The Right Needs Real America First Journalism
Planned Parenthood: Infants Not 'Conscious Beings' and Unlikely to Feel Pain
Democrats Boycotting OpenAI Over Support for Trump
Trump Threatens to Go on the Warpath Against Republicans Who Voted Against His...
This State Just Declared All-Out War on ICE
Trump Is Suing the IRS – This Bill Is How Democrats Plan to...
In Historic Deregulatory Move, Trump Officially Revokes Obama-Era Endangerment Finding
Sen. Bernie Moreno Just Exposed Keith Ellison's Open Borders Hypocrisy
Another Career Criminal Killed a Beloved Figure Skating Coach in St. Louis
Are the Media Going to Stop Calling Trump a Dictator After Hearing This...
Slate's 'Leftists Are Buying Guns Now' Piece Unintentionally Hilarious
Chaos Erupts as Josh Hawley Tells Keith Ellison He Belongs in Jail Amid...
Nate Morris Slams Rep. Barr As a ‘RINO’ for Refusing to Support Ending...
North Carolina Sheriff Fails a Basic Civics Test As GOP State Rep. Questions...
Pam Bondi Blasts Thomas Massie for Having Trump Derangement Syndrome in Fiery House...
Tipsheet

California Wanted to Tax Text Messages But The FCC Squashed That Dream

The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) was previously considering taxing text messages as part of the Public Purpose Program (PPP), which subsidizes cell phone services for low income families. A similar tax is placed on gas and landlines. Part of the problem though, is more households are switching to having just cell phones, which is putting a strain on the PPP budget. Their goal was to bolster the budget by adding the text message tax. That is, until the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) said text messages are an information service, not a telecommunications service. 

Advertisement

Once the ruling was made, the CPUC made the following statement:

On Dec. 12, 2018, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued a declaratory ruling finding that "text messaging" is an information service, not a telecommunications service, under the Federal Telecommunications Act, which limits state authority of information services. Prior to the FCC ruling, text messages was not a classified service under federal law. Under California law, telecommunications services are subject to the collection of surcharges to support a number of CPUC public programs that subsidize the cost of service for rural Californians and for low income, disadvantaged communities, and provides special services for the deaf, the hard of hearing, and the disabled.

In light of the FCC's action, assigned Commissioner Carla J. Peterman has withdrawn from the CPUC's Jan. 10, 2019 Voting Meeting agenda the draft decision in Docket R.17-06-023, which proposed to clarify that text messaging service should be subject to the statutory surcharge requirement. 

Advertisement

Related:

CALIFORNIA

The CPUC was hoping the tax would generate $44.5 million in a one-year time span, Fortune reported. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement