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House Commerce Committee Republicans questioned FCC transparency during the agency’s...

House Commerce Committee Republicans questioned FCC transparency during the agency’s Universal Service Fund proceeding. “Given the keen interest of Congress in seeing the FCC’s internal procedures subjected to public scrutiny, we are particularly concerned with the Commission’s recent conduct with…

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respect to the universal service item adopted at the Commission’s October open agenda meeting,” Chairman Fred Upton, R-Mich., and Communications Subcommittee Chairman Greg Walden, R-Ore., wrote in a Monday letter to Chairman Julius Genachowski. The chairmen complained of another last-minute “data dump” by the commission. Also, the agency’s “practice of negotiating up to, and sometimes after, the Commission’s open agenda meeting appears to have reached an apex in the universal service proceeding,” they said. The Republicans asked Genachowski to say what changes were made to the USF order between the time it was considered and adopted. Meanwhile, the FCC sought comment Tuesday on additional ways to improve “transparency and efficiency” in Commission proceedings. “In particular, we seek comment on whether we should require commenters to file materials they cite in pleadings submitted in rulemaking proceedings, so that those materials are more easily accessible to all interested parties,” the FCC said. Comments are due 30 days after the notice’s publication in the Federal Register. Replies are due 45 days after publication. The House Commerce Committee marks up FCC process reform legislation Wednesday. Committee Democrats continued to oppose Walden’s HR-3309 in a memo that circulated late Monday.