House committee version of SB 117 preserves local video franchising for most Ohio communities
Source: http://www.callahansclevelanddiary.com/?p=284
Well, you just never know, do you?
The House Public Utilities Committee unanimously approved a heavily amended version of
The Governor got real oversight power for his Commerce Department, which will now be able to levy fines and even terminate the franchises of state Video Service Providers that violate the new law’s requirements on buildout, redlining, reporting or customer service. Cities and public access advocates represented by Local Voice Ohio
But most important, the Committee adopted an amendment proposed by Rep. Louis Blessing (R-Cinci) that allows an incumbent cable company to “opt out” of a municipal franchise and switch to a state Video Service Authorization only when 25% of the residents in the franchise community have access to a competing wireline video service. In other words, if there’s no real competition, there’s no switching to the state franchising system.
The Blessing amendment, if it survives the House-Senate conference process, will preserve local cable franchising for the majority of Ohio communities (those that don’t get their phone service from AT&T)
Something tells me the cable companies are going to be very unhappy about this turn of events — which is why it ain’t over till the conference committee sings. But the House will pass the Committee version in a day or two, and then AT&T will have every reason to push for a quick reconciliation and final adoption, no matter how unhappy that makes Time Warner.
(Left on the Committee’s cutting-room floor: Rep. Mike Foley’s anti-abandonment language and “Connect Ohio”