categories with some of the heaviest weighting for progressive and market-interventionist policies.

For example, the Quality of Life category rewards states with more federal research funding, “livable wage” laws, union and collective bargaining protections, and even pro-abortion policies.

Maryland’s weak #36 overall ranking stems primarily from its dismal #49 ranking in the study’s "Economy" category – calling Maryland out for having one of the worst economies in the nation. In the "Economy" category, Maryland fell behind West Virginia (#48) and beat only Rhode Island (#50).

This near-last ranking on "Economy" (#49) is because Maryland scored poorly on factors like GDP growth, job growth, and overall budget picture including spending, revenues, and reserves. The "Economy" category also includes factors like the number of major corporations headquartered in each state and health of the residential real estate market. Maryland also ranks poorly on the "Cost of Doing Business" category at #44, which includes things like tax climate and related costs.

Most nearby states rank better overall: Virginia (#3), Pennsylvania (#13), and Delaware (#32). So, it’s no surprise that Marylanders are voting with their feet – a problem I wrote about here.

The General Assembly and Governor Moore need to get serious about improving Maryland's ability to attract and grow businesses. They must remember that at the end of the day, it’s everyday residents – Maryland's consumers – who benefit from a stronger economy and lower costs of doing business.

The Growing Realization That AI Needs Modernized High-Capacity Information Networks

It is becoming increasingly difficult to avoid discussions about artificial intelligence (AI). There is a growing consensus that AI broadly defined will have a major impact on virtually every sector of the economy. A growing number of experts believe that the impact will not stop there. Like railroads, electricity, telephones, steam engines, and the Internet, AI’s impact is expected to be large enough to affect the way we live. But, as Free State Foundation scholars have written, this will require massive investment to modernize the nation's information networks and to keep them robust.

Most of the attention on AI is focused on building models that will consume massive amounts of data and compute complex problems that are increasingly beyond the ability of humans to solve. A lesser concern has been the energy and, to a smaller extent, water networks required because of their role as major inputs into data centers and power plants. However, AI will also have a large impact on other networks. One of the most important will be the nation's information networks. 

 

In the past, most of the focus on networks has been on extending broadband to all people, a job that is nearing completion as broadband availability becomes ubiquitous. Over the past year or so an increasing number of leaders and organizations have begun to point out the strong interdependency of AI and the information networks. The result is a growing realization that the U.S. needs to devote an enormous amount of investment to networks that are larger, faster, and more self-aware than the existing infrastructure.

As stated above, there is already wide recognition of the strong linkage between AI and power supplies. For instance, Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, has stated that the problem in the AI industry is not an excess supply of computation power, but rather a lack of power to accommodate all those CPUs. Jensen Huang, NVIDIA's CEO, has stressed that the U.S. is vulnerable because of its deficient energy supply. Finally, a report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies finds that the U.S. electricity sector is struggling to meet growing demand while maintaining low costs, improving system reliance, and reducing emissions.

Recently authoritative voices have expressed some of the same "supply-based" concerns about the information networks. These networks must convey, compute, and control massive amounts of data to massive amounts of computing power and back. Börje Ekholm, President and CEO of Ericsson, explained that “[a]s artificial intelligence (AI) moves beyond data centres into real-world applications like robotics, autonomous systems and extended reality, it depends on high-performance 5G today and 6G tomorrow.” John Saw, T-Mobile's President of Technology and Chief Technology Officer, believes that “6G to us is more than just an ‘XG.’ We think it's the foundation for an AI-native future that distributes intelligence across devices, the edge, and the cloud.” Finally, Ajit Pai, President and CEO of CTIA stated that: “AI without a strong wireless network is like a new car without a road.”

