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To: Rico Staris who wrote (22343)6/15/1999 12:31:00 PM
From: Rico Staris  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 41369
 
MORE NEWS.....

news.com

FCC's Kennard slams open access
ruling
By Jim Davis and Corey Grice
Staff Writers, CNET News.com
June 15, 1999, 8:30 a.m. PT

CHICAGO--In a highly anticipated speech given at a gathering of cable industry
executives, Federal Communications Commission chairman William Kennard
predicted chaos and stymied growth for the Internet if local authorities were
allowed to regulate broadband services.

In front of a crowd of receptive industry executives at the National Cable Television
Association convention, Kennard slammed recent legal decisions over the deployment of
broadband services that would give regulatory authority to local municipalities.

"There are 30,000 local franchises in the United States. If each one decided on their own
to develop technology standards for two-way communications on the cable
infrastructure, there would be chaos," Kennard said.

Kennard's comments were his first public statements on the court decision in Portland,
Oregon, that gave local authorities the right to force AT&T to open its cable networks to
competing ISPs. An open network was imposed as a condition of transferring the city's
cable license from Tele-Communications Incorporated to AT&T.

Net access providers such as America Online and MindSpring Enterprises want to offer
high-speed cable modem services to their growing subscriber bases. But cable TV
networks, which offer Net access via proprietary services such as Excite@Home and
Road Runner, are closed to unaffiliated ISPs.

"It is in the national interest that we have a national broadband policy," Kennard told the
audience. That policy is to let the industry grow as the market dictates, he said, but the
decision in Portland would have a decidedly opposite effect. .

"The fact is there is a role for national policy…we have to have a national standard in this
area," Kennard said as the audience applauded. Taking a lead from the medical field,
Kennard coined the policy as the "Hippocratic high-tech oath--do no harm."

Industry executives, who gave Kennard a standing ovation after his speech, were equally
effusive in their commentary.

Leo Hindery, who head's AT&T's cable unit, noted that "The chairman said this is a
federal issue and we're delighted that he reiterated his strong stance. I thought it was a
very harsh indictment of the Portland decision.

"We have argued for a long time that this is not an issue that is resolvable at the local
level…If national telecom policy is decided franchise by franchise, that's not a policy,"
he said after Kennard's keynote.

AT&T chief executive C. Michael Armstrong echoed similar sentiments in yesterday's
press conference. "If indeed federal policy is shifted to local municipalities, through the
franchise license process, the outcome will be chaos," he said of the Portland decision.

Armstrong noted that he had met late last week with Kennard and other FCC
commissioners on the open access issue.

Outgoing NCTA president Decker Anstrom said "It's clear [Kennard] doesn't feel
regulatory intervention is appropriate," noting that the cable industry will continue to
invest in the nation's cable infrastructure.

While the audience of cable executives received Kennard's comments favorably, the
chairman did not pass up the opportunity to remind cable operators of their obligations
to wire all of America--including rural and inner-cities--with high-speed Internet
connections.

Anstrom said the industry will "meet his challenge to make sure [broadband service] is
available everywhere." He added that the industry is participating in programs to wire
schools with cable modem access.