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STATEMENT: NHMC Files Joint Brief with Allies in Net Neutrality Litigation

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
August 21, 2018

CONTACT:
Brenda Rivas
213.718.0732
brivas@nhmc.org

STATEMENT: NHMC Files Joint Brief with Allies in Net Neutrality Litigation

WASHINGTON, D.C. – On August 20, 2018, the National Hispanic Media Coalition (NHMC) filed a joint brief with petitioners seeking to reverse the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) decision to revoke 2015 Net Neutrality consumer protections.

The National Hispanic Media Coalition released the following statement from Francella Ochillo director, government and legal affairs:

“NHMC uncovered critical evidence during the FCC’s repeal of Net Neutrality last year which documented consumer harms, further cementing the need to retain the 2015 open Internet rules. Despite several requests from NHMC, the FCC refused to consider relevant information uncovered through these FOIA requests. That was a fatal error in the FCC’s administrative process, a vulnerability that will be exposed through litigation. The FCC chose to exclude evidence in its own possession from this proceeding, and for this reason alone the court should reverse the FCC’s decision to repeal Net Neutrality protections.”

Back in May 2017, NHMC sent a series of Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests to the FCC and ultimately uncovered over 70,000 pages of documents, including over over 47,000 open Internet consumer complaints excluded from FCC’s analysis in its repeal of the rules.

While the FCC continues to produce documents that were requested in May 2017, NHMC commissioned an independent expert report back in November 2017 focusing on the Net Neutrality consumer complaints. The report by Reza Rajabiun found that both consumers and their service providers appear to consider broadband access as a basic stand-alone telecommunications service. To read the full report, click here: http://bit.ly/2z4lFQe

For interviews, please contact Brenda Rivas, at brivas@nhmc.org or at 213.718.0732.

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The National Hispanic Media Coalition (NHMC) is the media watchdog for the Latino community, ensuring that we are fairly and consistently represented in news and entertainment and that our voices are heard over the airwaves and on the internet.

We exist to challenge executives and influencers throughout the entertainment and news industry to eliminate barriers for Latinos to express themselves and be heard through every type of medium. NHMC works to bring decision-makers to the table to open new opportunities for Latinos to create, contribute and consume programming that is inclusive, free from bias and hate rhetoric, affordable and culturally relevant.

Receive real-time updates on Facebook, Twitter @NHMC and Instagram @NHMC_org.

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NHMC Files Comments on Competition and Consumer Protection in the 21st Century

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On August 20, 2018, the National Hispanic Media Coalition, along with 18MillionRising.org, Color of Change, and others, submitted public comments to the Federal Trade Commision (FTC) ahead of the public hearings on competition and consumer protection in the 21st century. These comments will aid the FTC in evaluating their law enforcement and policy agenda. Of the eleven topics that organizations were asked to provide input, the filing refers to competition and consumer protection issues in communication, information, and media technology networks, the intersection between privacy, big data, and competition, and the agency’s investigation, enforcement, and remedial processes.

Click here to review the filing. Key points are as follows:

  • Tech giants have become unwieldy in size and influence, and consumers effectively cannot avoid interacting with them.
  • Tech giants have repeatedly failed to protect and respect internet users’ data, precipitating a multitude of consumer harms.
  • Many of the practices of tech giants are harmful to society as a whole, and consumers are calling for change.
  • The FTC can and should do more to address harms perpetrated by the actions of tech giants.

Hearings on competition and consumer protection in the 21st century will consist of 15-20 sessions that will take place between September 2018 and January 2019. A dedicated website to the hearings can be found here.

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NHMC Urges the FCC to Consider Marginalized Voices When Revising Children’s Programming Regulations

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In July 2018, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) released a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) outlining sweeping changes to children’s television programming rules. The changes would effectively dismantle the existing regulations and decrease the quality of educational content for children who rely on local broadcast programming.

NHMC responded with comments asking the Commission to do the requisite data collection and analysis needed to justify its proposals. Under the current proposals, children in low-income, rural, and minority communities who do not have access to Internet or paid-television alternatives and have no alternative to free, local broadcasts for educational programs and information would be further disadvantaged. NHMC strongly urged the FCC to consider children in disconnected populations, especially communities of color, when determining whether its proposals provide all American children with opportunities to learn and thrive.

