New FCC chairman Ajit Pai is familiar with KC startup community
January 24, 2017 | Meghan LeVota
A native Kansan that recently visited with the area’s entrepreneurial community will now head the Federal Communications Commission.
President Donald Trump selected Ajit Pai, the senior Republican on the FCC to lead the commission, which regulates interstate and international communications by radio, television, wire, satellite and cable.
“I am deeply grateful to the President of the United States for designating me the 34th Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission,” Pai said in his official statement. “I look forward to working with the new Administration, my colleagues at the Commission, members of Congress, and the American public to bring the benefits of the digital age to all Americans.”
A native of Parsons, Kan., Pai is familiar with the energy of Kansas City’s startup community and visited the metro to connect with entrepreneurs at least twice in 2016. Pai is a graduate of Harvard University and worked as a lawyer in Washington D.C. Former President Barack Obama nominated Pai to the FCC in 2012.
On Twitter, Pai added, “From broadband to broadcast, I believe in a 21st-century version of Jefferson’s 2nd Inaugural: we are all Republicans, we are all Democrats.”
Pai typically voted against former Democratic FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler, most notably on the move to establish net neutrality rules. Net neutrality is defined as the principle that Internet service providers should allow access to all content regardless of its source.
Here is what he told Startland News in 2015 during his visit to the Kansas City Startup Village:
“My great concern with net neutrality was that I didn’t want to adopt rules that inadvertently stand in the way of innovation on networks,” Pai said. “We heard from a number of smaller companies that these rules will disproportionately benefit the bigger companies — the Comcasts, AT&Ts and Verizons of the world — who have lawyers and accountants that have a greater incentive to discriminate on a network. My preference would be instead of preemptive regulation of the entire industry is to rely on the FCC and Federal Trade Commission to focus in a targeted way on the companies that may be misbehaving.”
Pai added that there is a bipartisan consensus on net neutrality, and most believe that the Internet should be unfettered from federal and state regulation. Pai warns against politicizing broadband.
“Broadband being politicized is the worst thing that can happen to arguably one of the greatest free market success stories of the 21st Century,” Pai told Startland News. “We take it for granted how far we’ve come over the last 25 years regarding broadband innovation, and I’d hate to see that fall into political affiliations or talking points.”
Not all of Pai’s politics are as divisive as net neutrality. One of Pai’s key issues is connecting rural communities to high-speed Internet to encourage innovation.
In October, Pai visited Think Big and shared with local entrepreneurs six strategic steps that he believes would close the digital divide. During that talk, Pai expressed the desire for gigabit opportunity zones, reform rules governing pole attachments that will make it easier on ISPs, speed up the employment of broadband on federal lands and more.
“Everyone should have online opportunity,” Pai told the community at Think Big. “There is no limit to what Americans could achieve if they become participants in as opposed to spectators of the digital economy.”
The president can appoint to the FCC without approval from the senate, thus his nomination is effective immediately.

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Look inside: Fishtech Group opens its $10M+ Cyber Defense Center in Martin City
Fishtech Group is making a splash within the cyber security industry, showcasing its cloud-era capabilities in a new Cyber Defense Center that sits behind the gates of Fishtech’s sprawling Martin City campus, said Gary Fish. “I’ve been doing security since before it was cool,” said Fish, founder and CEO of Fishtech, as well as an…
Elite investors at exclusive CEO retreat: Don’t waste time; sell us on your billion-dollar idea
Trying to land the backing of a venture capital firm? Throw your pitch deck out the window, Chris Olsen advised a select group of Kansas City CEOs. “A lot of times founders will come and give us their pitch and they’ll start going through it and [they’re telling us] they’re profitable in 18-months. And we’ll…
Hyped from high school: Blue Valley teens among startup cash winners at K-State challenge
Four Overland Park high school students have landed cash infusions totaling more than $7,000 for their ongoing startup ventures. Local winners of the Kansas Entrepreneurship Challenge — supported by Network KS, sponsored by the Kansas Masonic Foundation, and hosted by Kansas State University — included: Drone Estate founders Austin Jones and Hunter Vasquez, Blue Valley West…
‘More is better’ TrueAccord CEO says as Silicon Valley startup plans for 150 KC jobs
TrueAccord is “furiously hiring” to jumpstart the San Francisco-based startup’s intense expansion plan now supplemented by a growing Lenexa office, said Ohad Samet. “We’ve been very successful [in Silicon Valley], but at some point we realized that we really needed to blow up,” said Samet, co-founder and CEO of the debt recovery startup, which recently…
