Analysis & commentary on America's troubled transition from analog telephone service to digital advanced telecommunications and associated infrastructure deficits.
Saturday, November 13, 2021
FCC set to move into key role on universal advanced telecommunications service
Notably, the infrastructure bill emphasizes the FCC report “may not in any way reduce the congressional mandate to achieve the universal service goals.” But it gives the FCC an opportunity to weigh in as to whether it “believes such an expansion is in the public interest.”
The infrastructure bill’s enactment comes as the administration looks to put its mark on the FCC by nominating FCC member Jessica Rosenworcel to serve as chair and Gigi Sohn as a member of the panel. In an executive order issued in July, President Biden called on the FCC to reinstate Obama administration regulations repealed during the Trump administration that would mandate universal service by classifying IP delivered services as common carrier telecommunications under Title II of the Communications Act of 1934.
Friday, November 12, 2021
Biden administration signals incumbents likely to be favored in challenges of proposed state FTTP builds under infrastructure bill
Under the bill expected to be signed into law next week, states receiving the funding can award up to 75 percent of the project’s capital cost as subgrants. The measure specifies states first fund builds that would serve these “unserved” premises. States can then award grant funds to projects where at least 80 percent of prems in a proposed project are “underserved,” which as defined in the bill means those that cannot order service providing minimum throughput of 100/20 Mbps and with latency sufficient to support real-time, interactive applications.
But in order to do so, states must first certify to the Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) that the bill authorizes to oversee the grants there are no “unserved” premises in the state.
Combined, these provisions stringently proscribe the scope of state sponsored projects in most states.
However, the bill affords the NTIA a fair degree of discretion. It authorizes it to fund “priority broadband projects” that provide advanced telecommunications service that meets throughput and quality of service standards as determined by the NTIA. As well as those that would “easily scale speeds over time to meet the evolving connectivity needs of households and businesses and support the deployment of 5G, successor wireless technologies, and other advanced services.” That could reasonably be interpreted as a fiber to the premises (FTTP) infrastructure standard.
A likely scenario is states and particularly those wishing to fund publicly and consumer cooperative owned FTTP projects will face push back from incumbent investor-owned telephone, cable and fixed wireless operators challenging their funding under the bill, contending they already provide 25/3 Mbps or 100/20 Mbps throughput to at least 80 percent of prems where FTTP is proposed to be built – what they term as “overbuilding.”
States must establish a “transparent, evidence-based, and expeditious challenge process” in which advanced telecommunications providers can contest a proposed project’s eligibility and whether a particular prem within the proposed project is unserved or underserved. States would have 60 days to resolve challenges. The bill authorizes the NTIA to modify the challenge process and overrule state determinations of challenges.
A question as the bill is implemented is to what extent the NTIA will exercise its discretion as permitted under the bill to favor publicly or cooperatively owned FTTP projects. Or side with commercial incumbents bringing challenges to proposed state projects. Department of Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo offered a clue the Biden administration may be inclined to side with incumbents on challenges. "We have to make sure we don't spend this money overbuilding," Raimondo was quoted as saying in this November 9, 2021 Reuters story.
Monday, November 08, 2021
The Infrastructure Bill is About More than Money | Benton Institute for Broadband & Society
The Infrastructure Bill is About More than Money | Benton Institute for Broadband & Society: it is now the policy of the United States that: Subscribers should benefit from equal access to broadband internet access service within the service area of a provider of such service; "Equal access" means the equal opportunity to subscribe to a service that provides comparable speeds, capacities, latency, and other quality of service metrics in a given area, for comparable terms and conditions; and The FCC should take steps to ensure that all people of the United States benefit from equal access to broadband internet access service.
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The Benton Institute is right. While the billions appropriated to the states in the advanced telecommunications infrastructure component of Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act headed to President Biden's desk gets most media attention, the measure contains important expressions of telecommunications policy. How they ultimately end up being implemented will be crucial headed into 2022 and beyond.
The Benton Institute's call that the U.S. Federal Communications Commission act to ensure the "equal access" provision sounds in the Title II universal service and anti-redlining requirements enacted in the FCC's 2015 Open Internet rulemaking reclassifying Internet Protocol delivered services as a common carrier telecommunications utility.
In an executive order issued in July, President Biden called on the FCC to reinstate that rulemaking that was repealed in 2018 during the Trump administration that deemed IP services as optional information services under Title I of the Communications Act of 1934. The order also calls on the FCC to initiate a rulemaking to require service providers to regularly report price and subscription rates to the public in a useful manner to improve price transparency and market functioning. The infrastructure bill mandates the FCC convene a proceeding to determine how to achieve universal service and to recommend to Congress expand it “if the Commission believes such an expansion is in the public interest.”
