Tuesday, January 31, 2023
Headlines Daily Digest
Don't Miss:
Connecting Minority Communities Grants
Preston Padden: Broadband Providers Complicit in Smear Campaign Against FCC Nominee Gigi Sohn
COVID and Connectivity
Broadband Funding
Infrastructure
Data and Mapping
Wireless
Security
Platforms/Social Media
Lobbying
Company News
Events
Stories From Abroad
COVID and Connectivity
In response to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in the US, the Federal Communications Commission's Wireline Competition Bureau has waived certain Lifeline program rules in thirteen previous Orders to provide relief for low-income households. The Bureau finds good cause exists to continue to waive the Lifeline recertification and re-verification requirements for those Lifeline subscribers residing on Tribal lands through April 30, 2023. This waiver also addresses the potential impact it may have on subscribers of the Lifeline and Affordable Connectivity Programs (ACP) that were required to undergo recertification for the calendar year 2022. The FCC will continue to monitor the situation to determine whether any additional extension of these waivers is appropriate, but given the generally improving nature of the COVID-19 pandemic and increased connectivity between the National Verifier and relevant databases, it anticipates that this will likely be the Bureau’s final extension of these waivers.
Broadband Funding
Biden-Harris Administration Announces More Than $33.5 Million in Internet for All Grants to 12 Minority-Serving Colleges and Universities
The Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) announced it has awarded 12 grants as part of the Connecting Minority Communities Pilot Program (CMC). These grants, totaling more than $33.5 million, will expand community technology hubs, upgrade classroom technology, and increase digital literacy skills at 12 minority-serving colleges and universities in 10 states. The awardees are as follows:
- H. Councill Trenholm State Community College, AL;
- University of Arizona, AZ;
- Loma Linda University, CA;
- Broward College, FL;
- St. Augustine College, IL;
- Dominican University, IL;
- Simmons College of Kentucky, Inc., KY;
- Coppin State University, MD;
- Elizabeth City State University. NC;
- Saint Augustine's University, NC;
- Central State University, OH;
- Lincoln University, PA.
The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) has a major hand in broadband matters. The agency's Rural Utilities Service (RUS) is responsible for overseeing a number of rural broadband funding programs, including the well-known multi-billion-dollar ReConnect loan and grant initiative. Andrew Berke has only recently taken the reigns as RUS Administrator, having been appointed by President Biden in October 2022. That means he's now in charge at a critical juncture for rural connectivity, as billions in federal funding from other broadband programs like the $42.5 billion Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program flows into the industry. Fierce spoke with Berke to get a better handle on how the USDA came to be involved in broadband, how its programs are unique, what kind of broadband demand its seeing in rural America and what the forthcoming Farm Bill update could mean for its programs.
I understand why folks are confused about the Federal Communications Commission's maps, because there are several major mapping timelines and issues progressing at the same time. The first issue is the FCC mapping fabric. The FCC recently encouraged state and local governments and internet service providers (ISP) to file bulk challenges to the fabric by June 30. The first mapping fabric issued in June 2022 was largely a disaster. Most experienced folks that I know in the industry are unhappy with the fabric because its definition of locations that can get broadband is drastically different than the traditional way that the industry counts possible customers, which is commonly called "passings." Meanwhile, ISPs were instructed to use the original mapping fabric to report broadband coverage and speeds – the FCC 477 reporting process. There have been some revisions to the fabric due to challenges that were made early, but some of the folks who made early map challenges are reporting that a large majority of the challenges they made were not accepted. The FCC’s speed reporting rules still include a fatal flaw in that ISPs are allowed to report marketing broadband speeds rather than actual speeds. This has always been the biggest problem with FCC 477 reporting, and it’s the one bad aspect of the old reporting that is still in place.
Finally, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) is required to use the FCC maps to determine how much Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) grant funding goes to each state. NTIA announced that it will report the funding allocation on June 30. That date means that none of the mapping challenges that states and counties have been working on will be reflected in the maps used to allocate the grant funding. The NTIA announcement implies that only the earliest challenges to the maps might be included in the database used to determine the number of unserved and underserved locations in each state. States that have already made challenges know that those numbers include a lot of mistakes and missed a lot of locations. Not only will the NTIA decision on funding allocation not include the large bulk challenges filed or underway by many state and local governments, but it won’t reflect the latest 477 reporting being submitted on March 1, 2023. This whole mapping process is the very definition of a slow-motion train wreck.
Lobbying
Preston Padden: Broadband Providers Complicit in Smear Campaign Against FCC Nominee Gigi Sohn
Citing a smear campaign to continue to prevent Gigi Sohn [Senior Fellow and Public Advocate at the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society] from being seated as the fifth Federal Communications Commissioner, former Fox and ABC/Disney executive Preston Padden has written the chair of the Senate Commerce Committee to call out those tactics and advocate for Sohn, with whom he is not aligned politically. Padden also said he had been in contact with Fox’s Rupert Murdoch, an opponent of the Democratic nominee. He said he was able to assuage Murdoch’s “misgivings” about Sohn’s nomination by pointing out that she was helpful in Padden’s efforts as a top Fox exec to secure the FCC waivers needed to start the Fox network and “fend off” fierce lobbying from ABC, CBS, and NBC in the process. Padden called Sohn a “superbly qualified” nominee who should get confirmed ASAP. He also asked that the letter be read into the record of a potential third nomination hearing on Sohn, who was nominated by President Joe Biden to fill the vacant third Democratic seat more than two years ago. Padden said he was afraid Sohn was ”in danger of falling victim to the worst, and most cynical and baseless smear campaign ever waged against a nominee to serve on the FCC."
AT&T reported its fourth-quarter 2023 results, showing sustained momentum in customer additions across 5G and fiber and solid growth in wireless service and broadband revenues. Results include:
- 656,000 postpaid phone net adds; nearly 2.9 million for the full year;
- 280,000 AT&T Fiber net adds, 12 straight quarters with more than 200,000 net adds; more than 1.2 million net adds for full-year 2022, the fifth straight year with 1 million or more AT&T Fiber net adds;
- Domestic wireless service revenues up 5.2%; 5.1% for the full year;
- Consumer broadband revenues up 7.2% driven by AT&T Fiber revenue growth of more than 31%; full-year broadband revenues grew 6.4% with AT&T Fiber revenues up nearly 29%;
- Mid-band 5G spectrum covering 150 million people, more than two times higher than the original end-of-year target;
- Ability to serve more than 19 million consumer locations and more than 3 million business customer locations in more than 100 US metro areas with fiber.
Benton (www.benton.org) provides the only free, reliable, and non-partisan daily digest that curates and distributes news related to universal broadband, while connecting communications, democracy, and public interest issues. Posted Monday through Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments, policy issues, and other related news events. While the summaries are factually accurate, their sometimes informal tone may not always represent the tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang (headlines AT benton DOT org) and Grace Tepper (grace AT benton DOT org) — we welcome your comments.
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