Skip to main content

Current Analysis: Texas Senate Bill 5 Opinion

The state of Texas has signed Senate Bill 5, the Telecommunications Reform Act, into law. The Act cites that "significant technology changes" have occurred since Texas passed its last Public Utilities Regulatory Act a decade ago. The overhaul goes into great detail governing regulations for broadband over power lines (BPL), should electric utilities choose to provide these services. Among other changes, the Act also clears the way to deregulate all incumbent local exchange carriers (ILECs), redefining them as "transitioning companies" that can qualify as non-dominant carriers in major markets that present at least token local competition. But most important, the Act aims to bypass the traditional local video franchise system, establishing a way for the RBOCs to receive statewide video franchises. Texas Governor Rick Perry signed the legislation into law on September 7, 2005, and the next day the Texas Cable & Telecommunications Association (TCTA) filed suit in federal co urt against the Act.

According to a Current Analysis assessment, "The Texas Telecommunications Reform Act could not have represented the interests of the RBOCs better if they had written it themselves. The actual punch in the legislation - deregulating ILECs and allowing them to bypass the local video franchise system by applying for statewide franchise licenses - is sugarcoated by a lengthy treatise on BPL. BPL is a still nascent service that's years away from becoming a mainstream market competitor, and that's assuming that energy providers go full-throttle with technology development and buildout. The legislation at key points so clearly benefits the RBOCs at the expense of cable providers that entire sections appear ripe to be torpedoed in the courts. The cable industry, in its federal suit, filed almost immediately after the legislation was signed into law in the federal U.S. District Court, Western District of Texas, Austin division, seeks to do just that."

Popular posts from this blog

How WLAN Transforms Industrial Automation

The industrial sector is on the eve of a wireless transformation, driven by an urgent demand for greater network capacity, reliability, and deterministic performance. Historically, manufacturers and mission-critical operations have relied on wired networks — favoring their predictability — because spectrum congestion in legacy 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands limited confidence in wireless for operational technology (OT) environments. However, with the introduction and rapid adoption of the 6GHz spectrum, compounded by significant advances in Wi-Fi standards, industrial facilities are now poised to embrace wireless LANs as the backbone for automation and digital innovation. Industrial WLAN Market Development Recent research from ABI Research forecasts that over 70 percent of industrial-grade wireless LAN access points (WLAN APs) shipped in 2030 will support the 6GHz band. This is a leap from 2 percent in 2023, highlighting a rapid and profound technological shift. The market for ruggedized indust...