Others share these concerns. An informative report from the Fiber Broadband Association argues that “[t]wo historic trends are unfolding at the same time: the nationwide deployment of fiber broadband infrastructure and the rapid buildout of the infrastructure required to support artificial intelligence, quantum networking, and other emerging applications.” FBA's report says: “AI workloads require high-capacity east-west traffic within and between data centers. They require low-latency pathways between inference platforms and end users. They require resilient interconnection among geographically distributed facilities.” The report argues that the current grid is evolving from a centralized system into a highly distributed network incorporating renewable energy resources, battery storage systems, distributed generation, microgrids, and intelligent controls. Managing this complexity requires real-time visibility and coordination.

A recent CTIA report argues that AI requires networks to move data, coordinate real-time decisions, and interact with the physical world. In turn, wireless networks rely on AI to manage the surging complexity and record traffic driven by AI’s own insatiable data demands:”

[I]t is now clear that AI traffic will strain existing wireless networks before the decade is out with huge new data needs, entirely new traffic patterns, and novel demands on wireless networks to do more than simply carry traffic….

[I]t will also require emerging 6G networks to be AI-native from the ground up with embedded intelligence to dynamically allocate spectrum, anticipate congestion, sense the physical environment, coordinate edge-compute workloads, and secure devices—all at machine speed.

Two final points. To maximize AI’s performance, the most important parts of the networks have to work differently than current networks. They will feature more east-west flows, lower latency, higher uploading speeds, and the ability to operate independently of humans. Second, the networks will have to be closely integrated into those of other industries, including healthcare, transportation, government services, and (of course) electricity.

In fact, building out modernized networks will require both fiber and wireless technology, as well as a lot of other inputs. Success will require massive investments in these modernized networks, most of which will come from the private sector. Given the large economic and security implications, public policy should concentrate on creating favorable conditions for private sector investment and working with allies to develop common standards and protections.

 

Friday, July 10, 2026

Congress and Regulators Should Follow NCTA’s Next Steps on AI-Driven Shortages

Surging demand for high-power AI chips is diverting scarce resources away from traditional chips that are used in broadband equipment. For example, the price of DDR4 memory – ubiquitous in broadband – has risen 700-800% year-over-year. NCTA – The Internet & Television Association has also emphasized that the problem extends beyond memory chips to substrate, the foundational materials on which chips are built.

An NCTA-led coalition of groups involved in deployment and operation of broadband services sent a letter on June 2 to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick urging certain policy actions to expand chip production: “Ease constraints on alternative sourcing and product redesign by offering expedited validation and approvals for regulated products, along with flexibility for necessary hardware, firmware, or software changes. . . Identify and remove regulatory barriers that slow the expansion of memory manufacturing capacity, both domestically and internationally, to increase overall global supply.”

Promising policies under NCTA’s recommendations may include: streamlining regulatory and permitting requirements; reforming the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) to speed up the review of new chemicals and substances necessary for innovation; allowing immediate expensing of foreign research and development costs; easing trade frictions by cutting unnecessary tariffs and customs barriers, expedite customs clearance procedures, and ensuring that semiconductor data can move freely across borders; and reforming high-skilled immigration for a robust workforce.

Broadband providers rely heavily on semiconductors to capture, process, and transmit data across their networks, making these shortages a direct constraint on their ability to operate, expand, and improve Internet service. And broadband providers are not alone. The coalition includes other sectors experiencing supply constraints, including automotive, medical technology, and retail associations.

State and federal policy responses to the shortages largely have relied on interventions in the form of grants, loans, and tax credits for domestic chip making and research. These interventions, like the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act, may indeed alleviate chip shortages but are subject to the typical flaws of government subsidies – they risk favoring selected companies and taxing Americans in the form of mounting government debt.

Encouragingly, there have also been some wins for more free-market oriented approaches to boost supply and slow the growth of increasing costs. In June, the FCC granted a waiver of certain router requirements that NCTA had petitioned for – I blogged about it here. The 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act restored expensing requirements for research and development (affecting all industries, not just chip-making). The OBBBA also let companies deduct the full cost of most new equipment and machinery in the year they buy it, particularly valuable for a capital-intensive industry like chip production.

