Wednesday, March 12, 2014

House OKs FCC Reform Acts, Sends It to Senate

Ajit Pai
The House was getting some love Wednesday for its approval of the FCC Process Reform Act, which passed overwhelmingly Tuesday, according to Multichannel News.

The legislation, among other things, gives the FCC a year to set minimum comment periods, establishes procedures for putting specific language of a proposed rule in notices of proposed rulemaking, and comes up with performance measures for evaluating the effectiveness of rules.

FCC commissioner Ajit Pai was in Mumbai for a conference, but still managed to send his congratulations

"I applaud the U.S. House of Representatives for passing the Federal Communications Commission Process Reform Act of 2013, H.R. 3675, and I commend the leaders of the Energy and Commerce Committee’s Subcommittee on Communications and Technology—chairman Walden and ranking member Eshoo—for their bipartisan efforts to advance this legislation.

I hope that this common-sense bill, as well as the Federal Communications Commission Consolidated Reporting Act of 2013, H.R. 2844, which the House of Representatives passed 415 to 0 back in September, will soon be enacted into law. Together, these bills recognize the need to modernize the FCC to reflect our dynamic, converged communications marketplace. And they would eliminate outdated mandates on the agency, streamline its operations, and make it more accountable to the public. These are two pieces of straightforward, good-government legislation, and I hope that the President will soon have the opportunity to sign them."

The bill now will get consideration in the Senate.

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