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April 27, 2006

There was a brief effort this morning to include anti-redlining provisions in the major new broadband law being proposed, but it was defeated 33-22 by the House Energy and Commerce Committee. The amendment would have made it illegal for incumbents to hold back broadband deployments from poor or minority neighborhoods. As it stands now, the "Communications Opportunity, Promotion and Enhancements Act of 2006", which could replace the current Telecom Act of 1996, does not hold incumbents to any sort of build-out obligations.

Also defeated today was a push to grandfather the 14 states that currently ban their cities from offering broadband services. Barton's proposed federal law would allow municipalities to offer broadband in competition to private enterprise. An effort to include network neutrality guidelines in the broadband bill was likewise defeated 34-22, according to CNET.