The California Privacy Protection Agency posted guidance on complying with data minimization requirements of the California Consumer Privacy Protection Act (CCPA). It’s the Enforcement Division’s first CCPA advisory, the agency said Tuesday. “We intend for our Enforcement Advisories to promote voluntary compliance, but sometimes stronger medicine will be in order,” said Deputy Director of Enforcement Michael Macko. The division has noticed “that certain businesses are asking consumers to provide excessive and unnecessary personal information in response to requests that consumers make under the CCPA,” the advisory said.
The Maryland General Assembly supported a 25 cent fee that will help fund the 988 mental health hotline. It would apply monthly to landline and postpaid mobile services, while prepaid wireless would pay a quarter per retail transaction under SB-974. The bill passed the Senate last month 42-3. The Maryland House voted 110-26 Tuesday for the Senate bill after last month voting 121-17 for a House version (HB-933). The bill will go to Gov. Wes Moore (D).
The Nebraska Public Service Commission will consider changes to telecom service outage reporting requirements, the PSC decided at its Wednesday meeting. Commissioners voted 4-0 for the order in docket C-5564. Commissioner Eric Kamler (R) wasn't at the meeting. Outage reporting is “essential,” but the PSC “has recently observed an increase in the number of significant and concerning outages, and in reports of cable cuts,” the agency said. In addition, the PSC said it has heard that “requirements in its outage reporting policy are unclear and could be subject to multiple interpretations.” One proposed change would require that a carrier’s initial outage report include a “listing of any public safety answering points, government officials, other agencies, or news media notified of the outage.” Also, the PSC would require daily updates for outages lasting longer than three days. The current requirement is an update every five days for outages longer than five days. A final report would be due five business days after service is restored, down from 14 days. It would have to address how the outage affected 911 services, in addition to previous requirements. Also, the PSC proposal would redefine what counts as a service interruption. It would exempt planned or scheduled outages when customers receive notice at least 24 hours in advance. The PSC set a workshop for May 29 at 1:30 p.m. CST and asked for written comments on proposed changes by June 14.
State senators in California advanced a bill that could mean ISPs no longer must provide free internet to receive public housing broadband grants. The California Senate Communications Committee voted 15-0 to clear SB-1383 at a livestreamed hearing Tuesday. Backed by the cable industry, the bill would remove restrictions included in the California Advanced Services Fund (CASF) public housing account. If the bill is enacted, the grants could support projects with plans that charge as much as $30 monthly. Also, the bill would let more types of organizations apply for and expressly authorize the California Public Utilities Commission to award funds for range extenders and other network enhancers. The fund is currently underutilized, said bill sponsor and committee Chair Steven Bradford (D). “Multiple low-income housing providers” say that the account’s free internet condition “is a major deterrent” to applying for grants, he said. Requiring free broadband “is a major deterrent,” echoed Amanda Gualderama, California Broadband and Video Association director-legislative and regulatory advocacy. The CPUC last year denied the cable industry group’s petition to reconsider what counts as free broadband service as it doles out public housing grants (see 2309010006). Last month, the commission approved changes to the public housing account with a clarification that grant recipients should provide free service without government subsidies (see 2403080010).
Gov. Brian Kemp (R) should veto a Georgia social media bill that would require age verification and prevent those younger than 16 from getting accounts without parental consent, tech industry groups said this week. The Computer & Communications Industry Association sent Kemp a veto request Tuesday. NetChoice asked for the same in a letter Monday. Age-verification and parental consent requirements in HB-351 “significantly fail to meet constitutional standards,” CCIA said. The group supported another part of the bill that would require digital citizenship curriculum in schools. NetChoice, which has sued other states over similar requirements, warned that SB-351 “would immediately invite legal challenges.”
Two 911 bills passed the Kansas State Legislature. The House concurred Monday with Senate amendments to HB-2690 and HB-2483. The first bill would replace the Kansas 911 Coordinating Council with a state 911 board, among other changes. The second bill would eliminate a five-year audit by the Kansas Legislative Division of Post Audit. The House voted 114-5 for HB-2690 and 119-0 for HB-2483. Gov. Laura Kelly (D) will next consider the bills, which the Senate approved last week (see 2403280010).
The Tennessee Senate voted 30-0 for a broadband reporting bill Monday. SB-2907 would require state and federal broadband grant recipients to list unserved areas where they plan to deploy high-speed internet using government cash, and to say when they aim to have service in those places. The House Commerce Committee took no action on the cross-filed HB-2910 at a Tuesday meeting.
The Kansas Senate passed two 911 bills Wednesday. State senators voted 39-1 in favor of HB-2690, a possible state 911 administration shakeup that would replace the Kansas 911 Coordinating Council with a state 911 board, allow counties to contract with each other to consolidate public safety answering points and require transfer of 911 fees collected from monthly phone bills and prepaid wireless sales to state 911 funds at the state treasury (see 2403060075). Senators also voted 39-1 to pass HB-2483, which would eliminate a five-year audit by the Kansas Legislative Division of Post Audit. The audit checks if public safety answering points are appropriately using 911 funding, whether they have enough money and the status of 911 service implementation (see 2402220062). The House previously passed both bills but must agree to Senate amendments.
The California Public Utilities Commission will audit carriers for compliance with the state’s April 2023 shift to connections-based contribution to universal service public purpose programs. In a Wednesday ruling, CPUC Administrative Law Judge Hazlyn Fortune directed the agency's utility audit branch to ensure carriers are reporting and remitting the surcharge in a reasonable manner and as directed in the CPUC's October 2022 decision (docket R.21-03-002). T-Mobile has resisted the contribution mechanism change in the courts (see 2310170042). In a separate ruling Wednesday, ALJ Robyn Purchia clarified that California LifeLine pilot programs using federal affordable connectivity program (ACP) funds will continue through at least May 31. "If the ACP receives additional federal funding, the pilot programs may continue up to June 8, 2025," said the ALJ: If the ACP doesn't receive more funding by April 30, providers must notify California LifeLine customers by May 1 "that their service may be discontinued or otherwise changed."
The Missouri House unanimously supported a tax deduction for broadband grant funds for 2022 and later tax years. Lawmakers voted 146-0 to send HB-2142 to the state Senate.