BILL ANALYSIS AB 1814 Page 1 CONCURRENCE IN SENATE AMENDMENTS AB 1814 (Reyes) As Amended August 6, 2002 Majority vote ----------------------------------------------------------------- |ASSEMBLY: |49-28|(April 4, 2002) |SENATE: |21-10|(August 28, | | | | | | |2002) | ----------------------------------------------------------------- Original Committee Reference: J., E.D. & E. SUMMARY : Requires 30-day prior notice by an Internet service provider (ISP) to a customer of service termination or service transfer to another ISP. Specifically, this bill : 1)Requires that an ISP, or any entity representing an ISP, provide a 30-day prior written or electronic notice to a class of customers or any affected customers of service termination or transfer to another ISP, unless otherwise permitted by law or contract. 2)Specifies that in the case of service transfer the notice shall include a description of proposed transfer, rates and conditions of new service, a statement of the customer's right to transfer to another ISP, and a toll-free customer service telephone number for responding to customers' questions. 3)Preempts local governments and agencies from enacting rules, regulation, codes, statutes or ordinances regarding notice of service transfer or termination. 4)Specifies that the ISP shall not terminate service without just cause, with less than 30 days notice. 5)Specifies that if ISP providers enact federal law that regulates notice requirements for termination of service, these provisions become inoperative. The Senate amendments : 1)Remove language to limit this bill's provisions to situations where a provider exits the business voluntarily. 2) Clarify that no ISP may terminate service without just AB 1814 Page 2 cause. 3)Add federal preemption language. AS PASSED BY THE ASSEMBLY , this bill requires 30-day prior notice by an ISP to a customer of service termination or service transfer to another ISP. FISCAL EFFECT : None COMMENTS : This bill extends to customers of ISPs similar existing protections covering telephone customers. This bill responds to the need for consumer protections in the wake of business failures that resulted in immediate interruptions and terminations of Internet service without prior notice. In early December 2001, over 850,000 subscribers of an ISP were left without Internet service with no prior notice. Many other customers were transferred to other ISPs without notice although those ISPs offered slower service and different terms and conditions regarding information privacy and other consumer protections. The Senate cleanup amendments add technical language regarding an ISP's reason for service termination, adds termination for just cause language and adds a federal preemption clause. Analysis Prepared by : Tim Reardon / J., E.D. & E. / (916) 319-2090 FN: 0007625