On Friday, June 23 at Noon Eastern Standard Time, the Federalist Society will be hosting a webinar titled "The FCC's Digital Discrimination Rulemaking: Facilitating Equal Access to Broadband Services." Registration for the virtual event is now open.
The webinar will be moderated by Free State Foundation President Randolph May, and it will feature a panel that includes Dr. Harold Feld of Public Knowledge, Clint Odom of T-Mobile and Seth Cooper of the Free State Foundation. The Federalist Society's webpage for the event describes what will be in store for the webinar:
The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, signed into law on November 15, 2021, requires the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), within two years, to promulgate rules to facilitate equal access to broadband internet services and to prevent "digital discrimination of access based on income level, race, ethnicity, color, religion, or national origin." Significantly, the statute also requires that the rules take into account "issues of technical and economic feasibility." The FCC issued a notice of proposed rulemaking on December 22, 2022, and comments and reply comments have now been submitted.
Given the importance of widespread access to broadband services, the "Digital Discrimination" proceeding is one of the most important items on the FCC's agenda. The panelists, from a diversity of perspectives, will discuss key legal and policy issues presented in the rulemaking, including the following: Does the agency have authority to adopt rules that would impose liability on broadband providers based only on a showing of unintentional disparate impact or is evidence of intentional discrimination required? In considering liability, how should the agency take into account claims relating to the technical and economic feasibility of making available access? What impact will the rules have on investment and innovation under various scenarios? What type of process should the Commission employ in considering complaints of digital discrimination?
Please join the panel of experts for a lively discussion of these and other questions as the FCC prepares to adopt final rules in the digital discrimination proceeding.