Click here to review NHMC’s filing.

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NHMC FILED REPLY COMMENTS OPPOSING THE FCC’S PROPOSALS TO DEREGULATE CHILDREN’S PROGRAMMING RULES, ARGUING THAT THE PROPOSALS WILL DECREASE QUALITY AND ACCESSIBILITY FOR DISADVANTAGED CHILDREN

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

 October 24, 2018

CONTACT:
Alison Sotomayor
213.718.0732
communications@nhmc.org

 

RELEASE: NHMC FILED REPLY COMMENTS OPPOSING THE FCC’S PROPOSALS TO DEREGULATE CHILDREN’S PROGRAMMING RULES, ARGUING THAT THE FCC’S PROPOSALS WILL DECREASE QUALITY AND ACCESSIBILITY FOR DISADVANTAGED CHILDREN

 

WASHINGTON D.C. – The National Hispanic Media Coalition (NHMC) submitted reply comments to oppose the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) sweeping proposals to eliminate a series of current children’s programming rules, which will have a disproportionately negative impact on low-income and minority children who still rely on broadcast television. NHMC urged the FCC to delay the upcoming proceeding in order to conduct the requisite data analysis on the deleterious effects of its proposals.

It has been more than 20 years since the children’s programming rules were first ratified, and since, the media landscape has changed significantly, allowing children’s programming to be made available through numerous outlets. The FCC has offered a series of proposals to modify the “outdated” children’s programming rules, including providing broadcasters even more flexibility to choose how to serve the educational and informational needs of America’s children.

“We agree that the time is ripe to modernize children’s programming to meet the needs of the 21st century media market,” said Francella Ochillo, NHMC’s vice-president of policy and general counsel. “However, it is highly problematic for the Commission to reconstruct the regulatory framework without taking all children into consideration. Namely, children in low-income households, as well as households without broadband access are unable to take advantage of educational programming alternatives and still rely on free broadcast television.”

Various conclusions throughout the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) will make access even more difficult for the nation’s disadvantaged children. For example, the Commission suggests that:

  • It is no longer necessary to require more than three hours per week of educational/informational programming to children, but does not provide any analysis on the far-reaching impact of this change.
  • Children’s educational programming need not be regularly scheduled to count toward the guidelines. Yet, the NPRM fails to explain how parents and children will be able to find programming that is not regularly scheduled.
  • Programming no longer needs to be full length (30 minutes) to qualify as core programming. Notably, the NPRM does not provide any research to justify departure from the 30-minute requirement, which was is backed by scientific research and expert testimony previously accepted by the Commission.
  • Quarterly children’s television reports serve no useful purpose, again, without citing any evidence to support this conclusion other than being an inconvenience to broadcasters.

Therefore, the NHMC urges the FCC to press pause on this proceeding to conduct the requisite data collection and analysis. The Commission has yet to evaluate the unintended consequences of the current proposals. Children in low-income and marginalized communities who have the most at stake will shoulder the greatest burden.

NHMC is committed to access and media diversity. It will continue its work to ensure that children from low-income and marginalized populations are able to access and enjoy a free, over-the-air, educational and informational programming in the 21st century media market.

For interviews, please contact Alison Sotomayor at communications@nhmc.org or at 213.718.0732.

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 The National Hispanic Media Coalition (NHMC) is the media watchdog for the Latino community, ensuring that we are fairly and consistently represented in news and entertainment and that our voices are heard over the airwaves and on the internet.

We exist to challenge executives and influencers throughout the entertainment and news industry to eliminate barriers for Latinos to express themselves and be heard through every type of medium. NHMC works to bring decision-makers to the table to open new opportunities for Latinos to create, contribute and consume programming that is inclusive, free from bias and hate rhetoric, affordable and culturally relevant.

Receive real-time updates on Facebook, Twitter @NHMC and Instagram @NHMC_org.

