The proposal falls short relative to the urgent need to
modernize America’s legacy metallic telecommunications infrastructure designed
for analog telephone and cable TV of decades past to fiber optic infrastructure.
Its main flaw is it isn’t framed an infrastructure initiative.
Rather, the proposal calls for a service standard couched in
outdated terminology, calling for “universal high speed Internet.” That term
describes a level of service and not infrastructure. It and “broadband”
distinguish from narrowband, low speed dialup connections over phone lines
commonly used in the 1990s (and unfortunately still the case in 2017 for too many American homes). In so doing, the Democratic proposal falls into the
trap of the current debate over what constitutes “high speed Internet.” That
can only add further delay to solving the deepening crisis of deficient
telecommunications infrastructure in much of the United States that now
requires an expedited effort.
In addition to its origins in the past, “high speed
Internet” is also too present focused since that term means what’s sufficient to
support today’s needs relative to high quality voice, video and data. It
doesn’t take into account tomorrow’s needs which will undoubtedly require more
bandwidth -- and the growth capacity only fiber optic premise connections can efficiently
provide. That’s why instead of “high speed Internet,” the federal government
should instead launch a cleanly defined telecom infrastructure modernization
initiative to bring fiber connections to every American doorstep. And provide
sufficient funding to achieve it. That will take at least five times the $40
billion the Democrats propose.
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