Saturday, February 26, 2022

Infrastructure Act gives FCC option to route around “broadband map” delays

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) allocates $43.45 billion in grants to the states for the construction of advanced telecommunications infrastructure. The IIJA links the amount of that funding for a given state to geographic service availability data collected by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission as required by the 2020 Broadband Deployment Accuracy and Technological Availability (DATA) Act. That data is integral to determining eligible infrastructure projects for which the states can fund up to 75 percent of construction costs. The FCC announced this week announced data as of June 30, 2022 is due to the FCC by September 1, 2022.

However, final datasets are likely be delayed into 2023 and possibly beyond. Provisions of the DATA Act and FCC regulations implementing it authorizing state, local, and tribal governments and other entities or individuals to challenge their accuracy. The IIJA requires the FCC to timely resolve challenges within 90 days after the final response by a provider to a challenge.

States and local governments have complained for years FCC data overstates the availability of landline and mobile wireless advanced telecommunications availability. That historical point of tension between federal and state/local government will likely to be heightened given the large amount of funding the IIJA appropriates for advanced telecommunications infrastructure. Some states anxious to remedy infrastructure deficits magnified over the past two years by pandemic public health measures have developed their own data and suggested it should be utilized rather than the FCC’s for IIJA funding given the urgent funding need.

Additionally, the IIJA requires states to establish a process allow nonprofits, local governments and service providers to challenge grant awards. The IIJA also authorizes the National Telecommunications and Information Administration to modify the challenge process and overturn state determinations on challenges. Challenges to these IIJA funded projects are likely from incumbent commercial landline and wireless service providers claiming a proposed infrastructure project would “overbuild” their proprietary infrastructure and duplicate their advertised services as shown in availability data.

The IIJA provides the FCC the option to circumvent the service availability data-based eligibility standard and associated controversy and delay. Section 60102(a) of the IIJA defines project eligibility based on either the availability data being compiled by the FCC or for areas lacking access to “broadband service” as defined by the FCC’s 2018 Internet Freedom rulemaking “or any successor regulation.”

Such a regulation could be in the offing. In a July 2021 executive order, President Joe Biden encouraged the FCC to adopt new rules similar to the FCC’s superseded 2015 Open Internet rulemaking that classified Internet protocol delivered service as telecommunications utilities regulated under Title II of the Communications Act of 1934. This gives the FCC an opportunity to redefine “broadband service” using a utility delivery infrastructure definition and specifically fiber optic infrastructure.

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