Minn. Removes Muni Broadband Limits
Public broadband advocates applauded Minnesota for removing municipal broadband restrictions last week. The changes were part of SF-4097, a commerce omnibus that Gov. Tim Walz (D) signed last week and also included net neutrality and social media disclosure proposals (see 2405200059). Minnesota’s change “highlights a positive trend -- states are dropping misguided barriers to deploying public broadband as examples of successful community-owned networks proliferate across the country,” American Association for Public Broadband Executive Director Gigi Sohn said Friday. “While 16 states still restrict these networks in various ways, we’re confident this number will continue to decrease as more communities demand the freedom to choose the network that best serves their residents.” Minnesota struck an old law that let municipalities buy or construct telephone exchanges, which also included broadband networks, only if a supermajority approved it in a local referendum election, the Institute for Local Self-Reliance (ILSF) blogged Thursday. The state also eliminated a law that let municipalities construct broadband only if a private provider wasn't providing service in the area. Christopher Mitchell, director-ILSR's Community Broadband Networks, lauded the changes, saying he has long hoped “to see more deference to communities in how they want to solve these challenges that they understand better than anyone outside their region.”