http://pacer.cadc.us...-1291-1238302.pdf
(36 page .pdf)
Although Comcast complied with the Order, it now petitions for review, presenting three objections. First, it contends that the Commission has failed to justify exercising jurisdiction over its network management practices. Second, it argues that the CommissionÂs adjudicatory action was procedurally flawed because it circumvented the rulemaking requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act and violated the notice requirements of the Due Process Clause. Finally, it asserts that parts of the Order are so poorly reasoned as to be arbitrary and capricious. We beginÂand endÂwith ComcastÂs jurisdictional challenge.
IOW, the Circuit court said that the FCC read its "ancillary" authority too broadly. Apparently Congress over the years has not explicitly given the FCC authority that the courts have said it sometimes has. The court didn't rule on whether the FCC's procedures were flawed or whether the FCC was arbitrary. It is a narrow ruling.
Since the Administration, Congress, and the FCC seem certain to put new explicit internet regulatory rules in place, this decision is not the end of the story.
More - http://www.nytimes.c...ogy/07net.html?hp
One FCC member's view: http://hraunfoss.fcc.../DOC-297368A1.pdf
STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER MICHAEL J. COPPS ON THE COMCAST V. FCC DECISION
ÂTodayÂs decision is not just a blow to the FCCÂit's a blow to all Americans who rely on an open Internet that serves all comers without discrimination. Since 2002, I have warned about the dangers of moving the transmission component of broadband outside of the statutory framework that applies to telecommunications carriers. The only way the Commission can make lemonade out of this lemon of a decision is to do now what should have been done years ago: treat broadband as the telecommunications service that it is.
ÂIn tasking the FCC with creating the National Broadband Plan, Congress and the Administration recognized that broadband is critical for the economic success of this country. We are dealing with a broadband information ecosystem where many parts come together to form a complex, synergistic and interdependent whole. My criticism today is not of the Court, but of my own FCC for the bad policy choices it has made. It is time that we stop doing the Âancillary authority dance and instead rely on the statute Congress gave us to stand on solid legal ground in safeguarding the benefits of the Internet for American consumers. We should straighten this broadband classification mess out before the first day of summer.Â
- FCC -
Don't be celebrating too much just yet. ;-)
Cheers,
Scott.