Speaker Biographies
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October 6, 2017 The Honorable Ajit Pai, Chairman Federal Communications Commission 445 12th Street, SW Washington, DC 20544 Dear Chairman Pai: As you are aware, Hurricane Maria effectively destroyed 100% of the power grid in Puerto Rico and rendered over 95% of the cell sites out of service immediately after the storm. Two weeks after and – as reported in the daily Federal Communications Commission (FCC) statistics – cell service outside of San Juan is still almost non-existent. Even in San Juan, more than 62.6% of cell sites remain inoperative. Landline based voice and Internet networks have suffered almost total degradation. The U.S. Virgin Islands communications systems were similarly ravaged not only by Hurricane Maria but weeks before by Hurricane Irma. Per FCC statistics, all of St. John’s cell sites are still inoperative. This lack of even basic communications hampers essential emergency and medical services and undermines critical relief efforts. Additionally, while the people of these islands continue to work together to rebuild their lives, the inability to contact employers, education providers, and loved ones contributes to the ongoing sense of isolation and crisis. We appreciate all the steps you have already taken, including issuing an order making immediately available up to $76.9 million from the FCC’s Universal Service Fund for the restoration of communications services in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. However, we write to ask you, and your fellow Commissioners, to take additional steps to highlight the communications crisis, reassure the people of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands that the FCC is working for them, and to take any measures you can to assist in restoring emergency services. -
Lost Income Due to UNE-P Adelstein
From: [email protected] To: [email protected], FCC FCCINFO Date: Sat, Feb 22.2003 1218 AM Subject: Re: Lost income due to UNE-P cc: Mike Powell, Kathleen Abernathy. Michael Copps. KM KJMWEB, Commissioner Adelstein From: [email protected] To: [email protected]. FCC FCCINFO Date: Sat, Feb 22,2003 12:22 AM Subject: Re: Lost income due to UNE-P Your name, address and the telephone number or numbers involved with your complaint; (if telephone related) Mr. Terry Nenni 405 Trailhead Way Martinez, Ca 94553 925-228-4865 A telephone number where you can be reached during the business day; 925-824-7354 Specific information about your complaint, including the names of all companies involved with your complaint; Federal Communications Commission, specifically Michael Copps. Jonathan Adelstein, Kevin Martin Names and telephone numbers of the company representatives that you contacted, the dates that you spoke with these representatives, and any other information that would help process your complaint; Federal Communications Commission, Kevin Martin If telephone related, include a copy of the bill(s) listing the disputed charges; Salary statements available on request. What type of resolution are you seeking? I am an employee of SBC and writing this complaint on my behalf. SBC has laid off thousands of employees, cut spending, and cut salaries. Part of my salary is variable, based on company performance. This variable amount was cut by 50% for last year, (payable this year). The key reason identified by management is unfair regulation, specifically UNE-P. The result is accelerated loss of 10 million lines (at last count) most at below cost! You can't sellllease below cost and expect to stay in business. -
The Media Democracy Agenda the Strategy and Legacy of Federal Communications Commissioner Michael J
The Media Democracy Agenda The Strategy and Legacy of Federal Communications Commissioner Michael J. Copps by Victor Pickard and Pawel Popiel Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania Published by the Benton Foundation The Media Democracy Agenda The Strategy and Legacy of FCC Commissioner Michael J. Copps This Benton Foundation publication is written by Victor Pickard and Pawel Popiel. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License. A copy of this license is available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us Please include the following attribution when citing this report: Pickard, Victor and Pawel Popiel. September 2018. The Media Democracy Agenda: The Strategy and Legacy of FCC Commissioner Michael J. Copps. Evanston, IL: Benton Foundation. https://www.benton.org/publications/Copps-legacy Benton Foundation 727 Chicago Ave. Evanston, IL 60202 www.benton.org Table of Contents Foreword ....................................................................................................................................... 2 Introduction .................................................................................................................................. 4 Historical Context ......................................................................................................................... 5 Biographical Background .............................................................................................................. 7 Democratic Principles -
March 25, 2013 Chairman Julius Genachowski Commissioner
