Six Key Consequences of the D.C. Circuit Upholding Net Neutrality
06.20.2016 | UPDATES
On its third try, the Federal Communications Commission finally got the sweeping net neutrality court victory it had been
seeking for years. In US Telecom v. FCC , the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit held that the
FCC acted within its statutory authority when it issued its 2015 Open Internet Order.[1] That Order reclassified mobile
and fixed broadband internet access services as “telecommunications services” under Title II of the Communications
Act, and it imposed on such broadband providers a modified form of common-carrier regulation that has long applied to
mobile wireless telecom carriers.[2] This Title II outcome was the result most feared and opposed by many cable and
wireless broadband providers and related trade associations and, on more ideological grounds, the Republican majorities
in the House and Senate.
In previous attempts at net neutrality, the D.C. Circuit had first overturned the FCC’s efforts (in Comcast v. FCC in
2010) and then sharply limited the FCC’s later efforts (in Verizon v.
FCC in 2014 ). The FCC’s 2015 Open Internet Order
was consequently quite vocal about how the commission was carefully following the legal roadmap set forth in the
court’s opinion in Verizon. In particular, the Verizon court had found that the FCC had essentially lacked the courage of
its convictions when it effectively regulated broadband providers as common carriers without first reclassifying them as
common carriers under the Title II of the Communications Act.
As a result, in its 2015 Order the FCC expressly
reclassified broadband providers as Title II common carriers, while at the same time relieved them of many of Title II’s
more onerous and outdated regulatory obligations, such as rate regulation and tariffing requirements, under a statutory
doctrine known as forbearance.
This update distills the key consequences of the D.C. Circuit’s decision for broadband providers, consumers, edge
providers and other stakeholders, including the likely next steps for net neutrality’s proponents and opponents.
1. FCC’s Ban on Broadband Providers’ Blocking, Throttling and Other Discriminatory Conduct is Here to Stay.
While opponents of net neutrality were likely encouraged to hear Republican FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai’s battle cry
to “continue the legal fight,” the reality is the battle is probably over.
Although AT&T has announced it will pursue an
appeal before the U.S. Supreme Court, there is no split among the federal circuit courts to resolve. Moreover, the
issue of net neutrality is a fairly narrow and technical one for which an increasingly selective Supreme Court is
unlikely to grant review.
Because an evenly split Supreme Court would leave the D.C. Circuit decision in place, the
prospect of a 4-4 decision would also work against the chances of the Supreme Court granting certiorari. In addition,
while some opponents have expressed hope that Congress could intervene, the House and Senate Republicans’
repeated efforts since 2010 to legislate alternatives to net neutrality have failed under the threat of a White House
veto.
If the Democrats retain the White House, or retake the Senate majority in 2016, there is little likelihood the
political fortunes of net neutrality opponents will improve on Capitol Hill. Now, with the cloud of uncertainty largely
lifted, we can expect renewed interest from consumer advocacy organizations and the FCC’s Enforcement Bureau to
enforce the net neutrality rules.
2. Giving a Green Light for the FCC’s Broadband Privacy Rulemaking.
Another significant but less-publicized
implication of this victory is its effect on the FCC’s pending rulemaking to adopt broadband privacy rules. Because
the 2015 Order reclassified broadband providers under Title II as providers of telecommunications service, the
existing privacy-related rules in Section 222 of the Communications Act now apply to broadband providers.
Recognizing the FCC’s existing rules implementing Section 222 were intended for voice telephony services, the FCC
recently launched a rulemaking to adopt new rules better tailored for the online context of broadband services. Had
the US Telecom court overturned the FCC’s reclassification of broadband service, the legal foundation for the
broadband privacy rulemaking would have been eliminated.
But now that the D.C. Circuit has upheld the
Commission’s reclassification, the broadband privacy rulemaking can and will proceed with a solid jurisdictional
foundation.
