Previous federal efforts to expand broadband infrastructure, totaling $50 billion by Bennet’s estimation, were ”in reality subsidizing the biggest telecom companies in America not to build that broadband out,” he said. The money instead went to expansion that left out rural America.
https://www.denverpost.com/2023/07/06/federal-beads-broadband-funding-program/
The problem with modernizing telecom infrastructure to fiber to the premises is there has been no well thought out, coordinated high cost area subsidization policy. Instead, it's been a series of highly restricted one off grants, treating advanced telecom infrastructure more as a special charity case instead of essential infrastructure.
Moreover, subsidies have come without universal service obligations or rate regulation as existed for legacy voice plain old telephone service (POTS) under Title II of the federal Communications Act. Telecom utility infrastructure functions as a natural monopoly and requires regulation to protect the public interest in access and affordability.
Comcast is correct that public-private partnerships are the way forward. The public sector should own the infrastructure and competitively contract with private entities to design, build and operate it.
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