FRED UPTON, MICHIGAN CHAIRMAN ONE HUNDRED THIRTEENTH CONGRESS HENRY A. WAXMAN, CALIFORNIA RANKING MEMBER cteongress of tbe Wntteb ~tates j!)ouse of ll\epresentatibes COMM ITIEE ON ENERGY AND COMMERCE 2125 RAYBURN HousE OFFICE BuiLDING WASHINGTON, DC 20515-6115 Thomas E. Wheeler Chainnan Federal Communications Commission 445 It11 St, S.W. Washington, D.C. 20554 Dear Chairman Wheeler: MaJOrity (2021 225-2927 Mmority (7021 225-3641 May 13,2014 We write today to express our grave concern that the Commission continues to consider reclassifying Internet broadband service as an old-fashioned "Title II" common carrier service. Such unwarranted and overreaching government intrusion into the broadband marketplace will harm consumers, halt job creation, curtail investment, stifle innovation, and set America down a dangerous path of micromanaging the Internet. The Commission must reject thi s approach. Over a decade ago, the FCC wisely rejected calls to regulate broadband service as a Title II service, noting Congress's explicit direction to leave the Internet "unfettered by federal or state regulation." The result of this regulatory restraint has been billions of dollars in private sector investment, tremendous annual increases in broadband speeds, and an explosion of applications, content and services available to consumers over the Internet. Now, despite the incredible record of broadband success in America, the Commission may be contemplating turning back the clock on this process and proceeding with a classification that gives itself the authority to regulate every possible aspect of the Internet. Simply raising the prospect of such stii1ing regulation harms broadband providers, the American economy, and ultimately broadband consumers- actually doing so would be fatal to the Internet as we know it. Indeed, consumers will fare the worst ifthe FCC proceeds with this "common carrier­ ization" of broadband. The FCC efforts to impose Title II regulation will prohibit pricing innovation and force consumers to pay for the entire cost of bui lding and operating American Internet access networks. As demand for video and data continues to explode exponentially, this will ultimately result in broadband becoming unaffordable for many Americans. Title II reclassification could deprive consumers of the benefits of creative and tlcxible market-based pricing plans that would fit their video and data needs at affordable prices. Letter to Chairman Wheeler Page 2 Investors, investment analysts, and broadband companies have advised that regulating broadband as a Title II service will create such regulatory uncertainty that stock values will drop and investment capital will become much harder to find. Decreased investment leads to deferred maintenance, infrequent upgrades, and stalled deployment, which, at best, leads to higher consumer prices and at worst leaves consumers with fewer, if any, reliable choices. This market reaction is not speculation, it is reality. When the f-CC briefly considered its "third way" implementation of Title II several years ago, broadband provider stocks dropped sharply. Without capital, providers cannot innovate, upgrade their networks, or create new jobs. This is not an outcome anyone wants. Sixteen years ago, in a report to Congress, then-Chairman Bill Kennard and the FCC set a course for this country that supports consumer choice and champions the freedom of the Internet. The regulatory approach to date has done just that - by rejecting legacy regulation and supporting the job-creating and investment potential of the private sector. The Commission needs to send a strong sikrnal that it has no intention of hanning today's thriving market and consumers by imposing expansive new Title II regulation on broadband service and micromanaging the Internet under rules designed for the legacy telephone network. We ask you to end this uncertainty by stating clearly your intention to drop any consideration of the Title II approach, and closing your Title II docket. ~cfW,./ Sincerely, Greg Chairman Subcommittee noaooll""n'n..., Vice Chairman Vice Chairman Subcommittee on Communications and Technology cc: The Honorable Henry 1\. Waxman, Ranking Member House Committee on Energy and Commerce The J Ionorable Anna Eshoo, Ranking Member Subcommittee on Communications and Technology The llonorable Mignon Clyburn, Commissioner Federal Communications Commission The llonorable Jessica Rosenworcel , Commissioner Letter to Chairman Wheeler Page 3 Federal Communications Commission The Honorable Ajit Pai, Commissioner Federal Communications Commission The llonorable Michael O' Rielly, Commissioner Federal Communications Commission . . r •