Congress and regulatory agencies should build on NCTA’s recommendations and expand market-oriented approaches already supported by parts of the semiconductor industry, including the Semiconductor Industry Association.

Ultimately, persistent chip shortages translate into higher costs paid by consumers. When supply is stretched thin across industries, everyday products and services become more expensive – particularly in memory-heavy markets like broadband.

Congress and regulators must focus on finding market-oriented ways to bring these costs down for Americans.

Monday, June 29, 2026

PRESS RELEASE: The Supreme Court Confirms Agency Commissioners May Be Fired at Will

 

Free State Foundation President Randolph May issued the following statement regarding the Supreme Court’s decision today in Trump v. Slaughter:

“The Supreme Court has now confirmed the handwriting on the wall. The president may fire, without cause, members of what were formerly known as ‘independent’ agencies, including FCC commissioners. The Court held, correctly in my view, that this power is dictated by the Constitution’s separation of powers scheme. 

As I have pointed out for years, it is highly likely that, even absent the Slaughter decision overruling Humphrey’s Executor, the president always has possessed the authority to dismiss FCC commissioners at will. This is because the Communications Act, unlike the FTC Act and other statutes, doesn’t contain at provision even purporting to limit the president’s dismissal discretion. Of course, pursuant to the Communications Act, the FCC still needs a quorum to operate, which means three confirmed commissioners."  

Friday, June 26, 2026

FCC Allows Broadband to Substitute Router Parts Amid AI-Driven Shortages

On June 9, the FCC granted a partial waiver of its March ban on certain routers. The situation is bureaucratic and messy. While the March order banned “all consumer-grade routers produced in foreign countries” on national security grounds, the June waiver does not lift that ban.

Instead, the waiver allows already-approved domestic routers (approved by the FCC before March) to have certain parts substituted – substrate material and memory – without triggering a full re-certification process. In effect, the FCC is treating these modified designs as the same product, avoiding the need for them to go through a new approval process all over again.

This waiver was in direct response to the NCTA – the Internet & Television Association, which petitioned the FCC on June 2 explaining why it’s so important that their members be allowed to substitute components in their router designs: “unavoidable supply chain shortages in critical substrate material and memory . . . significantly constrain the industry.” The original ban in March had threatened to sharply limit new router imports and sales until approvals or waivers could be secured since the vast majority of waivers are made abroad.

In fact, the substrate and memory shortages are so severe that it would’ve been difficult for the FCC to find a worse time to ban consumer-grade foreign routers. The shortages are hitting broadband operators like NCTA members hard as increasing demand for capacity, driven by the current boom of artificial intelligence, is affecting their ability to serve their customers. Surging demand for AI GPUs has drawn massive production capacity toward high-end AI chips, tightening supplies of traditional everyday components used in broadband. This includes DRAM (Dynamic Random Access Memory) and non-volatile memory. Substrate materials – the foundational layers used for broadband and AI semiconductors – are also in short supply.

As NCTA explained in its petition: “Driven largely by surging demand from AI, manufacturers are shifting production toward DRAM chips used in data centers, and this shift has tightened supply for the widely used DRAM memory components that support everyday technologies like routers . . . [AI] is driving unprecedented demands for substrate materials, leading to a growing shortage of the necessary materials for semiconductor manufacturing.”

The FCC’s waiver provides some immediate relief for NCTA members and other broadband providers. But the FCC can do more. In a June 3 coalition letter, NCTA and other participants urged the FCC to take broader action: “Ease constraints on alternative sourcing and product redesign by offering expedited validation and approvals for regulated products, along with flexibility for necessary hardware, firmware, or software changes . . . Identify and remove regulatory barriers that slow the expansion of memory manufacturing capacity, both domestically and internationally, to increase overall global supply.”

