A Virginia broadband bill that focuses on access in rural and farm areas cleared the House Communications Committee at a livestreamed hearing Monday. State reps voted 20-1 to refer HB-382 to the Appropriations Committee. The legislation from Del. Michael Feggans (D) would require a state department to develop an application detailing information on connectivity in rural farmlands. Officials representing All Points Broadband, the Virginia Agribusiness Council and electric cooperatives supported the bill during the hearing.
New York state plans broadband expansion through a municipal infrastructure program with $228.2 million in federal funding from the U.S. Treasury’s Capital Projects Fund, Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) said Monday. The state already connected more than 3,000 homes upstate under the program through pilot projects with the New York Power Authority, Hochul said.
West Virginia could fund relay services for 20 years even if it reduced the monthly telecom relay service (TRS) fee on customer bills to zero, West Virginia Public Service Commission staff said Thursday. Staff recommended reducing the charge of 5 cents in docket 23-0756-T-P. “Monthly minutes of use of TRS has steadily declined in West Virginia, and although the amount collected monthly to fund TRTS has also decreased, the proceeds continue to exceed the amount needed to maintain TRS at its current level,” said staff: “This imbalance causes a continued increase in the TRS Escrow Account balance,” which hit nearly $1.6 million last July 31.
South Carolina's Senate supported clarifying that satellite TV and streaming video fall outside cable franchise fees. The Senate on Thursday sent the House an amended H-3782 after approving it 43-0 Wednesday. The House passed the bill in March but now must concur with Senate changes.
Passing a data broker registration bill would help Washington state better understand the industry's scope, Rep. Shelley Kloba (D) said Friday as the state’s House Consumer Protection Committee heard testimony on Kloba’s HB-2277 during a livestreamed hearing. The bill would require data brokers to register with the state. Submitted information would appear on a public website. Brokers are selling data that people generate during daily activities online, through connected devices and while driving cars, said Kloba: It often happens without a person’s permission. The committee also mulled multiple AI bills, including HB-1934, which would establish an AI task force and HB-1951, which attempts to prevent algorithmic discrimination. "Sometimes we have to put guardrails around things to protect people's civil liberties and to keep people safe,” said HB-1934 sponsor Rep. Travis Couture (R). Rep. Clyde Shavers (D) said his HB-1951 is an “incremental first step to make sure that the use of artificial intelligence helps, not harms us."
Florida could extend dollar broadband attachments through 2028. The state’s House Energy, Communications & Cybersecurity Subcommittee voted 13-0 Friday to clear HB-1147, paving the way for a full Commerce Committee vote. Since July 2021, ISPs could pay $1 a year per wireline attachment per pole to bring broadband to unserved or underserved areas in municipal electric utility service territories. The promotional rate is set to expire July 1. The Senate Commerce Committee plans Tuesday to consider the similar SB-1218, which cleared the Regulated Industries Committee in a 6-0 vote on Tuesday.
NetChoice slammed a proposed TikTok ban in Virginia immediately after Del. Jay Leftwich (R) introduced the measure Friday. HB-1468 would require TikTok to verify users’ ages and prohibit minors from visiting its social media platform. Under the bill, Virginia's attorney general could seek a $7,500 civil penalty for each violation, plus $7,500 per day that the violation continues. "This proposal is unconstitutional as we’ve already seen in other states that have tried this,” such as Montana, said NetChoice General Counsel Carl Szabo. He added, “Virginia representatives must reject this approach that, if passed, would ban Virginians from getting access to news, harm Virginia businesses and creators, require more data collection, and disconnect Virginians from online speech.”
T-Mobile completed $200 million worth of network upgrades in West Virginia after buying Sprint in 2020 and Shentel Wireless in 2021, T-Mobile and Gov. Jim Justice (R) said Friday. “Part of T-Mobile’s promise when we merged with Sprint was to build a more connected country leveraging 5G,” said Ulf Ewaldsson, T-Mobile technology president. “Our work in West Virginia with Governor Justice is a testament to what’s possible when time, resources and teamwork are invested in the places previously underserved."
The Wisconsin Assembly voted 96-1 to approve a next-generation 911 bill Thursday. AB-356 would provide grants that support NG-911 costs. A committee cleared the bill earlier in the week (see 2401170068). The Senate is its next destination.
Kansas Rep. Kyle Hoffman (R) would hesitate to scrap a recurring state 911 audit if the legislature doesn’t pass his forthcoming bill to move the Kansas 911 Coordinating Council to a state agency, he said at a livestreamed House Commerce Committee hearing Thursday. The committee heard testimony on HB-2483, which would eliminate a five-year audit by the Kansas Legislative Division of Post Audit that checks if public safety answering points are appropriately using 911 funding, whether they have enough money, and the status of 911 service implementation (see 2401030019). An audit could still be requested, but the bill would stop automatically requiring audits that are “somewhat boring for the most part,” said Chair Sean Tarwater (R). Committee member Hoffman responded that auditing is useful to the Kansas 911 Coordinating Council where he serves. However, Hoffman plans to propose a bill next week, probably with a Democratic co-sponsor, "that will be moving the 911 Coordinating Council to a fee-funded state agency, which would then negate the reasoning for the 5-year audit,” he said. "I would be a little bit hesitant to totally get rid of the audit if we don't move it to a state agency because that is one of the only real lookbacks that we have as a legislature to really look at what they're doing.” Kansas Legislative Post Auditor Chris Clarke testified that her division usually receives more requests for audits than it has capacity to perform.