Supreme Court overturns 5th Circuit ruling that upended Universal Service Fund

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Finally, the Consumers' Research position produces absurd results, divorced from any reasonable understanding of constitutional values
Under its view, a revenue-raising statute containing non-numeric, qualitative standards can never pass muster, no matter how tight the
constraints they impose
But a revenue-raising statute with a numeric limit will always pass muster, even if it effectively leaves an agency with boundless power
In precluding the former and approving the latter, the Consumers' Research approach does nothing to vindicate the nondelegation doctrine or
the separation of powers.The Gorsuch dissent said the "combination" question isn't the deciding factor
He said the only question that needs to be answered is whether Congress violated the Constitution by delegating the power to tax to the
FCC."As I see it, this case begins and ends with the first question
Section 254 [of the Communications Act] impermissibly delegates Congress's taxing power to the FCC, and knowing that is enough to know the
Fifth Circuit's judgment should be affirmed," Gorsuch said.In the Gorsuch view, it doesn't matter whether the FCC exceeded its authority by
delegating Universal Service management to a private administrative company
"As far as I can tell, and as far as petitioners have informed us, this Court has never approved legislation allowing an executive agency to
tax domestically unless Congress itself has prescribed the tax rate," Gorsuch wrote.The FCC and Department of Justice asked the Supreme
Court to reverse the 5th Circuit decision
The court also received a challenge from broadband-focused advocacy groups and several lobby groups representing ISPs."Today is a great
day," said Andrew Jay Schwartzman, counsel for the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society; the National Digital Inclusion Alliance; and
the Center for Media Justice
"We will need some time to sort through the details of today's decision, but what matters most is that the Supreme Court has given the green
light to the FCC to continue to support Internet access to the tens of millions of Americans and the thousands of schools, libraries and
rural hospitals that rely on the Universal Service Fund."FCC Chairman Brendan Carr praised the ruling but said he plans to make changes to
Universal Service
"I am glad to see the court's decision today and welcome it as an opportunity to turn the FCC's focus towards the types of reforms necessary
to ensure that all Americans have a fair shot at next-generation connectivity," Carr said.