3. FTC’s Lack of Jurisdiction Over Broadband Providers Resolved.
While the validity of the FCC’s net neutrality
efforts remained unsettled, the Federal Trade Commission had flexed its enforcement muscle towards mobile
wireless carriers in their role as wireless broadband providers. But because FCC-regulated common carriers have
long been exempt from FTC jurisdiction, the 2015 Open Internet Order’s reclassification of broadband service as
common carriage stripped the FTC of jurisdiction over the provision of broadband service, going forward. The
.
decision in US Telecom has affirmed that as a general matter only the FCC, not the FTC, can bring enforcement
actions concerning the provision of broadband service.[3]
4. Interconnection Arrangements Are Fair Game. The US Telecom court rejected the petitioners’ challenge to the
FCC’s prospective regulation of interconnection arrangements—i.e., non-consumer-facing arrangements between
broadband providers and “backbone” providers (e.g., Level 3) or “edge” providers (e.g., ESPN.com). The court made
clear that the FCC has sufficient authority to make interconnection arrangements subject to Title II once it
“reclassif[ied] broadband service—and the interconnection arrangements necessary to provide it—as a
telecommunications service.”[4]
5.
Mobile Service Is Also Covered. The US Telecom court also found that the FCC’s Open Internet authority extends
to mobile services provided by wireless carriers. That holding is important because otherwise the FCC’s net
neutrality rules would apply to internet usage on fixed broadband connections but not to mobile connections on
smartphones and tablets.
With consumers increasingly using mobile networks to access the internet, reversal by the
D.C. Circuit on this issue would have created a major discontinuity in the FCC’s net neutrality regulations.
6. Deference to Agency Expertise.
The US Telecom court went to great lengths to emphasize that it is not for the
court to second-guess rational agency decisions, even those that they view as unwise. The panel, for example,
largely brushed aside the opposing economic studies and economic declarations emphasized in Judge Stephen
Williams’ partial dissent by noting “we [do not] inquire whether some or many economists would disapprove of the
agency’s approach because we do not sit as a panel of referees on a professional economics journal, but as a panel
of generalist judges obliged to defer to a reasonable judgment by an agency acting pursuant to congressionally
delegated authority.”[5] The court instead observed that whether broadband service qualifies as a
telecommunications or information service depends on “factual particulars of how Internet technology works and how
it is provided,” and the FCC has the expertise and resources to make decisions based upon those particulars.[6]
Further, the court denied petitioners’ argument that the FCC’s decision should be vacated because it could have
accomplished its Open Internet goals without the reclassification.[7] In so doing, the court rebuffed the petitioners’
efforts to transform the well-known “arbitrary and capricious” standard into one requiring the agency to show there
were no less-restrictive alternatives. US Telecom thus reaffirms that, at least with respect to arbitrary and capricious
review, courts do not ask what agencies could have done but whether what the agency in fact did was the result of
reasoned decision-making.[8]
ENDNOTES
[1] U.S.
Telecom Assoc. v. FCC , No.
15-1063, slip op. 1619173 (D.C. Cir.
June 14, 2016) (hereinafter, US Telecom ).
[2] In re Protecting and Promoting the Open Internet , Report & Order on Remand, Declaratory Ruling & Order, 30 FCC
Rcd 5601 (2015) (Open Internet Order).
[3] Whether the FTC now lacks jurisdiction over broadband providers without regard to whether their conduct concerns a
common carrier activity remains a subject of dispute before the Ninth Circuit. See Fed. Trade Comm’n v.
AT&T
Mobility LLC , No. 14-CV-04785 (N.D. Cal.
Oct. 28, 2014).
[4] US Telecom , at 54-55.
[5] US Telecom , at 23 (quoting City of Los Angeles v. U.S.
Department of Transportation , 165 F.3d 972, 978 (D.C. Cir.
1999)).
[6] US Telecom , at 14.
[7] US Telecom , at 43.
[8] Id . at 42.
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