Daily Digest 6/23/2023 (ACP)

Benton Institute for Broadband & Society
Table of Contents

Affordable Connectivity Program

FCC Chairwoman Rosenworcel warns Congress that not funding ACP will 'cut families off'  |  Read below  |  Nicole Ferraro  |  Light Reading
Why Congress Must Save the Affordable Connectivity Program  |  Read below  |  Frank Nolan  |  Editorial  |  Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
Low-Income Americans Benefit From Cheap Internet. So Do Comcast and Charter  |  Read below  |  Todd Shields  |  Bloomberg

BEAD

BEAD Program: A Framework to Allocate Funding for Broadband Availability - Version 3.0  |  Read below  |  Research  |  ACA Connects

State/Local Initiatives

Benton Foundation
Maine Drafts a Five-Year Broadband Action Plan  |  Read below  |  Grace Tepper  |  Analysis  |  Benton Institute for Broadband & Society

Content

Op-ed: The World’s Digital Memory Is at Risk  |  New York Times

Platforms/Social Media/AI

Biden-Harris Administration Announces New NIST Public Working Group on AI  |  Department of Commerce
New video undercuts claim Twitter censored pro-Trump views before Jan. 6  |  Washington Post
Dish, Samsung, Wall Street Journal, and others are advertising on the Twitter account of a leading white nationalist group  |  Media Matters for America
Texas Governor Signs Law Allowing Residents To Reject Targeted Ads  |  Media Post
Musk vs. Zuckerberg: The Billionaire Bout for the Social-Media Age  |  Wall Street Journal
TikTok Shakes Up Leadership Amid Questions About Its Future  |  New York Times
Two US lawyers fined for submitting fake court citations from ChatGPT  |  Guardian, The

Company News

UScellular Launches 5G Mid-Band Network  |  US Cellular

Stories From Abroad

Twitter agrees to comply with tough EU disinformation laws  |  Guardian, The
Canada Forces Google and Facebook to Pay News Outlets for Linking to Articles  |  New York Times
Meta is yanking news from Facebook and Instagram in Canada  |  Vox
Today's Top Stories

Affordable Connectivity Program

FCC Chairwoman Rosenworcel warns Congress that not funding ACP will 'cut families off'

Nicole Ferraro  |  Light Reading

With the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) set to run out of funding in early 2024, the importance of sustaining the program took center stage with House Democrats at a Federal Communications Commission oversight hearing. The hearing was the FCC's first before the House Communications and Technology Subcommittee and touched on a range of issues from improved broadband mapping to the FCC's lapsed spectrum authority and beyond. But one issue top of mind, at least for House Democrats, was the ACP.  Industry stakeholders and observers have been raising concern about the ACP's dwindling funds, and a lack of congressional action, for months. Pressed by House Democrats on what the end of the ACP would mean for the country's efforts to close the digital divide, FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel stressed the importance of continuing funding. She further noted that the ACP works "hand-in-hand" with the $42.5 billion Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) program being administered by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA). Alan Davidson, NTIA Chief, has also recently stressed the importance of ACP to BEAD's success in front of Congress. However, she also confirmed the FCC is exploring what that unwanted outcome will look like. In discussing the ACP, several House members also referenced a letter sent to President Biden. That letter calls the ACP "an important tool in our efforts to close the digital divide," and further asks the White House to devote unused COVID relief funds to support the program.

Why Congress Must Save the Affordable Connectivity Program

Frank Nolan  |  Editorial  |  Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

The future of the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) is now at risk. Civil rights organizations have partnered with Congress, the Biden administration, internet service providers, and other stakeholders to spread the word about the ACP so that those who need it most are informed and can get connected. But the future of the ACP is not guaranteed. Congress needs to step up again and ensure adequate funding to continue the program. As more than 160 organizations have told policymakers, without action from Congress in 2023, millions of households could immediately lose service — and access to their daily, hybrid way of life. The loss of the ACP would also reduce the efficacy of Congress’ groundbreaking $42 billion investment in the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program. A recent study concluded that the ACP reduces the size of the subsidy needed to incentivize broadband deployment in rural areas by 25 percent. Simply put: The ACP makes BEAD program dollars go farther. On a bipartisan basis, Congress recognized — despite decades of digital discrimination — that we must all be connected if we want America to endure and prosper. But without adequate and sustained funding for the ACP, Congress will not be able to keep everyone online and meet its goal of universal deployment and adoption.

[Frank Nolan is the senior campaigns and programs associate at The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.]

Low-Income Americans Benefit From Cheap Internet. So Do Comcast and Charter

Todd Shields  |  Bloomberg

In 2021, US lawmakers created a $14.2 billion fund to help low-income families across America pay for internet service they would otherwise struggle to afford. Since then, nearly 19 million households have come to rely on the subsidy — which provides $30 or more in monthly bill aid, helping to narrow the long-standing digital divide that has placed low-income families at a disadvantage for everything from educational services to employment opportunities. Broadband providers, including Comcast and Charter, have come to count on the program as a fresh source of income at a time when their customer growth rates are slowing. But the program is on track to be exhausted by early 2024. The top six internet service providers participating in the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) have raked in more than $2 billion since its inception, according to data from the Federal Communications Commission. Charter is the biggest beneficiary, receiving $910 million from early 2022 through the end of February 2023, implying it’s cleared more than $1 billion by now. Verizon’s wireless unit TracFone took in $250 million from the program, and Comcast and mobile company T-Mobile US. each collected more than $200 million, according to the FCC. In addition to the government subsidies, the internet service providers also get revenue from the households that sign up for additional services, suggesting that the total benefit from the ACP is much higher.

BEAD

BEAD Program: A Framework to Allocate Funding for Broadband Availability - Version 3.0

Research  |  ACA Connects

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act’s (IIJA) $42.5 billion Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program holds out tremendous opportunity to close the broadband availability gap. To assist States and Territories and ACA Connects Members in seizing that opportunity, ACA Connects has once again joined with the business consulting firm Cartesian – this time to develop a framework for how each State and Territory can spend BEAD funds on fixed broadband – principally fiber -- projects to connect their unserved and underserved locations. Our framework includes both a national analysis and an analysis for each State where we use the latest data to estimate the number of unserved and underserved locations and the amount of BEAD funding that will be allocated to each jurisdiction, and then, using Cartesian’s proprietary and detailed model, we develop fixed broadband deployment scenarios using that funding and matching funds from providers. Version 3.0 uses the location-specific data from the Federal Communications Commission's National Broadband Map released May 30, 2023, to determine funding allocations and network availability. This version also includes an analysis of how continued broadband deployment—using private capital as well as funding from other programs—will reduce the number of locations that require BEAD support. 

State/Local

Maine Drafts a Five-Year Broadband Action Plan

Grace Tepper  |  Analysis  |  Benton Institute for Broadband & Society

All 50 states are currently working on Five-Year Action Plans for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program. As they release draft plans, the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society is sharing summaries focused on how states define their broadband goals and priorities. Last week we took a look at Maine's vision for digital equity and its Digital Equity Plan. This week, we are breaking down what the state plans to do with its BEAD Program funding to achieve universal broadband for all Mainers through its Five-Year Action Plan. Together with a network of collaborators across the state, Maine is committed to a multi-year, multi-disciplinary approach, leveraging all necessary resources to bring broadband to all.

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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), Grace Tepper (grace AT benton DOT org), and David L. Clay II (dclay AT benton DOT org) — we welcome your comments.


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Kevin Taglang

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Executive Editor, Communications-related Headlines
Benton Institute
for Broadband & Society
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