House and Senate Republicans have scheduled hearings next Wednesday to propose legislation that would enforce net neutrality rules while forbidding the Federal Communications Commission from regulating broadband providers as common carriers.

FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler plans to unveil his net neutrality plan on February 5 and put it to a commission vote on February 26. He is expected to propose reclassifying broadband as a common carrier service to be regulated under Title II of the Communications Act, which is also used to regulate the landline phone system.

Wheeler intends to forbear from the more restrictive parts of Title II, choosing not to impose rate regulation on Internet providers. But ISPs and Republicans in Congress oppose reclassification and are willing to accept net neutrality rules in exchange for taking Title II off the table.

Sen. John Thune (R-SD), chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, said that his legislation will enforce these 11 "bipartisan rules in the Internet Age":

Prohibit blocking
Prohibit throttling
Prohibit paid prioritization
Require transparency
Apply rules to both wireline and wireless
Allow for reasonable network management
Allow for specialized services
Protect consumer choice
Classify broadband Internet access as an information service under the Communications Act
Clarify that Section 706 of the Telecommunications Act may not be used as a grant of regulatory authority
Direct the FCC to enforce and abide by these principles
Defining broadband as an "information service" would prevent the FCC from reclassifying Internet access. Restricting the FCC's Section 706 powers could also interfere with the commission's plans for preempting state laws that prevent cities and towns from building broadband networks.

"Clear and reasonable rules are what every business and consumer needs and expects—this also applies to the Internet," Thune said in his announcement. "The FCC currently has limited options to write rules that escape the uncertainty of litigation while protecting innovation. Clear statutory authority from Congress is necessary to update FCC authority for the Internet Age, escape court challenges, and avoid regulatory overreach from outdated laws."

Thune's hearing, scheduled for Wednesday, January 21, at 2:30pm, is titled “Protecting the Internet and Consumers through Congressional Action."

The House Commerce's Subcommittee on Communications and Technology has scheduled a similar hearing for 10am on the same day.

"We will soon put forward a legislative plan that will protect consumers, promote innovation and investment, and provide legal certainty," subcommittee chairman Greg Walden (R-OR) said. "This hearing will show that the FCC cannot achieve that same certainty nor do they have authority to accomplish as much as Congress can through the legislative process."