Just as turkeys were being prepared 
for the oven last week, the FCC reheated an issue leftover from 2011 
when it was petitioned by industry advocates to realign the rates 
telecoms pay utility companies to be on their poles and bring parity to 
cable companies. Late Tuesday, the commission issued its long awaited, 
much discussed 44-page decision which effectively reduced telecom rates 
to what cable providers pay. What’s really behind all of it is the 
commission’s desire to promote deployment of broadband service 
nationwide.
“The 2011 revisions sought to bring 
the telecom and cable rates into parity,” the FCC said in explaining its
 new rule. “In the intervening time, we have seen that our revisions did
 not fully achieve that objective. Today, we take the next logical step 
in achieving the goals set forth in 2011.” The commission added, “We 
additionally act to support incentives for deployment of broadband 
facilities, particularly in rural areas, and to harmonize regulatory 
treatment between states where the Commission regulates the rates, 
terms, and conditions for pole attachments and states where such matters
 are regulated by the state.” The Commission said subjecting cable 
operators to higher pole attachment rates “merely because they also 
provide telecommunications services, such as broadband Internet access, 
could deter investment in states subject to Commission pole regulation, 
which would undermine the Commission’s broadband deployment policy. By 
keeping pole attachment rates unified and low, we further our 
overarching goal to accelerate deployment of broadband by removing 
barriers to infrastructure investment and promoting competition.” Continue Reading
 
 
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