Substrate material and memory supply were a problem long before the FCC’s March routers ban, and these shortages continue to pose real challenges for broadband as telecommunications infrastructure requirements and AI demand keep growing.

Alabama, Louisiana, and Vermont Enact Privacy Laws: The Number of Such States Is Now One Shy of Half

As I noted in an April post to the FSF Blog, the Sooner State, with the enactment of the Oklahoma Consumer Data Privacy Act, became the first in nearly two years to enact a comprehensive data privacy statute. In the intervening months, three more states – Alabama, Louisiana, and Vermont – have followed suit, bringing the total to 24.

As the number of state-specific privacy regimes increases, so, too, do the complexity burdens for consumers seeking to understand their rights and the compliance questions for companies seeking to satisfy their regulatory obligations.

Alabama

Yellowhammer State Governor Kay Ivey signed the Alabama Personal Data Protection Act (APDPA) into law on April 16. It will take effect on May 1, 2027.

"Fun" differentiating fact: the APDPA has a lower applicability bar than most, covering companies that (1) control or process the personal information of just 25,000 Alabama residents, or (2) earn over 25 percent of their gross revenues from the sale of personal data, no matter how many Alabama residents that involves.

Louisiana

Pelican State Governor Jeff Landry signed the Louisiana Data Privacy Act (LDPA) on May 29. It will take effect on January 1, 2027.

"Fun" differentiating fact: the LDPA includes a temporary 30-day cure period that applies before the Attorney General may initiate an investigation; in other states, the cure period typically runs after the investigation but before the commencement of an enforcement action.

Vermont

Green Mountain State Governor Phil Scott signed the Vermont Data Privacy and Online Surveillance Act (VDPOSA) on June 16. It will take effect on January 1, 2028.

"Fun" differentiating fact: Vermont residents whose "personal data were processed for the purposes of profiling in furtherance of any automated decision" may "question the result of such profiling."

All three statutes assign enforcement authority to the state attorney general. The Louisiana and Vermont laws expressly exclude a private right of action while the Alabama law is silent on the topic.

*    *    *

A comprehensive federal regime could take the "fun" out of data privacy and put in its place a single, straightforward set of consumer rights and corporate responsibilities that apply nationwide.

Which brings us to the Securing and Ensuring Consumer Uniform Rights and Enforcement over Data Act (SECURE Data Act), legislation introduced by a group of House Republicans on April 21.

As noted by Free State Foundation Adjunct Senior Fellow Michael O'Rielly in "The House Builds a Sound Privacy Bill," a May Perspectives from FSF Scholars, The SECURE Data Act (1) embraces "strong federal preemption that recognizes the interstate nature of data collection and consumption" and (2) rejects a private right of action in favor of exclusive enforcement by the FTC and state attorneys general, thereby "prevent[ing] abusive class-action lawsuits by trial attorneys that have plagued many other sectors of our economy."

The House Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade held a hearing on the SECURE Data act on June 3. The Press Release included the following quote from Subcommittee Chairman Gus Bilirakis (R-FL): "Americans, regardless of political affiliation, share a fundamental expectation that their personal data be protected and secure…. The productive dialogue during today's hearing represents an important step toward creating a framework that puts constituents back in control of their personal information while holding bad actors accountable."

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Louisiana Becomes the First State to Complete NEPA Approvals for the BEAD Program

This week Louisiana became the first state to obtain approvals under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) for all its projects under the Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) program, encompassing nearly 25,000 serviceable projects. This accomplishment marks significant progress toward bringing high-speed Internet to all communities across the state. According to the Executive Director of ConnectLA, the state is on track to eliminate the "digital divide" by 2028.

This is not a minor accomplishment. Under NEPA, federal law requires agencies to assess any reasonably foreseeable environmental impacts of major federal action. It is one of two federal statutes requiring significant action, the other one being the National Historical Preservation Act (NHPA). A recent NERA study commissioned by CTIA finds that the combined requirements cost $7.5 billion in lost value over ten years. 