The post NHMC FILED REPLY COMMENTS OPPOSING THE FCC’S PROPOSALS TO DEREGULATE CHILDREN’S PROGRAMMING RULES, ARGUING THAT THE PROPOSALS WILL DECREASE QUALITY AND ACCESSIBILITY FOR DISADVANTAGED CHILDREN appeared first on National Hispanic Media Coalition.

NHMC Filed Reply Comments Opposing the FCC’s Proposals to Deregulate Children’s Programming Rules Which Will Decrease Quality and Accessibility for Disadvantaged Children

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           On October 23, 2018, the National Hispanic Media Coalition (NHMC) filed reply comments in response to the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC or Commission) Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to revise children’s programming rules. NHMC urged the Commission to press pause on this proceeding, collect the requisite data, and conduct the analysis required under the Administrative Procedure Act to support any proposals for deregulation. Neither the NPRM nor the comments filed in the record meaningfully evaluate the unintended effects of deregulation. Further study would help ensure that already underserved and disadvantaged minority, low-income, and rural children are not deprived of widely accessible educational and informational (E/I) programming.

          Unquestionably, children low-income households without paid-television alternatives and those without access to broadband platforms lack adequate representation in this proceeding. Many still rely heavily on free educational programming to learn, however, the Commission did not evaluate how the current proposals will impact on children who may not be able to access costly alternatives in the new media landscape. Further, if the current programming standards and reporting requirements are dismantled, as proposed, quality educational content will eventually disappear from our public airwaves.
The NPRM is laced with conclusions, many of which are neither supported by the FCC nor the record. Under the current proposals:

  • It would no longer necessary to require more than three hours per week of E/I programming, yet no substantive data has been provided in the record to analyze the impact of this change;
  • Non-broadcast sources provide ample E/I programming, however, the record overlooks the hundreds of thousands of children who reside in households without access to paid-television or broadband alternatives;
  • Three hours of core programming need not be available on a station’s primary channel. To date, there has been no attempt in the record to quantify the impact of this change;
  • Children’s E/I programming need not be regularly scheduled to count toward the guidelines. Nothing in the record explains how parents and children will be able to find programming that is not regularly scheduled;
  • Programming no longer needs to be full length (30 minutes) to qualify as core programming. Noticeably, no credible scientific research is provided to support the new conclusion or debunk the expert analysis in the 1996 Order;
  • Public broadcasters should be able to eliminate the requirement to display the E/I icon on programs designed to educate children, providing broadcasters with new opportunities to profit from the public airwaves without any additional benefit to the children who rely on their programming; and
  • The quarterly children’s television reports and Form 398 serve no useful purpose even though no conclusive evidence is cited by commenters and these reports are vital tools to hold broadcasters accountable.

Click here to review the filing.

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NHMC, along with a coalition of public interest groups, urge FCC to allow shared use of vacant C-Band spectrum for rural-underserved communities

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On 10/26/18, NHMC signed on to Public Interest Spectrum Coalition (PISC) comments urging the FCC to adopt the public interest coalition’s proposal to allow shared use of the vacant C-band spectrum for rural/underserved areas so communities can create their own networks.

It also opposes the private auction proposal which essentially allows industry to buy spectrum with no public interest conditions.

To view the draft letter, click here.

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NHMC Filed NTIA Comments Recommending Privacy Regulations That Protect the Disenfranchised and Disconnected

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The National Hispanic Media Coalition, Asian Americans Advancing Justice-AAJC, Common Cause, the National Urban League (NUL), and OCA-Asian Pacific American Advocates filed joint comments with the National Telecommunications and Information Administration on ways to protect and advance consumer privacy. Our groups submitted comments on behalf of the millions of Americans and communities of color who continue to find themselves adversely impacted or completely left out of the benefits and advantages that so many have enjoyed in the digital revolution.

Now that digital footprints can be tracked, shared, and manipulated by public and private entities in ways that were once unimaginable, the regulatory framework must include privacy protections for all consumers including the disenfranchised and disconnected. As stated in the letter, “strong privacy protections will help foster greater participation in all aspects of the online ecosystem, allowing those who have traditionally been at the margins of society to harness the potential and power of the Internet and enjoy the full potential of America’s economic and democratic ideals.

