Senate Majority Leader Duff: If internet service providers have no interest in throttling internet speeds and forcing customers to pay for content, then why have they fought net neutrality so much?

Senate Majority Leader Duff: If internet service providers have no interest in throttling internet speeds and forcing customers to pay for content, then why have they fought net neutrality so much?

photo of Senator Duff testifying.

Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff (D-Norwalk) today spoke in support of net neutrality at an informational meeting of the General’s Assembly’s Energy and Technology Committee.

Speaking from the perspective of consumers and constituents, Senator Duff said, “We have spent a lot of time in this state trying to spur creativity and create more entrepreneurs. Without net neutrality principles, entrepreneurs working online in our state will face a significant hurdle. Our established businesses will have to pay more. And our consumers in the state will have to make choices they don’t have to now. One question I would like everyone to ask themselves is this: if internet service providers have no interest in throttling internet speeds and forcing customers to pay for content, then why have they fought net neutrality so much?”

“This is about a free and open internet. And this is about a few internet service providers being able to control who sees what and how fast they see it,” said Senator Duff.

During the Obama administration, the FCC voted to adopt strong, open internet rules to ensure that Americans reap the economic, social and civic benefits of an open internet, including the preservation of net neutrality.

Following the December 2017 announcement by the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) announcement that they were rolling federal net neutrality rules, Senator Duff announce that he would introduce legislation during the 2018 legislative session of the General Assembly aimed at protecting Connecticut businesses and consumers

Senator Duff has introduced Senate Bill 2 to hold companies to their commitments not to block websites, throttle speeds, or impose prioritization pricing and to establish a process for internet service providers to certify that they will not engage in practices inconsistent with net neutrality principles.

Included in Senate Bill 2 will be language to hold companies accountable for warranties made to consumers as well as amend Connecticut’s consumer protection laws to include the principles of net neutrality.

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Senate Majority Leader Duff and Senate Democratic Caucus Call on Congress to Fund Community Health Centers

Senate Majority Leader Duff & Senate Democratic Caucus Call on Congress to Fund Community Health Centers

Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff (D-Norwalk) and the entire Senate Democratic Caucus today released a letter calling on Congressional leaders to prioritize the extension of funding for community health centers. Without Congressional action, funding for health centers is set to run out on March 31st.

In Connecticut, 17 health center organizations serve over 375,000 people in more than 100 locations, from Torrington to Norwich, from Greenwich to Putnam, and everywhere in between. Over $56 million in federal funds are provided to health centers to support their work in providing high-quality primary medical, dental and behavioral health care to some of the state’s neediest people. Collectively, the centers employ about 3,000 people, making them not just a critical component of the safety net, but also a lynchpin of Connecticut’s economy.

“[This is] not just a humanitarian disaster, it’s a fiscal one as well,” wrote Senator Duff and his Senate Democratic colleagues. “If patients don’t have access to primary care in their communities, they turn to hospital emergency rooms for routine care, or defer needed care until their health problems are more serious and more costly.”

“We are asking you to fight for extended funding for health centers on a multi-year basis, with at least the current levels of funding, so that Connecticut residents continue to have access to high-quality primary medical, dental and behavioral health care,” continued Senator Duff and his Senate Democratic colleagues.

Over the last several years in Connecticut, health centers have expanded to more cities and towns, added needed treatment for the opioid crisis, expanded specialty services, and served an additional 40,000 people.

In 2015, Congress authorized a funding extension for health centers on an overwhelmingly bipartisan basis.


**Full letter attached.**