HR-5147-119
Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Sponsored by Robert Latta (R-OH)
What it does
This bill would impose federal limits on how states and localities review requests to build, modify, or place wireless telecommunications facilities. It would require local governments to approve or deny such requests within set deadlines — which vary by request type — and would treat any failure to meet those deadlines as automatic approval. It would also prohibit any discrimination among wireless providers in local permitting decisions, restrict fees to actual and direct costs, and allow only objective, nondiscriminatory engineering, safety, or aesthetic standards as grounds for regulation.
Who benefits
Wireless telecommunications companies and tower developers who would face faster, more predictable permitting. Consumers in areas with limited wireless coverage who may gain access to new or improved service. Rural and underserved communities where infrastructure deployment has been slow. Businesses and emergency services that depend on reliable wireless connectivity. Smaller or newer wireless providers who may benefit from the anti-discrimination provisions preventing incumbents from securing preferential access to local infrastructure.
Who is hurt
State and local governments that would lose discretion over land-use and zoning decisions affecting wireless towers. Residents and neighborhood groups who oppose tower placement on aesthetic, environmental, or property-value grounds and would have fewer avenues to delay or block construction. Competing industries — such as wired broadband providers — that are not covered by the bill's anti-discrimination protections. Local governments that currently charge fees above actual cost, which would lose that revenue. Municipalities with limited administrative capacity that may struggle to meet mandatory decision deadlines.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that inconsistent and slow local permitting is a primary bottleneck to 5G and broadband deployment, particularly in underserved areas, and that federal shot-clock rules are necessary to ensure timely buildout of critical communications infrastructure. They contend that the existing patchwork of local regulations — including discriminatory fee structures and indefinite review timelines — raises costs and delays service for millions of Americans who lack adequate wireless coverage, and that the bill's anti-discrimination provisions level the playing field for all providers.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill effectively strips local governments of meaningful land-use authority by converting inaction into automatic approval and limiting permissible review criteria, undermining the traditional state and local role in zoning and community planning. They contend that communities should retain the ability to weigh the visual, environmental, and public health impacts of tower placement, and that federal preemption of local fee-setting removes a legitimate tool for recovering the real administrative and infrastructure costs that wireless deployment imposes on municipalities.