Daily Digest 1/19/2024

Benton Institute for Broadband & Society
Table of Contents

Broadband Funding

President Biden, Treasury Department Announce Approval of Federal Funds to Connect 16,000 North Carolina Homes and Businesses to High-Speed Internet  |  Read below  |  Press Release  |  Department of the Treasury
Making a Down Payment on Affordable, Reliable, High-Speed Internet for All  |  Read below  |  Ashley Schulte  |  Press Release  |  Fiber Broadband Association
BEAD Program: A Framework to Allocate Funding for Broadband Availability  |  Read below  |  Research  |  ACA Connects
BEAD Affordability Plans  |  Read below  |  Alec Mena  |  Analysis  |  Citizens Against Government Waste
FCC Chairwoman Rosenworcel: Nearly half of ACP households are using it for fixed broadband  |  Read below  |  Nicole Ferraro  |  Light Reading
The Value of $7 Billion: The Affordable Connectivity Program and the Future of Access and Adoption  |  Read below  |  Jonathan Cannon  |  Analysis  |  R Street
Rural Families Need Broadband Subsidy Program More but Use It Less  |  Read below  |  Brian Whitacre, Howard Song  |  Op-Ed  |  Daily Yonder
Don’t Let the Affordable Connectivity Program Lapse Over the First-time Subscriber Fallacy  |  Read below  |  Jessica Dine  |  Analysis  |  Information Technology & Innovation Foundation
Federal Communications Commission’s Affordable Connectivity Program Shutdown Silent on Broadband Labels  |  Read below  |  Ted Hearn  |  Op-Ed  |  Broadband Breakfast
Las Vegas teacher says students’ futures tied to internet access  |  KVVU-TV
Op-ed | Affordable Internet and Net Equality Act of 2024 is a way to close digital divide  |  Daily Republic
Op-ed | ACP's equal-opportunity promise for Latinos  |  Arizona Daily Star
Podcast | Former Trump USDA Official Hilda Legg shares thoughts on push for ACP renewal  |  Broadband Communities
Reps Curtis (R-UT) and Kuster (D-NH) Introduce Bill to Connect Rural America  |  Read below  |  Press Release  |  House of Representatives
Schools, Health, and Libraries Broadband Coalition Supports Federal Communications Commission's Initiative for Off-Campus E-rate Support  |  Read below  |  Press Release  |  Schools Health & Libraries Broadband Coalition
Private Equity Firm M/C Partners Sees Potential in Mobile Home Broadband Investment  |  Summary at Benton.org  |  Phil Britt  |  telecompetitor
Green Loans for Fiber  |  Read below  |  Doug Dawson  |  Analysis  |  CCG Consulting

Net Neutrality

Cable Internet Service Providers Look To Shape Expected Return of FCC’s Net Neutrality Rules  |  Read below  |  John Eggerton  |  Multichannel News

Wireless

Four prominent wireless leaders testify about open RAN at Congressional hearing  |  Read below  |  Linda Hardesty  |  Fierce

AT&T to Spend $20M on Satellite-to-Cellphone Service, Joins Google in AST Investment  |  telecompetitor

Journalism 

Federal Communications Commission Adopts Proposal to Support Local Journalism  |  Read below  |  Press Release  |  Federal Communications Commission
The news business faces a reckoning in 2024  |  Read below  |  Sara Fischer  |  Axios
Billionaires Wanted to Save the News Industry. They’re Losing a Fortune.  |  New York Times

Labor

YouTube Cuts 100 Employees as Tech Layoffs Continue  |  New York Times

Health

Characterizing Telehealth Use in the US: Analysis of the 2022 Health Information National Trends Survey  |  American Journal of Managed Care

Emergency Communications

Updated FirstNet Authority Emergency Management Guide  |  FirstNet Authority

Platforms/Social Media/AI

Attorney General Bird (IA) Sues TikTok for Misleading Parents  |  Iowa Department of Justice
Is It Safe to Share Personal Information With a Chatbot?  |  Wall Street Journal
Unlocking productivity and personalizing learning with AI  |  Microsoft Education Blog
Mark Zuckerberg’s new goal is creating artificial general intelligence  |  Vox
A new collaboration with OpenAI charts the future of AI in higher education  |  Arizona State University

TV

Parks: Video Streaming Providers Battle 50% Churn  |  telecompetitor
The Real Reason You’re Paying for So Many Subscriptions  |  Wall Street Journal

Help Wanted

NTCA Seeks Education Manager  |  NTCA–The Rural Broadband Association

Stories From Abroad

European Commission seeks feedback on commitments offered by Apple over practices related to Apple Pay  |  European Commission
EU Commission Intends to Block Amazon’s iRobot Acquisition  |  Wall Street Journal
"AI made us do it" is Big Tech's new layoff rationale  |  Axios
Today's Top Stories

Broadband Funding

President Biden, Treasury Department Announce Approval of Federal Funds to Connect 16,000 North Carolina Homes and Businesses to High-Speed Internet

Press Release  |  Department of the Treasury

President Joe Biden announced that the U.S. Department of the Treasury approved $82.2 million for high-speed internet projects in North Carolina under the American Rescue Plan’s Capital Projects Fund (CPF), which the state estimates will connect approximately 16,000 homes and businesses to affordable, high-speed internet. The $82.2 million will fund the Broadband Stop Gap Solutions Program to extend high-speed internet service to reach individual or small pockets of households or businesses which have not been reached through prior federal investments. North Carolina’s Broadband Infrastructure Office will work with counties to identify remaining locations that lack high-speed internet and then make Stop Gap Program awards on a county-by-county basis. Overall, the Biden-Harris Administration is investing $3 billion in North Carolina to connect everyone in the state to affordable, reliable high-speed internet through the American Rescue Plan and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.

