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Call to Action North Carolina: Senator Hoyle Infects Popular House Bill With His Parting Gift to Big Telecom [Corrected]

The bill is pending in the House Ways and Means Committee, whose chairman, Rep. Bill Faison, sees the moratorium as an attempt to protect the powerful cable monopoly. Faison, a Democrat who represents Orange and Caswell counties, is meeting Wednesday with representatives of the telecommunications industry and local government leaders to discuss options.

Senator David Hoyle (D-Gaston) couldn’t get his Senate bill the time of day in the North Carolina House, so he attached it to a popular House bill to extend the e-NC Authority — North Carolina’s initiative to promote better broadband.  Now a good bill is infected, like a virus, by Hoyle’s tireless work on behalf of Time Warner Cable.

Hoyle, who has cashed checks from the cable and phone lobbies for years, is proud of sticking it to consumers in his state.

“I want my bill passed. They want their bill passed. So, if they want theirs, they’re going to have to take up mine,” Hoyle told WRAL-TV.

Hoyle, who plans to retire at the end of his term, faces no consequences from Gaston County voters, so he doesn’t care if his bill effectively protects incumbent cable companies who have raised their rates far above the rate of inflation for years.  Hoyle wants a one year moratorium to stop local communities from building their own broadband networks to improve service to residents and deliver lower pricing.

One community that escaped Time Warner’s relentless rate hiking is Wilson, where a municipal broadband project called Greenlight effectively forced a red light on Time Warner’s plans to increase rates in the community earlier this year.  Wilson was the only city we could find in the state where rates remained the same, and residents have Greenlight and city officials to thank for that.

Hoyle and his friends at the cable company are outraged at the thought of North Carolina communities stopping the rate hike gravy train.  After all, less money for Time Warner equals less money for campaign contributions to friendly politicians.

“Do we, as government, want to get in competition with private enterprise and my answer to that is no, and I am passionate about that,” Hoyle said.

If only his constituents could afford to pay him enough to be passionate about their interests.

Rep. Bill Faison, (D-Orange), is among the lawmakers sponsoring the broadband stimulus bill, which was a sure thing until Hoyle got his hands on it.  Faison called Hoyle’s amendments anti-competitive and pro-rate increase, both bad for North Carolina consumers.

“I decide what gets put on the agenda,” Faison told the Charlotte Observer. “It’s unlikely that any bill with a moratorium in it has a chance of getting through the House.”

Hoyle’s strenuous efforts to perform legislative gymnastics on behalf of cable and phone companies have not gone unnoticed by Faison.  He suggested Hoyle’s latest move represented an “interesting political maneuver,” but he doesn’t intend to sit still for it.  Faison and other pro-consumer legislators are meeting this week to consider how to strip Hoyle’s nonsense out of HB1840 and shove it in the nearest trash can.  For comparison purposes, here is the original bill.

Consumers show no love for Time Warner.  Charlotte residents had choice words for their cable company when they learned it was behind the push to stop municipal competition:

Time Warner is about to pay for being jerks to their customers, and it’s high time.

Time Warner cable: I hope they rot. It’s about dang time that municipal governments started providing free broadband to their citizens. The fact that multiple households need their own wireless routers, broadcast on different channels, is a totally inefficient use of technology. Companies like TW Cable want to keep citizens constrained, which runs totally opposite to the promise of the Internet. Find out which boneheads in the Senate are pushing for this and vote them out. They’re clearly more interested in money from the cable companies than in serving their constituents.

For cable to argue unfair competition is laughable when they operate a virtual monopoly.

Instead of fighting this legislation, why doesn’t Time-Warner Cable focus on making its service so reliable and reasonably priced that no city or county will seriously consider managing this themselves? I find it hard to believe any local government could actually run this type of technology more efficiently than a company with TWC’s resources can, but the threat of competition helps keep TWC on their toes. P.S. I lost my TWC signal for 90 minutes this past Sunday right in the middle of the US Open and Brazil-Ivory Coast World Cup game. Nice.

A vote on the House measure is imminent, so North Carolina consumers should be contacting the House Committee members listed below and urge them not to allow any part of Hoyle’s language to remain in HB1840.

http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WRAL Raleigh NC Broadband Bill Debate 6-28-10.flv

WRAL-TV in Raleigh discusses Hoyle’s language and how it ended up in a broadband stimulus request bill.  (2 minutes)

House Ways and Means/Broadband Connectivity Committee

County Name Telephone # E-Mail Party
Mecklenburg Kelly Alexander 919-733-5778 Kelly.Alexander@ncleg.net Democrat
Nash, Hallifax Angela R. Bryant 919-733-5878 Angela.Bryant@ncleg.net Democrat
Rowan Lorene Coates 919-733-5784 Lorene.Coates@ncleg.net Democrat
Orange, Caswell Bill Faison 919-715-3019 Bill.Faison@ncleg.net Democrat
Burke, McDowell Mitch Gillespie 919-733-5862 Mitchg@ncleg.net Republican
Mecklenburg Jim Gulley 919-733-5800 Jim.Gulley@ncleg.net Republican
Haywood, Jackson, Macon, Swain R. Phillip Haire 919-715-3005 Phillip.Haire@ncleg.net Democrat
Brunswick, Columbus Dewey L. Hill 919-733-5830 Dewey.Hill@ncleg.net Democrat
Catawba Mark K. Hilton 919-733-5988 Mark.Hilton@ncleg.net Republican
Franklin, Hallifax, Nash John May 919-733-5860 John.May@ncleg.net Democrat
Allegheny, Surry Sarah Stevens 919-715-1883 Sarah.Stevens@ncleg.net Republican
Mecklenburg Thom Tillis 919-733-5828 Thom.Tillis@ncleg.net Republican
Edgecomb, Wilson Joe P. Tolson 919-715-3024 Joe.Tolson@ncleg.net Democrat
Durham, Person W. A. (Winkie) Wilkins 919-715-0850 Winkie.Wilkins@ncleg.net Democrat

This article contains the following correction since original publication: Our original article did not fully explain the bill to which Sen. Hoyle attached his municipal broadband moratorium. For clarification purposes, that bill is HB1840, legislation to extend the authority of the e-NC Authority. Our original article carried WRAL-TV’s language that said the bill provided for “$5 million in federal stimulus to help provide high-speed Internet access in parts of the state.” While that would be nice, it wasn’t an accurate characterization the bill’s intent.  Our apologies for the error.

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Other stories of interest:

  1. North Carolina Call to Action! The Municipal Broadband Moratorium Heads to the House
  2. North Carolina Anti-Municipal Broadband Update – Senator Hoyle Still Up to Tricks
  3. Not All Bad News From North Carolina – A New Bill from Rep. Bill Faison Offers Hope for Caswell County
  4. Action Alert: North Carolina, Get Writing Now for Municipal Broadband Protection!
  5. Action Alert: Stop Sen. Hoyle’s Anti-Municipal Broadband Bill in North Carolina

Currently there is 1 comment on this Article:

  1. Digitlman says:

    It looks like this passed?

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