Congressman Coffman crosses party lines, proposes reversal of FCC net neutrality repeal

Authored by thedenverchannel.com and submitted by Akkeri

DENVER – Colorado Congressman Mike Coffman is trying to keep the way you watch and use your favorite apps and online services from changing.

Coffman is the first member of the House of Representatives to cross party lines and introduce a bill that would reverse many of the FCC’s net neutrality repeals that took effect last month.

“Net neutrality is the principal that all the content on the internet must be treated fairly and equally,” Nick Gianoutsos of Defend Net Neutrality Colorado told Anne Trujillo on this weekend’s Politics Unplugged.

Net neutrality rules barred broadband and cellphone companies from slowing down or blocking sites of their choosing or charging more for higher speeds. While most companies have said they’re not going to change anything, at least not immediately, reversing those rules opens up the door to the possibility.

Colorado Common Cause's Caroline Fry says the rule changes could ultimately impact personal use of the internet as well as business use.

“My internet service provider, if we do not have net neutrality could say, ‘hey, in order for all of Coloradans to go to your website, you need to pay us extra money,’” she said, explaining that net neutrality rules ensured that all people had equal access to the internet.

The U.S. Senate has already voted to repeal the FCC’s reversal of the net neutrality repeal.

Politics Unplugged airs Sundays at 4:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. on Denver7 and noon on K3-KCDO.

ngpropman on July 25th, 2018 at 06:08 UTC »

Wake me when this actually gets a vote and enough republicans switch to pass this. Until then this is an empty gesture.

VY99 on July 24th, 2018 at 23:07 UTC »

Now we just need a few more people to do the same and save this thing.

beef-o-lipso on July 24th, 2018 at 22:31 UTC »

Maybe I'm being overly negative but anyone think this crossing the line for Net Neutrality is just a money grab. Pay the kind Congressman or he'll vote against you.