Testimony: Rejecting Handouts to Government-Owned Broadband
Testimony in Opposition to LD 1456: “An Act to Facilitate the Expansion of Broadband” Senator Lawrence, Representative Zeigler, and the distinguished members of the Committee on Energy, Utilities and Technology, […]
Read More →Maine set to waste buckets of federal cash on broadband infrastructure
Mills’ Broadband Bureaucracy Grows With More Biden Bucks Earlier this month, the Treasury Department approved a plan to invest $110 million “to strengthen or expand broadband infrastructure across the state.” […]
Read More →Southport residents experiencing buyer’s remorse over bond for new government-owned network
In May 2021, residents of Southport, Maine voted 95-86 at a special town meeting to seek bonding not to exceed $2.48 million to build a municipal-owned fiber optic network. The […]
Read More →Congress must pump the brakes on the American Innovation and Choice Online Act
Antitrust is a hot topic in Washington lately. The pervasive reach of big technology companies into our personal lives and economy has drawn the attention and ire of both Democrats […]
Read More →Testimony to Oppose LD 1894
Testimony in Opposition to LD 1894, “An Act To Support Municipal Broadband Infrastructure through Incentives and Competition.” Senator Lawrence, Representative Berry, and the distinguished members of the Committee on Energy, […]
Read More →There’s no need for a government-owned network in Knox County
Many advocates in Maine and around the nation have highlighted the need for more stable and faster internet speeds, especially in the shadow of the remote-learning, work-from-home, socially-distant economy that […]
Read More →There’s no need to neuter the net in Maine
This week, the Maine Legislature’s Committee on Energy, Utilities and Technology held a public hearing on LD 1364, a bill that would prohibit state funds from being transferred to internet […]
Read More →Open markets for internet providers can bridge the digital divide
The best safeguard against corporatism and corruption is diffused, lighter, and less-centralized government power. Restoring “net neutrality” would concentrate that power in government, and the only beneficiaries will be the companies who can afford to go to the dance.
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