House Commerce Dems Press FCC to Hike Lifeline Services; COVID-19 Bill Talks Stall
House Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone of New Jersey and 14 other committee Democrats urged the FCC Thursday to “provide unlimited voice minutes and unlimited mobile data to Lifeline recipients for the duration” of the COVID-19 pandemic, and increase “the…
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basic support amount to cover the incidental costs of such increased benefit.” Talks between Congress and President Donald Trump’s administration on a compromise for the next pandemic aid bill appeared Thursday to be on pause until after Labor Day, as Senate leaders scheduled their next votes for Sept. 8. The House is already on recess and isn’t expected to return until Sept. 14. “We will have our regular pro forma meetings” and if Hill Democratic leaders “decide to finally let another package move forward … it would take bipartisan consent to meet for legislative business sooner than scheduled,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told reporters. Senate Republicans’ proposal last month for the next aid measure contained few telecom and tech provisions (see 2007280059). House Democrats had more tech and telecom language in their Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions Act (HR-6800), including broadband funding (see 2005130059). The FCC “has taken some small steps since March to tweak the Lifeline program’s rules, much bolder action is necessary,” House Commerce Democrats said in their letter to FCC Chairman Ajit Pai. “Regrettably, the Senate has yet to consider any meaningful action to assist low-income consumers in affording broadband during this pandemic,” so it’s “all the more critical that the FCC use all of its authorities to ensure that the American people have access to internet services at an affordable cost.” The lawmakers also faulted Pai’s draft order to reduce a Dec. 1 increase of Lifeline’s minimum service standard for mobile broadband (see 2007300064). The proposal appears “to ignore the fact that coronavirus cases continue to rise, and the country has experienced nineteen consecutive weeks of over one million unemployment claims,” the Democrats said. Other signers included House Commerce Vice Chair Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y., Communications Subcommittee Chairman Mike Doyle, D-Pa., and subpanel Vice Chair Doris Matsui, D-Calif. Pai “for months has made clear that Congress needs to step up to the plate and make more funding available for connectivity during” the epidemic, a spokesperson emailed. “It’s therefore disappointing that House Democrats have failed to do their job and are refusing to find common ground with the Administration and congressional Republicans on broadband funding and other core national priorities unless they get their demand for special-interest giveaways that have nothing to do with the pandemic, like tax cuts for the rich in states like New York, New Jersey, and California.”