Last updated: August 14, 2009 - 8:41am
The Obama administration made a national priority of spreading high-speed Internet access to every American home and offered stimulus money to help companies pay for it, but the biggest network operators are staying away from the program. As the Aug. 20 deadline nears to apply for $4.7 billion in broadband grants, AT&T, Verizon and Comcast are unlikely to go for the stimulus money. Their reasons are varied. All three say they are flush with cash, enough to upgrade and expand their broadband networks on their own. Some say taking money could draw unwanted scrutiny of business practices and compensation, as seen with automakers and banks that have taken government bailouts. And privately, some companies are griping about conditions attached to the money, including a Network Neutrality rule that they say would prevent them from managing traffic on their networks in the way they want. Some public advocates and analysts say the carriers never had a compelling reason to seek the grants. "They weren't going to apply," said Ben Scott, head of policy at public advocacy group Free Press. "They are using this as an opportunity to grandstand against net neutrality." Rebecca Arbogast, head of tech-policy research at Stifel Nicolaus, notes that the biggest carriers would be less inclined to deploy networks in rural areas because there is not enough demand to justify the ongoing financial investments. She said the companies should have expected stronger net-neutrality conditions because it was mandated by Congress in the stimulus act.
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Comments
"Flush with cash." Perhaps Ms. Kang missed one of the basic requirements of broadband stimulus grants: an entity must prove that the project would not be possible if not for ARRA funding. So, although the companies may take the opportunity to blame Network Neutrality, the real reason may be that they are not eligible.