Click here to review the filing.

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NHMC Joins 33 Consumer and Civil Rights Advocates In Public Interest Principles for Privacy Legislation

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Today, NHMC joins 33 civil rights, consumer, and privacy organizations in releasing public interest principles for privacy legislation, because the public needs and deserves strong and comprehensive federal legislation to protect their privacy and afford meaningful redress.

Irresponsible data practices lead to a broad range of harms, including discrimination in employment, housing, healthcare, and advertising. They also lead to data breaches and loss of individuals’ control over personal information. Existing enforcement mechanisms fail to hold data processors accountable and provide little-to-no relief for privacy violations.

The privacy principles outline four concepts that any meaningful data protection legislation should incorporate at a minimum:

  • Privacy protections must be strong, meaningful, and comprehensive.
  • Data practices must protect civil rights, prevent unlawful discrimination, and advance equal opportunity.
  • Governments at all levels should play a role in protecting and enforcing privacy rights.
  • Legislation should provide redress for privacy violations.

These public interest privacy principles include a framework providing guidelines for policymakers considering how to protect the privacy of all Americans effectively while also offering meaningful redress. They follow three days of Federal Trade Commission hearings about big data, competition, and privacy as well as the comment deadline on “Developing the Administration’s Approach to Privacy,” a request for comment from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration as the agency works to develop privacy policy recommendations for the Trump Administration, and ongoing work at the National Institute for Standards and Technology to develop a privacy risk framework.

The groups urge members of Congress to pass privacy legislation that ensures fairness, prevents discrimination, advances equal opportunity, protects free expression, and facilitates trust between the public and companies that collect their personal data.

New America’s Open Technology Institute, Public Knowledge, Access Humboldt, Access Now, Berkeley Media Studies Group, Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood, Center for Democracy & Technology, Center for Digital Democracy, Center for Media Justice, Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law, Color of Change, Common Cause, Common Sense Kids Action, Consumer Action, Consumer Federation of America, Consumers Union, Customer Commons, Demand Progress, Free Press Action Fund, Human Rights Watch, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, Media Alliance, Media Mobilizing Project, National Association of Consumer Advocates, National Consumer Law Center, National Consumers League, National Digital Inclusion Alliance, National Hispanic Media Coalition, Oakland Privacy, Open MIC (Open Media and Information Companies Initiative), Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, Public Citizen, U.S. PIRG, and United Church of Christ, OC Inc. signed the principles. Additional local and national privacy advocates are encouraged to sign on.

The following can be attributed to Eric Null, Senior Policy Counsel at New America’s Open Technology Institute:

“For decades, privacy regulation has favored the company over the user — companies set their own rules and users are left to fend for themselves. Worse, companies have even discriminated based on protected classes through algorithmic decision-making. Comprehensive privacy legislation must disrupt this status quo. Legislation that follows the public interest privacy principles will better protect users and give users more control over their data.”

The following can be attributed to Allie Bohm, Policy Counsel at Public Knowledge:

“It is imperative that any comprehensive privacy legislation reflect the concerns, interests, and priorities of actual human beings. Today, consumer protection, privacy, and civil rights groups come together to articulate those interests, priorities, and concerns. Importantly, these principles address the many harms people can experience from privacy violations and misuse of personal data, including enabling unfair price discrimination; limiting awareness of opportunities; and contributing to employment, housing, health care, and other forms of discrimination.”

The following can be attributed to Amie Stepanovich, U.S. Policy Manager at Access Now:

“From Europe to India to Brazil, data privacy legislation is becoming the norm around the world, and people in the United States are getting left behind. It is long past time that our legislators acted to protect people across the country from opaque data practices that can result in its misuse and abuse, and any acceptable package must start with these principles.”

The following can be attributed to Josh Golin, Executive Director at Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood:

“What big tech offers for ‘free’ actually comes at a high cost — our privacy. Worst of all is how vulnerable kids are tracked online and then targeted with manipulative marketing. This has to stop. We need laws that will empower parents to protect their children’s privacy.”

