Wicker Backs Infrastructure Package, Ahead of Final Vote
Senate Commerce Committee ranking member Roger Wicker, R-Miss., said Sunday he now backs the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act substitute for shell bill HR-3684, and voted to invoke cloture on the measure after earlier opposing efforts to move forward.…
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The Senate voted 68-29 to invoke cloture after a 69-28 vote to adopt the HR-3684 substitute. A final vote on the measure is expected Tuesday morning. A group of senators said Monday they reached a deal on a compromise on rival cryptocurrency amendments (see 2108090050). Wicker cited statements from Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., who co-led work on HR-3684’s broadband language, that “preventing regulation of internet rates was the express intent of the broadband title.” Without that “assurance” and specific language in the measure barring NTIA from using actions related to executing the proposed $42.5 billion broadband equity, access and deployment grants program to “regulate the rates charged for broadband” service, “I would not have been able to support this bill on final passage,” Wicker said. “It is no secret that I have registered my concerns” about language that exempts the NTIA administrator from having to follow some Administrative Procedure Act requirements when making decisions on the grants program. “I hope” NTIA will “take care to avoid the wasteful and costly mistakes” the agency made in implementing the broadband technology opportunities program during the Obama administration “and make sure these broadband dollars are spent efficiently, effectively and with the benefit of stakeholder comment,” Wicker said. He and Senate Minority Whip John Thune, R-S.D., had cited NTIA’s BTOP history as a reason they wanted to shift the $42.5 billion in broadband grants to the FCC’s purview (see 2108050064). Thune, Communications Subcommittee ranking member, was among the Republicans who voted against invoking cloture on HR-3684 Sunday. The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation backs the measure’s broadband language, though it remains “far from perfect,” said Broadband and Spectrum Policy Director Doug Brake. Still, it “likely represents the best path forward for a much-needed and historic investment to close the digital divide.” The Washington Post also praised the proposed broadband funding in an editorial.