March 25, 2013 Chairman Julius Genachowski Commissioner Robert McDowell Commissioner Mignon Clyburn Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel Commissioner Ajit Pai Federal Communications Commission 445 Twelfth Street, SW Washington, DC 20054 RE: WC Docket No. 12-375, Rates for Interstate Inmate Calling Services Dear Chairman and Commissioners: As organizations with a strong interest and expertise in criminal justice policy, we write to urge the Federal Communications Commission to adopt into final rules the proposals in the long-pending Wright Petition. We are pleased the Commission has finally opened a proceeding to develop a factual record that will enable the Commission to adopt final rules ending predatory prison phone rates for long-distance calls. As groups that work to improve the criminal justice system, we see firsthand the challenges that high telephone rates pose, and write now to specifically emphasize how the high costs of telephone calls negatively impact the overall societal goal of reintegrating formerly incarcerated individuals to be full participants in society. Prisons charge incarcerated individuals significantly higher rates for phone calls than what most people in the United States are charged. The cost of a typical interstate collect call from a prison includes a $3.95 connection fee (regardless of the length of the call), while per minute rates can be as high as $0.89. This results in charges of $10-17 for a 15-minute collect call or $300 per month for a weekly one-hour call. Maintaining family relationships is a primary means to reduce recidivism, which is at crisis levels in the United States. Within three years of being released, 67 percent of ex-prisoners re-offend, and 52 percent are re-incarcerated. -
Washington Watch Congressional Staff Panel 10 -11Am HOUSE ENERGY & COMMERCE SUBCOMITTEE COMMUNICATIONS & TECHOLOGY
2020 MTA Annual Meeting - Monday, August 24th Washington Watch Congressional Staff Panel 10 -11am HOUSE ENERGY & COMMERCE SUBCOMITTEE COMMUNICATIONS & TECHOLOGY JERRY LEVERICH SENIOR COUNCIL, MAJORITY STAFF Gerald (Jerry) Leverich serves as a Democratic Counsel to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce’s Subcommittee on Communications and Technology. Prior to joining the Committee in 2015, Jerry served as the primary telecommunications attorney in the Office of the General Counsel at the Government Accountability Office. Jerry received his law degree, cum laude, from Georgetown University Law Center and his bachelor’s degree in political science from the College of Charleston. KATE O'CONNOR CHIEF COUNCIL, MINORITY STAFF Kate O’Connor is the Chief Counsel for Communications and Technology with the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce. O’Connor previously served as the Chief of Staff for the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, where she worked on legislative and communications policy issues affecting spectrum and broadband issues. She also worked with state government officials and other federal agencies to advance White House initiatives on broadband and 5G. Prior to joining NTIA, O’Connor worked in the United States Senate. She began her Senate career working in the office of Senator Mark Kirk (R-IL) and then served as a Legislative Assistant for Senator Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska), where she handled issues before the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, including telecommunications policy. Ms. O’Connor attended the University of Chicago, and is originally from Chicago, IL. SENATE COMMERCE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE OLIVIA TRUSTY POLICY DIRECTOR, MAJORITY STAFF Olivia Trusty is policy director over the Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, Innovation, and the Internet, and the Subcommittee on Manufacturing, Trade, and Consumer Protection. -
Top News Comm Daily® Notebook Capitol Hill Wireline Wireless
THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2020 VOL. 40, NO. 54 Top News As FCC’s Pai, NAB’s Smith Seek Pause in TV Blackouts, Some MVPDs on Board ................................ 2 COVID-19’s Threat to 911 May Be Inside the Call Center ........................................................................ 4 Senate Dems Eye Broadband Resiliency Language, Distance Learning Grants in Next COVID-19 Bill ....6 Virus-Related Regulatory Review Changes Not Seen Having Big Impact on M&A ................................. 7 Sen. Paul Optimistic About FISA Revisions After Senate Extension ......................................................... 9 Epidemic Still Forcing Industry Cancellations, Accommodations ............................................................ 10 Comm Daily® Notebook Wireline Bureau Waives Gift Rules in E-rate, RHC USF Programs Through September ........................ 11 Capitol Hill Trump Renominates O’Rielly to FCC Term Ending in 2024 .................................................................... 12 Wireline Wireline Bureau Slows Jaguar Review at DOJ Request ........................................................................... 12 New Submarine Cable Outage Reporting Rules Effective April 20 .......................................................... 12 Wireless NARUC President Urges FCC to Lift Wireless Data Caps, End Overage Fees ........................................ 13 Consumer Groups Seek Changes to Proposed HAC Rules ...................................................................... 13 Microsoft Details Actions FCC Could -
Chairman Julius Genachowski Commissioner Robert Mcdowell Commissioner Mignon Clyburn Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel Commissioner Ajit Pai