The following can be attributed to Joseph Jerome, Policy Counsel at Center for Democracy & Technology:

“Debates about national privacy laws focus on how companies should implement Fair Information Practices. The operative word is ‘fair.’ When it comes to how companies collect, use, and share our data, too many business practices are simply unfair. Federal law must go beyond giving consumers more notices and choices about their privacy, and we think it is time for legislators in Congress to flip the privacy presumption and declare some data practices unfair.”

The following can be attributed to Katharina Kopp, Director of Policy at Center for Digital Democracy:

“To this day, U.S. citizens have had to live without effective privacy safeguards. Commercial data practices have grown ever more intrusive, ubiquitous and harmful. It is high time to provide Americans with effective safeguards against commercial surveillance. Any legislation must not only effectively protect individual privacy, it must advance equitable, just and fair data uses, and must protect the most vulnerable among us, including children. In other words, they must bring about real changes in corporate practices. We have waited long enough; the time is now.”

The following can be attributed to Laura Moy, Executive Director at Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law:

“Americans want their data to be respected, protected, and used in ways that are consistent with their expectations. Any new legislation governing commercial data practices must advance these goals, and also protect us from data-driven activities that are harmful to society. We need privacy to protect us from uses of data that exclude communities from important opportunities, enable faceless brokers to secretly build ever-more-detailed profiles of us, and amplify political polarization and hate speech.”

The following can be attributed to Yosef Getachew, Director of Media and Democracy Program at Common Cause:

“An overwhelming majority of Americans believe they have lost control over how their personal information is collected and used across the internet ecosystem. Numerous data breaches and abuses in data sharing practices, which have jeopardized the personal information of millions of Americans, have validated these fears. Our current privacy framework no longer works, and the lack of meaningful privacy protections poses a serious threat to our democracy. Companies can easily manipulate data to politically influence voters or engage in discriminatory practices. These principles should serve as a baseline for any comprehensive privacy legislation that guarantees all Americans control over their data.”

The following can be attributed to James P. Steyer, CEO and Founder, at Common Sense:

Any federal legislation should provide for strong baseline protections, particularly for the most surveilled and vulnerable generation ever — our kids. These principles reflect that as privacy, consumer, and civil rights advocates, we only want federal legislation that will move the ball forward in terms of protecting kids, families, and all of us.”

The following can be attributed to Linda Sherry, director of national priorities at Consumer Action:

“Our country has floundered far too long without strong federal regulations governing data collection, retention, use and sharing. These privacy principles, developed by a coalition of leading consumer, civil rights and privacy organizations, are offered as a framework to guide Congress in protecting consumers from the many harms that can befall them when they are given little or no choice in safeguarding their data, and companies have few, if any, restrictions on how they use that information.”

The following can be attributed to Susan Grant, Director of Consumer Protection and Privacy at Consumer Federation of America:

“We need to move forward on data protection in the United States, from a default that allows companies to do what they want with Americans’ personal information as long as they don’t lie about it, to one in which their business practices are aligned with respect for privacy rights and the responsibility to keep people’s data secure.”

The following can be attributed to Katie McInnis, Policy Counsel for Consumers Union, the advocacy division of Consumer Reports:

As new data breaches are announced at an alarming rate, now is the time to protect consumers with strong privacy laws. We need laws that do more than just address broad transparency and access rights. Consumers deserve practical controls and robust enforcement to ensure all of their personal information is sufficiently protected.

The following can be attributed to Gaurav Laroia, Policy Counsel at Free Press Action Fund:

The public has lost faith in technology companies’ interest and ability to police their own privacy and data usage practices. It’s past time for Congress to pass a strong law that empowers people to make meaningful choices about their data, protects them from discrimination and undue manipulation, and holds companies accountable for those practices.

The following can be attributed to David Brody, Counsel & Senior Fellow for Privacy and Technology at the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law:

“Protecting the right to privacy is essential to protecting civil rights and advancing racial equity in a modern, Internet-focused society. Privacy rights are civil rights. Invasive profiling of online activity enables discrimination in employment, housing, credit, and education; helps bad actors target voter suppression and misinformation; assists biased law enforcement surveillance; chills the free association of advocates; and creates connections between hateful extremists exacerbating racial tensions.”