Another key policy issue that will be addressed in the infrastructure bill's implementation is the role of public sector and nonprofit entities like consumer utility cooperatives. When the Biden administration issued its foundation for the infrastructure bill -- the American Jobs Plan -- it clearly favored them as more nimble and complete builders and operators of much needed infrastructure as shown in this paragraph from the plan:
Build high-speed broadband infrastructure to reach 100 percent coverage. The President’s plan prioritizes building “future proof” broadband infrastructure in unserved and underserved areas so that we finally reach 100 percent high-speed broadband coverage. It also prioritizes support for broadband networks owned, operated by, or affiliated with local governments, non-profits, and co-operatives—providers with less pressure to turn profits and with a commitment to serving entire communities.
The pressure private investor owned vertically integrated telephone and cable companies face to generate profits works against full deployment in their putative service territories. That has brought about longstanding, widespread gaps in landline connectivity to homes and small businesses, creating a pattern of Swiss cheese holes in delivery infrastructure in urban, suburban, exurban and rural areas with the latter two categories most severely affected.
Saturday, November 06, 2021
Broadband mapping provision of House-passed infrastructure measure poses risk to timely disbursement of state funding
The Largest U.S. Investment in Broadband Deployment Ever | Benton Institute for Broadband & Society: Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (And the Need for Better Broadband Maps) The U.S. Department of Commerce's National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) has six months to create the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program to support projects to construct and deploy broadband networks. Congress has allocated $42.45 billion for the program which will prioritize expansion of broadband in rural areas and states that rank below other states on broadband access and deployment. A key element in the implementation of the program is broadband mapping taking place at the Federal Communications Commission. The FCC is in the process of updating its current broadband maps with more detailed and precise information on the availability of fixed and mobile broadband services.
The Broadband Deployment Accuracy and Technological Availability (DATA) Act, signed into law in March 2020, requires the FCC to change the way broadband data is collected, verified, and reported. Specifically, the FCC must collect and disseminate granular broadband service availability data (broadband maps) from wired, fixed-wireless, satellite, and mobile broadband providers. To do this, the FCC is required to establish the Broadband Serviceable Location Fabric (a dataset of geocoded information for all broadband service locations, atop which broadband maps are overlaid) as the vehicle for reporting broadband service availability data. Additionally, the FCC must put forth specified requirements for service availability data collected from broadband providers, and it must create a challenge process to enable the submission of independent data challenging the accuracy of FCC broadband maps.
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This provision of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that passed the U.S. House of Representatives late this week and expected to be quickly signed into law is the largest risk factor to the measure's timely implementation.
Given the nation's fraught history of broadband mapping, that key provision of the funding eligibility formula and the development of procedures to challenge their accuracy is likely to set off time consuming controversy between investor owned providers, consumer interest and state and federal regulators, bogging down federal disbursements for months and possibly years. The billions of dollars at stake provide impetus for these groups to file challenges and raise questions over the accuracy of the maps, neighborhood by neighborhood.
Eligibility for up to 75 percent grant funding for advanced telecom infrastructure builds is prioritized to “unserved areas,” defined as those
where at least 80 percent of premises are unserved – those not having
any providers offering service with throughput of at least 25 Mbps down
and 3 Mbps up. That's open to gaming by fixed wireless
providers who could conceivably claim offers of service meeting or
exceeding the throughput minimum but at exorbitant rates.
“Underserved” areas – defined those lacking access to “reliable
broadband service” with no providers offering service with throughput of
at least 100 Mbps down and 20 Mbps up are secondarily eligible. For
both categories, funding eligibility is limited to areas where least 80
percent of premises are unserved or underserved. Neighborhoods failing
to meet the 80 percent threshold would be out of luck and continue to
potentially suffer redlining by incumbent providers serving only select parts of them.
Monday, October 25, 2021
In potential model for nation, California poised to scale up open access fiber
The model, financed by a current state budget allocation of $3.5 billion for state owned transmission infrastructure and a similar amount for distribution infrastructure in the form of grants and loan securitization, dovetails with the current federal regulatory regime put in place in 2018 that regards the service layer as distinct from infrastructure, regulating IP services as information services under Title I of the Communications Act of 1934.
It also emerges one year after the U.S. Federal Communications Commission conditionally repealed rules put in place by the 1996 amendment to the act requiring incumbent telephone companies to sell wholesale access to its proprietary infrastructure to competitive local exchange carriers -- CLECs. That heightens the need for open access transmission infrastructure such as that being planned in California.