Chairman Julius Genachowski Commissioner Robert McDowell Commissioner Mignon Clyburn Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel Commissioner Ajit Pai Federal Communications Commission 445 12th Street, SW Washington, DC 20554 In the Matter of Policies Regarding Mobile Spectrum Holdings Re: WT Docket No. 12-269 November 20, 2012 Dear Chairman Genachowski and Commissioners McDowell, Clyburn, Rosenworcel and Pai: On behalf of the Internet Innovation Alliance (IIA), we appreciate the opportunity to offer comments on the Federal Communication Commission’s (FCC) Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) focusing on FCC policies regarding mobile spectrum holdings. In summary, IIA believes the existing unpredictable, non-public process for changing spectrum screens undermines economic growth by failing to provide investors with the transparency, predictability and flexibility needed to properly consider wireless broadband investments. While freeing more spectrum for mobile broadband use remains the most important new policy priority, creating an open and predictable process for evaluating the amount of spectrum carriers will be allowed to possess is essential to promoting investment and growth in commercial mobile services. 1. Uncertainty Is Undermining Economic Growth & Job Creation. One of the greatest challenges facing today’s innovators, entrepreneurs and investors is uncertainty. Businesses have roughly $2 trillion idled on their balance sheets,i capable of more productive immediate and long-term investment, but they lack visibility into future consumer demand and global growth. Given Europe’s ongoing sovereign debt crisis, China’s slowing growth, increasing protectionism in the developing world and immediate risks that the American economy will go “off the fiscal cliff,” potential employers are understandably reluctant to hire. Absent greater investment and new jobs, consumers are more cautious. -
March 23, 2021 the Honorable Jessica Rosenworcel
March 23, 2021 The Honorable Jessica Rosenworcel Acting Chairwoman Federal Communications Commission 45 L Street NE Washington, DC 20554 Dear Acting Chairwoman Rosenworcel: I write to request the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) take steps to address the growing issue of pollution from commercial use of space. With many corporations proposing to send thousands of satellites into space as part of new mega-constellations, the FCC should consider the environmental and safety risks posed to our atmosphere and to shared orbital resources that serve defense, scientific research, and communication needs. In the absence of proper oversight, mega-constellations present a direct threat to our environment when they reenter our atmosphere in large numbers. Upon reentry, the satellites vaporize and release particulates that settle in the stratosphere, contribute to global warming, and deplete the ozone layer.1,2 Mega-constellations also contribute to light pollution, impacting the look of the night sky for the public and negatively impacting astronomical research.3 Further, the rise in orbital debris in space compromises valuable assets and threatens to make space inaccessible. If satellites cannot reliably maneuver, we are likely to soon see collisions and more debris spreading out over hundreds of kilometers, polluting surrounding orbits for years.4 Some could even plummet to Earth, creating an unsafe situation for aircraft and all of us on the ground.5 The FCC needs to act now, before allowing more satellites to be deployed, to mitigate all of these threats. Every proposed mega-constellation should be comprehensively reviewed under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) that considers the significant effects these systems could have on the environment and the cumulative impact they will have on our effort to fight climate change. -
Leadership Conference Incarcerated
Officers January 22, 2021 Chair Judith L. Lichtman National Partnership for Women & Families Vice Chairs Acting Chair Jessica Rosenworcel Thomas A. Saenz Mexican American Legal Commissioner Brendan Carr Defense and Educational Fund Hilary Shelton Commissioner Geoffrey Starks NAACP Secretary/Treasurer Commissioner Nathan Simington Lee A. Saunders American Federation of State, Federal Communications Commission County & Municipal Employees Board of Directors 45 L Street NE Kevin Allis National Congress of American Indians Washington, DC 20554 Kimberly Churches AAUW Kristen Clarke Lawyers' Committee for Re: WT Docket 12-375 Civil Rights Under Law Alphonso B. David Human Rights Campaign Lily Eskelsen García Dear Acting Chair Rosenworcel, Commissioners Carr, Starks, and Simington: National Education Association Fatima Goss Graves National Women's Law Center Mary Kay Henry On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and the 17 undersigned Service Employees International Union Sherrilyn Ifill organizations, we appreciate this opportunity to provide reply comments in response to this NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. rulemaking initiated by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC or Commission). David H. Inoue Japanese American Citizens League Gary Jones International Union, UAW The Leadership Conference is a coalition charged by its diverse membership of more than Derrick Johnson NAACP 220 national organizations to promote and protect the civil rights of all persons in the United Virginia Kase League of Women Voters of the States. We have been an active participant in the FCC’s multi-year, long-overdue effort to United States Michael B. Keegan cap predatory rates for communications services used in prisons, jails, and immigration People for the American Way Samer E. -
MMTC Press Statement