Making a Down Payment on Affordable, Reliable, High-Speed Internet for All

Ashley Schulte  |  Press Release  |  Fiber Broadband Association

The fiber broadband industry is experiencing a historic moment. According to Joseph Wender, Director of Capital Projects Fund at the US Department of the Treasury, never before (and likely never again) have multiple government agencies provided tens of billions of dollars in funding to provide affordable, reliable, high-speed internet for all Americans and close the digital divide once and for all. The Capital Project Fund (CPF) was created before BEAD; it was one of the few COVID Relief Bills that Congress passed as part of the American Rescue Plan during the height of the pandemic and the reason why Congress specifically put $10 billion in the rescue plan. “It was a down payment on making high-speed internet affordable and reliable for all Americans,” Wender noted. The $10 billion CPF program has been critical to keeping broadband deployments progressing while larger programs, like BEAD, will take longer to disperse. Wender said that his agency wants to make investments that don’t just last years, but last decades.

BEAD Program: A Framework to Allocate Funding for Broadband Availability

Research  |  ACA Connects

ACA Connects, in partnership with Cartesian, announced the release of “BEAD Program: A Framework to Allocate Funding for Broadband Availability – Version 4.0.” This newest version, using data from the latest National Broadband Map, estimates that when States and Territories begin to select broadband deployment projects, 6.4 million unserved and underserved locations will be eligible for Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program funding and that the program should be able to provide robust broadband service to all these eligible locations. This includes by providing service over fiber infrastructure – the BEAD program’s preferred broadband technology – to at least 71 percent of eligible locations. The updated analysis indicates that funding is still sufficient to achieve BEAD’s broadband availability goal.

BEAD Affordability Plans

Alec Mena  |  Analysis  |  Citizens Against Government Waste

A look at each state’s response to the National Technology and Information Administration’s (NTIA) Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program Notice of Funding Opportunity’s (NOFO) Requirement 20 on Middle-Class Affordability and Requirement 16 for a Low-Cost Broadband Service Option.  This list also provides background information on the degree of participation in BEAD by municipal, tribal, and other government-owned networks (GONs) in each state. Thirteen states have affordability strategies that meet the NOFO requirements in a manner that should enhance private-sector participation and encourage the most rapid rollout of connectivity to unserved areas.  A significant element of most of their proposals is to not require specific monthly rates for each of the speed tiers. Instead, the states propose to determine eligibility either by comparing providers’ applications to the “reasonable comparability benchmark” defined in the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) Urban Rate Survey, or by requiring providers to charge the same rates in areas of their state that qualify to receive BEAD subsidies as they charge in unsubsidized areas. There are eight states—Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Texas, and Virginia—that will determine providers’ affordability by reference to the benchmark rate for any given service area determined by the FCC’s Urban Rate Survey. There are five States—Alabama, Delaware, Maryland, New Hampshire, and Oregon—that require providers to charge no more in BEAD-subsidized locations than they do in unsubsidized areas of their state or any other state. (Alabama, however, uses this geographic price-parity approach only for scoring Middle-Class Affordability, while requiring a specific rate for the Low-Cost Service Option.) There are 11 states—Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Iowa, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, and Vermont, along with American Samoa—that have adopted an affordability strategy that scores providers’ proposed pricing relative to other providers that apply for BEAD funding, rather than against any objective standard of affordability. The other 24 states* and four territories (including the District of Columbia) surveyed, all dictate specific prices providers must charge to score well in the competitive application process.

FCC Chairwoman Rosenworcel: Nearly half of ACP households are using it for fixed broadband

Nicole Ferraro  |  Light Reading

In a letter to a group of Republican lawmakers, Federal Communications Commission Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel confirmed that the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) is subsidizing fixed broadband services for nearly 10 million of the 22 million households enrolled in the program thus far. The letter was a response to an inquiry the lawmakers sent to Chairwoman Rosenworcel last month, requesting more information on who the ACP is serving – including how many mobile subscribers versus fixed broadband subscribers – and efforts undertaken by the FCC to track the program. Roughly 4.6 million ACP subscribers are over the age of 65; and 3.3 million participating households are eligible based on their participation in the National School Lunch or National School Breakfast Program, suggesting the benefit is reaching millions of school-aged children.

