The
move comes after Democrats took majority control of the
five-member FCC on Monday for the first time since President Joe
Biden took office in January 2021 when new FCC Commissioner Anna
Gomez was sworn in.
The FCC is set to take an initial vote on the net neutrality
proposal in October, the sources added.
In July 2021, Biden signed an executive order encouraging the
FCC to reinstate net neutrality rules adopted under Democratic
then-President Barack Obama in 2015.
The FCC voted in 2017 to reverse the rules that barred internet
service providers from blocking or throttling traffic, or
offering paid fast lanes, also known as paid prioritization.
Days before the 2020 presidential election, the FCC voted to
maintain the reversal.
Rosenworcel denounced the repeal in 2017 saying it put the FCC
"on the wrong side of history, the wrong side of the law, and
the wrong side of the American public."
She plans a speech to outline her plans on Tuesday, the sources
added. A spokesperson for Rosenworcel declined to comment.
In 2022, a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals ruled 3-0 that the 2017 decision by the FCC to reverse
federal net neutrality protections could not bar state action,
rejecting a challenge from telecom and broad industry groups to
block California's net neutrality law. Industry groups abandoned
further legal challenges in May 2022.
The appeals court said that since the FCC reclassified internet
services in 2017 as more lightly regulated information services,
the commission "no longer has the authority to regulate in the
same manner that it had when these services were classified as
telecommunications services."
Days after Biden took office, the U.S. Justice Department
withdrew its Trump-era legal challenge to California's state net
neutrality law.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Kim
Coghill)
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