Monday, January 04, 2021

Appropriate role for legacy telcos, cablecos in advanced telecom infrastructure: design, build, operate. But not own.

Finish the Job of Connecting Every American

From COVID relief to budget decisions, take bold and decisive action to finish the job of connecting every American home, business and anchor institution to U.S. broadband infrastructure. Particularly amid a global pandemic, the fact that an estimated 18 million American homes do not have broadband access is unacceptable. Working together—public resources alongside private expertise, technology and networks—this is the most solvable of our nation’s leading challenges. Resources + political will = universal connectivity.

— SPECIFIC 100-DAYS ACTIONS —

  • Advance legislation to rapidly and fully invest in the broadband infrastructure programs required to quickly and permanently close the digital divide in America. USTelecom members are ready to immediately go to work with government partners to build these networks, including fiber investment deeper into all corners of America

 https://spark.adobe.com/page/KDnqM9tW5sAo7/#finish-the-job-of-connecting-every-american

The partnership proposed by the industry group USTelecom for the first 100 days of the incoming Biden administration needs clarification that to ensure public funds are appropriately used to build advanced telecom infrastructure and bring fiber to every American doorstep, it should be publicly owned. Subsidies given to legacy incumbent telephone and cable companies since the 1990s have not remedied America's advanced telecom infrastructure deficiencies. Repeating more of the same would be poor public policy. USTelecom members can indeed play a role in this public-private partnership: to design, build and operate. But not own.

Sunday, December 20, 2020

"Broadband vouchers" a misguided notion for expanding home Internet access

Remote work and learning during the pandemic compelled some lawmakers to get creative in expanding broadband availability. In Delaware and Alabama, state officials earmarked parts of their CARES Act funding to create broadband vouchers—monthly service rebates—for households with school-age children.

It’s an established way of expanding telecommunications access. For years, the FCC has disbursed monthly discounts to millions of low-income households through the “Lifeline” program. Voucher programs also have the potential to expand broadband availability and competition in underserved rural areas.

Broadband Breakfast: Brent Skorup and Michael Kotrous: Modernize High-Cost Support with Rural Broadband Vouchers

There are multiple problems with this concept. The most fundamental is it assumes U.S. telecom infrastructure deficiencies are due to buy side market failure. In fact, sell side market failure is responsible. The demand is there. For many years, households lacking landline Internet service have begged telephone and cable companies for connections, often to no avail and eventually giving up. (Lately, they've been barraging their elected representatives as the need for connectivity has grown more urgent). The main reason is these companies require rapid returns on investment in extending service to these homes. When analyzing the needed investment, net present value doesn't pencil. Tossing vouchers into the mix isn't likely to meaningfully improve the business case. 

In addition, unlike analog telephone service regulated under Title I of the Communications Act, Internet in the United States is regulated as an optional information service under Title II of the Act and not as a telecommunications utility with subsidies to connect homes in high cost areas. Consequently, there is no regulatory incentive to connect every home requesting service. 

Finally, to make service more affordable to low income households, regulated lifeline rates such as used for voice telephone service are an already existing mechanism to help achieve that. Vouchers wouldn't be needed with the proper regulatory policy in place.

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

California bill would use existing phone surcharge to secure bonds for local government and cooperative-owned fiber to the premise infrastructure

Proposed legislation introduced this month in the California state Senate offers a potentially viable means of financing fiber to the premise (FTTP) advanced telecommunications infrastructure builds owned by local governments and nonprofits such as consumer telecom cooperatives. It does so by creating a financing mechanism to secure bonds to fund FTTP construction with proceeds from an existing California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) surcharge on voice lines to subsidize advanced telecom projects in high cost areas of the state not served by incumbent landline and wireless internet service providers.

Debt service for the bonds could also be provided by project sponsors since the proposed legislation authorizes the CPUC to require they demonstrate the ability to reasonably finance and implement the projects utilizing the proposed bond financing.

The measure is proposed as an urgency measure that would take effect immediately upon enactment.