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  "description": "Commissioner Gomez said the agency had chosen 'to ignore both the law and the will of Congress' and that it is 'stalling'",
  "path": "/fcc-delays-prison-phone-rate-caps-until-2027/",
  "publishedAt": "2025-07-01T18:22:59.000Z",
  "site": "https://broadbandbreakfast.com",
  "tags": [
    "_Bureau’s order released Monday_",
    "All Videos from Speeding BEAD Summit",
    "_required_",
    "_July 2024_",
    "_audio rate caps_",
    "_marked a departure_",
    "_would have dropped_",
    "_expressed reservations_",
    "_in a release_",
    "_in a statement_",
    "_coalition of states_",
    "_have been fighting_",
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  "textContent": "WASHINGTON, July 1, 2025 – The Wireline Competition Bureau said that it had decided to delay enforcement of key provisions of the Martha Wright-Reed Just and Reasonable Communications Act until April 1, 2027.\n\nThe _Bureau’s order released Monday_ framed the delay as a response to unanticipated cost burdens on correctional institutions, writing that “facilities themselves are facing financial hurdles that far exceed those the Commission anticipated.”\n\nDemocratic Commissioner Anna Gomez called the decision “indefensible” and said that the agency had chosen “to ignore both the law and the will of Congress. Rather than enforce the law, the Commission is now stalling, shielding a broken system that inflates costs and rewards kickbacks to correctional facilities at the expense of incarcerated individuals and their loved ones.”\n\n\n\n_****FROM SPEEDING BEAD SUMMIT****_\n _****Panel 1: How Are States Thinking About Reasonable Costs Now?****_\n_****Panel 2: Finding the State Versus Federal Balance in BEAD****_\n _****Panel 3: Reacting to the New BEAD NOFO Guidance****_\n _****Panel 4: Building, Maintaining and Adopting Digital Workforce Skills****_\n\n All Videos from Speeding BEAD Summit \n\nUnder Bureau Chief **Joseph Calascione** , WCB explained that “this temporary waiver period will allow the Commission to reevaluate these issues and find a long-term solution.”\n\n###  _Enacted in January 2023_\n\nEnacted in January 2023, the Martha Wright-Reed Just and Reasonable Communications Act _required_ prison phone providers to charge “just and reasonable” rates, and gave the Federal Communications Commission authority to enforce and define what “just and reasonable” means.\n\nIn _July 2024_, the FCC voted to set _audio rate caps_ of $0.06-$0.12 per minute (depending on the size of the facility) and video rate caps of $0.16-$0.25 per minute. This _marked a departure_ from old FCC regulations, which capped audio rate calls at $0.14-$0.21 per minute and had no set cap for video calls. It also forbid providers from making site commission payments associated with IPCS.\n\nThese and other new regulations _would have dropped_ the price of a 15-minute phone call in some large jails from $11.35 to $0.90, and the price of that same call in a small jail from $12.10 to $1.35, according to the FCC.\n\nAt the time of adoption, Gomez and FCC Chairwoman **Jessica Rosenworcel** , plus Commissioners **Geoffrey Starks** and **Nathan Simington,** fully supported the resolution.\n\nThen-commissioner **Brendan Carr** approved in part and concurred in part. At the time, Carr _expressed reservations_ that the FCC’s regulations “went too far in one direction” and “overcorrected in ways that could ultimately work against the interests of inmates.”\n\nThe Bureau-level decision to delay enforcement has also drawn sharp criticism from advocates, in addition to the concerns expressed by Gomez _in a release_.\n\n“Not only did Congress unanimously pass the Martha Wright Reed Act, but the FCC unanimously adopted the decision last summer,” **Cheryl A. Leanza** , policy advisor for the United Church of Christ Media Justice Ministry said _in a statement_. “The decision to delay these rules is factually and legally wrong,” she wrote. “Iincarcerated people deserve the protections adopted by the FCC as directed by Congress.”\n\nA _coalition of states_ and incarcerated people’s communication services providers Securus Technologies and Pay Tel Communications _have been fighting_ the FCC’s regulations, arguing that the FCC’s order was arbitrary and that the commission ignored the requirement that incarcerated people’s communication service providers be “fairly compensated.”\n\nA joint filing from the National Sheriff’s Association and IPCS providers _also argued_ that such low price caps might lead some IPCS providers to exit the market, leaving prisoners with few options to contact loved ones.",
  "title": "FCC Delays Prison Phone Rate Caps Until 2027",
  "updatedAt": "2026-03-11T03:26:59.310Z"
}