Biden picks broadband-for-all advocate Rosenworcel to lead FCC
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[October 27, 2021]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Jessica Rosenworcel,
a champion of broadband access for low-income American households, is
President Joe Biden's choice for permanent chair of the Federal
Communications Commission, the White House confirmed on Tuesday.
A Democrat who already serves as acting FCC chairwoman under Biden, she
is expected to win U.S. Senate approval for a new term on the
five-member telecoms regulator. Biden announced he intends to nominate
her for a new term and a White House official said Biden will tap her to
become the first woman to serve as permanent FCC chief.
Biden has waited more than nine months to make nominations for the FCC,
which has not been able to address some issues because it currently has
one vacancy and is divided 2-2 between Democrats and Republicans.
For the open seat, the White House confirmed to nominate Gigi Sohn, a
former senior aide to Tom Wheeler, who served as an FCC chairman under
President Barack Obama, a Democrat.
Rosenworcel has overseen the FCC's temporary $3.2 billion broadband
subsidy program created by Congress in December that provides discounts
on monthly internet service and on the purchase of laptops or tablet
computers to more than 6 million lower-income American households or
people afflicted by COVID-19.
She has said the lack of broadband access leads to a “homework gap” for
lower-income Americans because most teachers assign homework that
requires internet access.
The White House also confirmed Biden will nominate Alan Davidson, a
senior adviser at Mozilla, as director of the Commerce Department's
National Telecommunications and Information Administration, the
executive branch agency principally responsible for advising the White
House on telecommunications and information policy issues. NTIA is also
expected to oversee tens of billions of dollars in funding from Congress
to expand internet access.
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Jessica Rosenworcel answers a question during an oversight hearing
held by the U.S. Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation
Committee for the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), in
Washington, U.S. June 24, 2020. Jonathan Newton/Pool via
REUTERS/Files
Last month, a group of 25 U.S. senators wrote to
Biden in support of Rosenworcel, a former Senate staffer, for a new
term and the chair role. They wrote "further delays will
unnecessarily imperil our shared goal of achieving ubiquitous
broadband connectivity."
Rosenworcel and her staff did not respond late on Monday to requests
for comment on the announcement expected as soon as Tuesday. Without
being confirmed to a new term, Rosenworcel would need to leave the
FCC at the end of the year.
She has said the FCC decision under then-Republican President Donald
Trump in 2017 to overturn net neutrality rules had put the FCC "on
the wrong side of history, the wrong side of the law, and the wrong
side of the American public."
The FCC under Obama, Trump's predecessor, adopted the net neutrality
rules in 2015 barring internet service providers from blocking or
throttling traffic, or offering paid fast lanes.
Supporters of net neutrality say the protections ensure a free and
open internet. Broadband and telecoms trade groups contend their
legal basis from the pre-internet era was outdated and would
discourage investment.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Howard Goller and David
Gregorio)
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