The corporate front group may change its social policy stance, but it still plans on robbing you blind.
April 18, 2012
The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) is the
most powerful corporate front group you’ve never heard of.
Drawing the vast majority of its financing from big corporations, the
group allows these firms to help write bills that it then secretly
passes off to state legislators to get turned into laws.
The organization has come under fire recently for backing “Stand Your
Ground” laws and voter suppression efforts, leading to an exodus of
some of its strongest corporate funders. But the group’s policy agenda
stretches far beyond these areas, and impacts just about every area of
American life.
Take public high-speed broadband Internet. A few years ago, the city of Wilson, North Carolina,
decided that it would create its own broadband system,
which it called Greenlight. The service offered speeds twice as fast
as private competitors in the area for a similar price. Soon, the
success of the service spread, and a number of other cities began
offering municipal broadband systems that were cheaper and/or faster
than private competitors’.
But state legislators — who
received $600,000 in contributions
from the telecom industry in the previous election cycle — reacted to
the spread of these successful services by undercutting them with a
bill that made it very difficult for cities to operate their own
broadband systems. One provision in the bill made it illegal for cities
to offer broadband services that are priced below their costs. “This
bill will make it practically impossible for cities to provide a
fundamental service. Where’s the bill to govern [cable provider] Time
Warner? Let’s be clear about whose bill this is.
This is Time Warner’s bill. You need to know who you’re doing this for!” thundered Rep. Bill Faison (D) at the time. The bill was unfortunately
passed into law.
ALEC did not publicly say that it was behind the North Carolina bill, but the bill bears similarities to
ALEC legislation. ALEC is an
outspoken opponent of municipal broadband and
crafts model bills to limit and kill these systems. Telecom companies like
AT&T,
Comcast, and
Time Warner are all ALEC funders.
ALEC also
unsuccessfully worked
to undercut a public broadband system proposed by the city of
Lafayette, Lousiana. ALEC’s Louisiana state chair (a legislator)
introduced a bill that would’ve placed onerous restrictions on how the
city could use fiber-optic cables to provide cheap broadband. The
broadband-undercutting bill “
almost word for word,
matched a piece of legislation kept in the library of the American
Legislative Exchange Council.” The most damaging provisions of the bill
were removed before it was passed, and major telecom companies sued to
try to stop Lafeyette from building its system anyway. Fortunately,
they lost.
Lafayette’s public system offers Internet speeds at a whopping
750 percent cheaper than
rival Cox’s service
at the lowest tier. That means that if ALEC and the telecoms had
succeeded in shutting down the system, life would be a whole lot slower.
The next time you groan at the thought of paying your broadband bill, remember that
some of America’s biggest corporations
— ranging from FedEx to WalMart — are funding a group that works to
make sure your city is barred from offering a cheaper and faster
service.
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