Home

Blog

How People Voted

15% For, 85% Against

Take Action

Alert Your Friends and Colleagues
Write Your Representative in Congress
Save & Share
del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Google
Reddit
Yahoo!

H.R. 4307, The Consumer Freedom of Choice in Cable Act

  • This item is from the 110th Congress (2007-2008) and is no longer current. Comments, voting, and wiki editing have been disabled, and the cost/savings estimate has been frozen.

Comparing original version (created by webmaster) with revision saved on April 9, 2008, 19:42:02 (webmaster):

H.R. 4307 would amend the Communications Act of 1934 and increase consumer freedom of choice in the video marketplace.

== Detailed Summary ==

<summary>
(Log Consumer Freedom of Choice in Cable Act - Amends the Communications Act of 1934 to editremove provisions authorizing the wikiFederal Communications Commission (FCC), when cable systems with at least 36 channels are available to 70% of U.S. households and beare subscribed to by 70% of households to which such systems are available (sometimes referred to as the first70/70 rule), to promulgate additional rules necessary to provide a detailed summarydiversity of the bill!)information sources.
</summary>

<!--Leave in the 'summary' tags if you want the latest summary from the Congressional Research Service automatically to replace the text between the tags once it becomes available. -->

== Status of the Legislation ==

<status>
(Log inLatest Major Action: 12/6/2007: Referred to House committee. Status: Referred to edit the wikiHouse Committee on Energy and be the first to update the status of the bill!)Commerce.
</status>

<!-- Leave in the 'status' tags if you want the latest reported status from THOMAS automatically to replace the text between the tags once it becomes available. -->

== Points in Favor ==

(Log in to edit the wiki and be the first to show why the bill should pass!)
<!-- First editor: Go ahead and take out the sentence in parentheses, and this notice! -->

== Points Against ==

(Log in to edit the wiki and be the first to show why the bill should not pass!)
<!-- First editor: Go ahead and take out the sentence in parentheses, and this notice! -->

« Return to Revision History.


Visitor Comments Comments Feed for This Bill

There are currently no comments for this bill.

RSS Feeds for This Bill

Keep yourself updated on user contributions and debates about this bill! (Learn more about RSS.)