. Press Statement Contact: Marcella Gadson, Director of Communications [email protected] (202) 332-0500 Statement on the Chartering of the FCC’s Advisory Committee on Diversity and Digital Empowerment WASHINGTON, D.C. (April 24, 2017): The Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council (MMTC) commends the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and its Chairman, AJit Pai, on today’s announcement that the agency is chartering the Advisory Committee on Diversity and Digital Empowerment. The FCC’s original Advisory Committee on Diversity for Communications in the Digital Age operated from 2003-2013 under Chairman Michael Powell, Chairman Kevin Martin, Acting Chairman Michael Copps, Chairman Julius Genachowski, and Acting Chairwoman Mignon Clyburn. During that time, the Committee was populated with a nonpartisan A-list of volunteer subject matter experts. Led by Chairwoman Julia Johnson and her successor Henry Rivera, and aided by senior FCC staff including Designated Federal Officers Jane Mago and Barbara Kreisman, the FCC Diversity Committee produced an unprecedented four dozen policy recommendations aimed at ensuring the full participation of all Americans in technologies that comprise one-sixth of our national economy. Kim Keenan, President and CEO of MMTC, made the following statement: By chartering a new advisory committee on diversity, and expanding its jurisdiction to encompass closing the digital divide, Chairman Pai has brought the FCC back to its historic and nonpartisan public interest mission. MMTC is especially pleased that the new committee will be charged with the tasks of developing a media incubator program as well as providing solutions to the vexing moral issue of telecom redlining. This is a defining step toward closing the digital divide for every American. -
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International Journal of Communication 10(2016), Forum 5779–5794 1932–8036/20160005 The Historical Moment of Net Neutrality: An Interview With Former U.S. Federal Communications Commissioner Michael J. Copps BILL KIRKPATRICK Denison University. USA Former Federal Communications Commissioner Michael J. Copps (sworn in May 31, 2001; served until December 31, 2011) reflects on how his time on the commission helped pave the way for the 2015 net neutrality decision. He offers his historical perspective on the role of the public in media policymaking and upcoming issues for citizens and activists. Keywords: media policy, Internet policy, network neutrality, citizen activism, policy history, Federal Communications Commission, media reform Introduction by the Guest Editors Becky Lentz and Allison Perlman One of our goals in producing this special section was to contextualize the net neutrality decision in a range of ways that foreground the work required to intervene on behalf of the public interest. To give us an insider’s view, we asked media historian and policy scholar Bill Kirkpatrick to interview former Federal Communications Commissioner Michael J. Copps: How does someone who was recently on the commission, and who intimately understands how it works, think about the possibilities and potentialities for intervening on behalf of the public interest? Copps was an obvious choice both because of his strenuous efforts, while at the FCC, to solicit public opinion and involve citizens in the policymaking process and because of his long historical perspective on American politics. Kirkpatrick (2012, 2013), for his part, has frequently wrestled in his scholarship with the tensions between official policy cultures and democratic processes, and he brought his own interests in policy history to the conversation. -
The Federal Communications Commission: Current Structure and Its Role in the Changing Telecommunications Landscape
The Federal Communications Commission: Current Structure and Its Role in the Changing Telecommunications Landscape Updated January 27, 2021 Congressional Research Service https://crsreports.congress.gov R45699 SUMMARY R45699 The Federal Communications Commission: January 27, 2021 Current Structure and Its Role in the Changing Patricia Moloney Figliola Telecommunications Landscape Specialist in Internet and Telecommunications The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is an independent federal agency established Policy by the Communications Act of 1934 (1934 Act, or “Communications Act”). The agency is charged with regulating interstate and international communications by radio, television, wire, satellite, and cable. The mission of the FCC is to make available for all people of the United States, “without discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, or sex, a rapid, efficient, Nationwide, and worldwide wire and radio communication service with adequate facilities at reasonable charges.” The FCC operates under a public interest mandate first laid out in the 1927 Radio Act (P.L. 632, 69th Congress), but how this mandate is applied depends on how “the public interest” is interpreted. Some regulators seek to protect and benefit the public at large through regulation, while others seek to achieve the same goals through the promotion of market efficiency. Additionally, Congress granted the FCC wide latitude and flexibility to revise its interpretation of the public interest standard to reflect changing circumstances and the agency has not defined it in more concrete terms. These circumstances, paired with changes in FCC leadership, have led to significant changes over time in how the FCC regulates the broadcast and telecommunications industries. The FCC is directed by five commissioners appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate for five-year terms.