Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Access to advanced telecom isn't a human right. But it is essential utility infrastructure.

The White House on Monday announced more than $42 billion in new federal funding to expand high-speed internet access nationwide and ensure even the most rural communities can reap the economic benefits of the digital age.

In an interview with TIME after the plan was unveiled, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, whose department will oversee the new funding, said that high-speed internet is no longer a luxury but a “basic human right” as modern life becomes more digitized. Her comment echoes a sentiment from President Joe Biden, who on Monday reaffirmed his pledge that every household in the nation would be connected to the internet by 2030.

https://time.com/6290366/gina-raimondo-internet-access-us-interview

It's an overstatement to describe affordable access to advanced telecommunications services as a basic human right. But in any advanced nation like the United States with a well developed information socio-economy, it should be regarded as essential infrastructure and treated as basic utility. As such, it should not require any given community to advocate for it.

That requires reconnoitering telecom policy that has since the 1990s treated it as privately owned market commodity sold based on throughput measured in megabits per second and latency. The Biden administration's Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 is a good first step in this redefinition. And the administration is remedying a defect in the law that retained the market commodity framework by favoring fiber to the premise (FTTP) infrastructure for some $43 billion in grants to the states authorized by the Act to subsidize its long overdue construction. 

The administration and Congress should look to regional public entities to provide FTTP as that essential utility, much like regional airports to use a metaphor offered by the president of one such entity, the Golden State (California) Connect Authority.

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