The Louisiana Office of Broadband Development and Connectivity (ConnectLA) leads the state’s efforts to expand high-speed Internet access. It works with federal, state, and local stakeholders to identify and implement strategies for expanding coverage. ConnectLA oversees the state’s GUMBO 2.0 Project backed by the federal BEAD awards. Louisiana is to be commended for its focused efforts to make the most of BEAD funding.

However, much remains to be done. This is especially true given that states face a deadline for completing projects with federal money. States need to move forward as quickly as possible, working closely with other involved agencies to develop joint strategies for building out the network.

Two changes in policies could make a difference in advancing broadband deployment. As long advocated by FSF scholars, implementing permitting reforms could significantly reduce the time required for obtaining state and local approvals for BEAD deployments. Second, the Department of Commerce could allow some part of BEAD’s non-deployment money ($21 billion) to pay for measures required to be implemented by state and local officials to speed deployments and for other actions such as quickly resolving pole attachment disputes.

 

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Is California Leveraging the Clock to Extract More Concessions From Charter and Cox?

In a March post to the FSF Blog regarding the merger between Charter Communications, Inc., and Charter Holdings, LLC (collectively, Charter) and Cox Enterprises, Inc. (Cox), I identified the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) as "the final, time-sensitive hurdle preventing the formation of a combined company better able to compete in broadband, mobile, and video." In recent days that time-sensitive hurdle has grown substantially.

In a video conference that took place on June 15 described in a June 18 notice of ex parte communication, representatives from Charter reiterated its concerns that the CPUC's timeline for action "would not sufficiently account for unforeseen or unanticipated delays that may occur, and that failure to complete the Transaction review prior to the [Hart-Scott-Rodino Act (HSR)] expiration would jeopardize the Transaction and the consumer benefits it would produce."

Meanwhile, Broadband Breakfast (subscription required) reports that "[s]ome advocacy groups in California want the state to tack on more conditions if it approves Charter's $34.5 billion acquisition of Cox Communications." Any such conditions would be in addition to commitments – including, among other things, a "$275 million investment over three years to upgrade Charter's network to support symmetrical gigabit service across its legacy service areas" – already agreed to in comprehensive settlements with the Public Advocates Office and the California Emerging Technology Fund described in a May 18 notice of ex parte communication.

Coincidence? Who can say.

What we do know is that the parties to this transaction – which has obtained the approval of the FCC, the Department of Justice (DOJ), and every other state within which they operate – repeatedly have warned the CPUC that its failure to sign off on the deal by September 15 at a minimum "would cost the companies $2.5 million in filing fees and require them to wait at least another 30 days for DOJ clearance."

Accordingly, the parties have on numerous occasions urged the CPUC to act "promptly." Most recently, and as described in the June 18 notice of ex parte communication referenced above, Charter explained why CPUC action by August 13, rather than its next meeting scheduled for September 3 (that is, a mere 12 days before HSR clearance expires), is "necessary."

As Free State Foundation President Randolph May and I explained in comments submitted to the FCC, and as every other reviewing body has concluded, the combination of these two companies will benefit competition – and, in turn, consumers.

The time for regulatory arbitrage has run out.

The CPUC should act before the DOJ's HSR clearance runs out, too.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

PRESS RELEASE: The USF Doesn't Top 40%

The following may be attributed to Free State Foundation President Randolph May:

“On June 3, I issued a press release stating that the FCC was expected soon to announce that the USF contribution factor (aka the “USF tax”) would top 40% for Q3 2026. Well, I was wrong, and I’m always happy to correct the record. The good news is that on June 12, the FCC issued a Public Notice reporting that the USF contribution factor for Q3 2026 will be only 38.8%. The bad news is that USF tax, at 38.8%, will be near the highest it has ever been, if not the highest. As I said a week ago, the current USF regime is in desperate need of a meaningful market-oriented overhaul that fits today’s market and technological environment."