An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The U.S. mobile industry’s top lobbying group is opposing a proposed California state law that would prohibit throttling of fire departments and other public safety agencies during emergencies. As reported yesterday by StateScoop, wireless industry lobby group CTIA last week wrote to lawmakers to oppose the bill as currently written. CTIA said the bill’s prohibition on throttling is too vague and that it should apply only when the U.S. president or California governor declares emergencies and not when local governments declare emergencies.

The group’s letter also suggested that the industry would sue the state if the bill is passed in its current form, saying the bill would result in “serious unintended consequences, including needless litigation.” “[T]he bill’s vague mandates, problematic emergency trigger requirement, and failure to include notification requirements could work to impede activities by first responders during disasters,” CTIA wrote. The group said that it “must oppose AB 1699 unless it is amended to address the foregoing concerns.” CTIA represents Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Sprint, and other carriers. Despite CTIA’s opposition, the bill proposed by State Assemblymember Marc Levine (D-Marin County) sailed through an Assembly committee yesterday. The Committee on Communications and Conveyance voted 12-0 to advance the bill, Levine’s chief of staff, Terry Schanz, told Ars today. A committee analysis of the bill says that CTIA was the only organization to register opposition. The next stop for the bill is an April 30 hearing with the Assembly Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee. It is in response to Verizon throttling an “unlimited” data plan used by Santa Clara firefighters last year during the state’s largest-ever wildfire.

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