Both federal policies also pave the way for non-incumbents/CLECs including public sector entities and consumer telecom cooperatives to more widely build out and operate open access fiber distribution networks. Incumbent telcos and CLECs are limited by their business models requiring rapid returns on investment and relatively high ARPU. Consequently, these investor-owned companies offer limited distribution fiber in select neighborhoods most likely to meet those requirements, leaving the majority of homes without fiber connections as legacy copper telephone infrastructure has become obsolete as demand for quality, reliable connectivity rises rapidly.
Instead of mitigating risk by cherry picking select neighborhoods, the open access model separates end user services from infrastructure. It thus spreads the risk of areas that are costlier to build fiber to all doorsteps by aggregating demand across a broad customer base, cross subsidizing the high-cost areas from revenues generated by businesses and institutions. That’s how the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) explained it in comments filed with the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) this month. In addition, the EFF recommends the CPUC develop a new license category for transmission infrastructure. In order to obtain licensure, the infrastructure would have to be offered on an open access basis to distribution infrastructure operators at affordable rates and offering sufficient capacity.
Thursday, October 07, 2021
Telcos, Comcast target fiber upgrades to business customers -- not residences
Two legacy telephone companies and the nation's biggest cable TV company are upgrading their legacy metallic delivery infrastructures to fiber for business customers. Not targeted for the upgrades are residential users.
Residential voice telephone service was cross subsidized by business customers. There isn't a similar situation when it comes to advanced digital telecommunications. That's because under current U.S. regulatory policy, it's classified like the information services of the 1990s dialup era, AmericaOnline and CompuServe, and not as telecommunications services.
Information services -- regulated under Title I of the Communications Act of 1934 -- are considered optional, discretionary services and not utilities. Hence, they are not subject to universal service and anti-redlining requirements, providing no regulatory incentive for telcos and cablecos to offer fiber connections to residences.
Tuesday, October 05, 2021
County's public-private partnership with telco looks more like a pass through federal subsidy and not a PPP
AT&T Takes the Public-Private Broadband Partnership Plunge - Telecompetitor: This AT&T public-private project still needs final funding approval from the County, which will trigger finalization of a contract between the two parties. No terms have been disclosed. Public-private partnerships are growing in momentum, as cities, towns, and localities look to ensure their communities have the adequate broadband infrastructure and are willing to put up funds to accomplish it. Increasingly, incumbent carriers like AT&T are interested in partnering.
But is this truly a public private partnership? Per the story below, it looks more like a pass through federal subsidy for a proprietary closed access network in which the county would have no partnership interest.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. — Unincorporated Vanderburgh County will now be the focus of a nearly $40 million investment into broadband service provided by AT&T.
AT&T was selected following its response to a Vanderburgh County request for proposal and unanimously approved Tuesday by the Vanderburgh County Commissioners. Four companies responded to the request, a jump from the county’s previous broadband project, which had one response.
The total investment will be $39.6 million, of which $9.9 million is public money through the American Rescue Plan Act and $29.7 million is investment by AT&T.
Friday, September 24, 2021
Treasury Department guidance on American Rescue Plan Act funding for state and local government fiber projects raises questions on throughput standard
The U.S. Treasury Department has updated guidance on the use of $10 billion in American Rescue Plan Act grant funding to state, local and tribal governments for capital projects to construct advanced telecom infrastructure. The text below is excepted from the guidance:
Broadband Infrastructure Projects. The construction and deployment of broadband infrastructure projects (“Broadband Infrastructure Projects”) are eligible for funding under the Capital Projects Fund program if the infrastructure is designed to deliver, upon project completion, service that reliably meets or exceeds symmetrical download and upload speeds of 100 Mbps. If it would be impracticable, because of geography, topography, or excessive cost, for a Broadband Infrastructure Project to be designed to deliver services at such a speed, the Project must be designed so that it reliably meets or exceeds 100 Mbps download speeds and between 20 Mbps and 100 Mbps upload speeds and be scalable to a minimum of 100 Mbps symmetrical for download and upload speeds. Treasury encourages Recipients to focus on projects that will achieve last-mile connections. Recipients considering funding middle-mile projects are encouraged to have commitments in place to support new and/or improved last-mile service.
This guidance favors fiber to the premises projects providing symmetrical throughput, something fiber can easily support. What's curious is the highlighted text. It begs the question of how "geography, topography, or excessive cost" (and what would be excessive?) would allow projects providing asymmetric throughput to qualify if those specific qualifications are met. It makes no sense because none of those factors would reasonably affect whether the delivered throughput is symmetric or asymmetric for a fiber to the premises project. Treasury clearly has some more explaining to do.