Lifeline Broadband Problems: Big Carriers Opt Out, Rural Carriers Struggle with Pricing

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The Federal Communications Commission’s decision to allow qualified low-income households to use funding from the Universal Service Lifeline program toward broadband service was welcomed back in March when it was made, but problems with the program are mounting.

Key Lifeline broadband problems: big carrier participation and rural carrier stand-alone broadband pricing. According to a press release from The National Hispanic Media Coalition (NHMC), more than 80 service providers have opted out of participation in the Lifeline broadband program for at least part of their territories. Verizon, for example, only wants to offer Lifeline broadband service in areas where it has deployed its FiOS fiber-to-the-home service. Other major service providers opting not to participate in Lifeline broadband include AT&T, Cox, Windstream, Charter, CenturyLink, FairPoint and Frontier. Reforms adopted in March called for the government to create a national eligibility verifier – essentially a database of eligible households — thereby eliminating the need for service providers to determine whether recipients are qualified to receive Lifeline payments. But according to a November 23 blog post from AT&T executive Joan Marsh, the eligibility verifier will not be fully implemented until 2019. Until then service providers are still responsible for verification – a responsibility that also entails compliance risks. Rather than take on that responsibility, AT&T would prefer to hold off on offering Lifeline broadband until the verifier is operational. Other carriers opting not to participate in the program may have similar motivation. There are a few areas where AT&T will offer a Lifeline discount on broadband – namely, anywhere the company receives high-cost Universal Service funding.

The reason is that carriers accepting high-cost program funding are required to participate in the Lifeline broadband program. But there, too, the Lifeline broadband program is encountering problems. Rural rate of return carriers, many of whom rely on high-cost funding, do not expect to be able to offer stand-alone broadband service at rates that are comparable with those available in urban areas. With rates projected to exceed $100 monthly, a $9.25 discount wouldn’t go far toward making service more affordable for low-income consumers. Rural carrier associations argue that this situation is the result of insufficient funding for the high-cost program.


Lifeline Broadband Problems: Big Carriers Opt Out, Rural Carriers Struggle with Pricing 80 Telecommunications Providers Opt-Out of Helping Low-Income Americans with Broadband Access Through Lifeline Program (NHMC)