The following can be attributed to Tracy Rosenberg, Executive Director at Media Alliance:

“After a flood of data breaches and privacy violations, Americans overwhelmingly support meaningful protections for their personal information that are not written by, for and in the interests of the data collection industry. These principles start to define what that looks like.”

The following can be attributed to Francella Ochillo, Vice President of Policy & General Counsel at National Hispanic Media Coalition:

“For years, tech platforms have been allowed to monetize personal data without oversight or consequence, losing sight of the fact that personal data belongs to the user. Meanwhile, Latinos and other marginalized communities continue to be exposed to the greatest risk of harm and have the fewest opportunities for redress. The National Hispanic Media Coalition joins the chorus of advocates calling for a comprehensive regulatory framework that protects a user’s right to privacy and access as well as the right to be forgotten.”

The following can be attributed to JP Massar, Organizer at Oakland Privacy:

“We must not only watch the watchers, and regulate the sellers of our information. We must begin to unravel the information panopticon that has already formed. This is a start.”

The following can be attributed to Robert Weissman, President at Public Citizen:

“Internet privacy means control. Either we get to control our own lives as lived through the Internet, or the Big Tech companies do. That’s what is at stake in whether the U.S. adopts real privacy protections.”

The following can be attributed to Ed Mierzwinski, Senior Director for Consumer Programs at U.S. PIRG:

“The big banks and the big tech companies all say that they want a federal privacy law, but the law that their phalanx of lobbyists seeks isn’t designed to protect consumers. Instead, it’s designed to protect their business models that treat consumers as commodities for sale; it fails to guarantee that their secret sauce big data algorithms don’t discriminate; it eliminates stronger and innovative state laws forever and it denies consumers any real, enforceable rights when harmed. We can’t allow that.”
You may view the privacy principles for more information.

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NHMC Joined Allies in Opposition to a Proposed Declaratory Ruling That Would Reduce Universal Service Funds

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NHMC joined allies in a letter led by Public Knowledge opposing a Federal Communications Commission (FCC) proposal for a declaratory ruling to classify SMS text messaging and short codes as an “information service” rather than a “telecommunications service” under Title II. The ruling would deprive the Universal Service Fund (USF) of billions of dollars in contribution-eligible revenue at a time when the existing contribution pool is already on the decline. Importantly, USF funds programs like Lifeline, which is the only federal program that helps low-income Americans to get access to phone and internet service.

The letter urges the FCC to update the record with the financial impact of such a drastic proposal. It also explains why classifying text messaging as an entirely unregulated “information service” eliminates important consumer protections afforded by Title II.

Click here to review the letter.

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NHMC Participated In a Deep Dive Discussion on Threats to the Lifeline Program

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The National Hispanic Media Coalition leads a coalition of public interest groups fighting to defend Lifeline, a program that helps low-income consumers maintain access to phone or wireless broadband services. Currently, it is the only program of its kind.

On January 23, 2019, the policy team participated in an important discussion, Death by a Thousand Cuts, about Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) proposals that will impact millions of Americans in need. The event was hosted by New America’s Open Technology Institute and included a panel of consumer and industry advocates. Olivia Wein of the National Consumer Law Center, Yosef Getachew of Common Cause, John Heitmann of Kelley Drye & Warren, LLP, and Chris Shipley of INCOMPAS shared data on program attrition and their perspectives on how to strengthen the Lifeline program. Sarah Morris, Deputy Director of New America’s Open Technology Institute, moderated the discussion and navigated questions from the audience.

The panel focused on the different elements of the Lifeline proposals pending before the FCC. In particular, panelists emphasized the detrimental effect that the FCC’s proposals could have on low-income consumers who are too often in communities of color. According to the panel, the already underutilized program could see as much as an 80 percent drop in participation in some states should the FCC move forward with its plans. NHMC will continue to hold the FCC accountable for these types of threats to the program.

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