The American Cable Association told the Federal Communications Commission that the agency is required by law to delay implementation of any broadband reclassification (or reclassification and forbearance) decisions until completion of rulemakings needed to identify those specific legacy provisions of Title II that the agency intends to apply to the newly declared common carrier service.

In order to proceed with the agency’s self-styled "Third Way" approach to broadband regulation, the FCC must comply with the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), which compels the agency to conduct a formal rulemaking, and the Regulatory Flexibility Act, (RFA) which requires the FCC to quantify the burdens on small operators of reclassification and steps it could take to ameliorate them.

"ACA submits that delayed implementation of any reclassification decision is not merely a matter of FCC discretion, but a necessity," ACA President and CEO Matthew M. Polka said in a statement.

The FCC has alerted stakeholders that as a procedural matter, it likely intends to move from a Notice of Inquiry (NOI) to the issuance of a ruling declaring that broadband Internet access is a telecommunications service rather than a lightly regulated information service within the meaning of the Communications Act.

With the policy machinery set up in this manner, ACA urged the FCC to delay the effective date of the reclassification ruling until the agency has established the substance of the Title II regulations that it will require carriers to follow. In July 15 comments, ACA noted that it is unable to assess and comment upon the full scope and impact of new common carrier regulations on ACA members until such time as the FCC has finished the Title II work now unfortunately slated for completion after reclassification.

The FCC proposes new duties and obligations under six to 12 or more provisions of Title II of the Communications Act that the agency fully intends to exempt from any forbearance action it may take.

"As it is, the FCC has left ACA and its members in the dark about the precise extent of the new regulatory burdens associated with common carrier status for broadband Internet services, and this uncertainty affects both operations and investment incentives," Polka added.

Reclassifying wireline broadband access as a common carrier service runs the risk of imposing costly and disproportionate compliance burdens on independent broadband providers, according to ACA. These burdens include both direct economic regulation of the rates, terms, conditions and practices associated with the provision of Internet service and the administrative recordkeeping, reporting and filing obligations of common carriers under existing FCC rules.

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