The Value of $7 Billion: The Affordable Connectivity Program and the Future of Access and Adoption

Jonathan Cannon  |  Analysis  |  R Street

The Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) provides eligible customers a discount of up to $30 per month for broadband services. The benefits of the ACP—especially compared to other programs—is that it is tech-neutral; it does not limit users to a specific means of connection and gives customers choices over what service they want. Absent congressional intervention, the program is due to run out of funding as early as April 2024. Federal Communications Commission Chairwoman (FCC) Jessica Rosenworcel has warned congressional leaders they will begin winding down the program and stopping new enrollment on February 7, 2024 if there is no additional funding. With the end date approaching and 23 million customers waiting with baited breath, the question remains what is the future of the ACP? The best chance of preserving the ACP as a permanent program is to roll it into a future Universal Service Fund (USF) Program. Unlike the ACP which depends on congressional appropriations, the USF Program is funded by a tax on interstate end-user revenues. Congress is in a perfect position to make reforms to the USF Program that reflects the modern connected landscape and maintains a light-touch program that gives customers flexibility to choose services that suit their needs, without additional burdens to providers.

Rural Families Need Broadband Subsidy Program More but Use It Less

Brian Whitacre, Howard Song  |  Op-Ed  |  Daily Yonder

While the future of the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) remains uncertain, it is worth reviewing how the program fared in rural America. Home broadband adoption rates in rural areas have historically been 5-10 percentage points lower than those in urban locations. This is due partly to lower internet availability but also higher monthly costs in rural geographies.  So, were rural households, with lower broadband adoption rates and higher monthly bills more likely to embrace the program? The short answer is no. Using county-level data on ACP subscribers for each month of the program and estimates of the number of eligible households in each county, it shows that rural households were far less likely to participate than urban households.  Even more tellingly, the gap grew dramatically over the life of the program. As the ACP began in January 2022, only about 13% of eligible households in the most rural counties signed up. This was well below the 21% rate for eligible urban households.  These highly-rural counties saw their participation rate grow to 28% by late 2023, while urban households increased to 46%. So, the rural-urban ACP participation gap increased from 8 percentage points (21% – 13%) to nearly 20 percentage points (46% – 28%) over the roughly two-year life of the program.  A smaller gap (and increase) was seen for less rural counties, from 3 percentage points in January 2022 to 9 percentage points by late 2023. Rural areas were disadvantaged by 1) lower numbers of internet providers advertising the program and 2) fewer civic organizations like libraries or non-profits spreading word about the program and helping people sign up. 

[Brian Whitacre is a professor and Neustadt Chair in the Department of Agricultural Economics at Oklahoma State University. Howard Song is an undergraduate at Oklahoma State.]

Don’t Let the Affordable Connectivity Program Lapse Over the First-time Subscriber Fallacy

Jessica Dine  |  Analysis  |  Information Technology & Innovation Foundation

In a time when broadband affordability still plays a major role in the digital divide, the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) meets an obvious need. Roughly two years into the program, around 23 million households are enrolled for discounted broadband and a one-time device subsidy. We should be able to consider this case closed: We now have a strong, effective mechanism for closing the affordability gap. Indeed, ACP enjoys bipartisan support, and its virtues are extolled by industry and consumer advocates alike. But as the program’s initial funding winds down, some congressional Republicans are demanding more data before taking any action—particularly data on how many enrollees are first-time subscribers—and in doing so obstructing legislative agreement on a source of continued funding. The crux of the skeptics’ position is that absent substantive evidence that the majority of ACP recipients are first-time subscribers, the program is somehow failing and ineffective. Of course, we should want more transparency and clearer information about ACP’s effects and enrollees. But the ACP wasn’t meant to help only first-time subscribers get online, and cannot be evaluated on this basis. If the ACP is allowed to end, it will ensure any future broadband affordability initiative fights a potentially losing battle to regain trust. Holdouts should recognize that this is all much too steep a price to pay.

Federal Communications Commission’s Affordable Connectivity Program Shutdown Silent on Broadband Labels

Ted Hearn  |  Op-Ed  |  Broadband Breakfast

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued an order on winding down the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), but the FCC was silent on a key issue: What’s going to happen to the agency’s rules that legally require internet service providers (ISPs) to display broadband “nutrition” labels that promote the ACP? In late 2022, the FCC adopted label rules that require broadband ISPs to “display at the point-of-sale clear, easy-to-understand, and accurate information about the cost and performance of broadband services …” ISPs apparently still need FCC guidance on whether they are to jettison the ACP section in their broadband consumer labels and when they would need to do so. Without word from the FCC, ISPs could be caught in a bind in needing to promote the ACP via consumer labels and rejecting eligible ACP applicants under the FCC’s enrollment freeze that begins on February 8. 

[Ted Hearn is the Editor and Publisher of Policyband, a new website dedicated to comprehensive coverage of the broadband communications market.]

Reps Curtis (R-UT) and Kuster (D-NH) Introduce Bill to Connect Rural America

Press Release  |  House of Representatives

Reps John Curtis (R-UT) and Annie Kuster (D-NH) introduced the Rural Broadband Protection Act to combat waste fraud and abuse in federal broadband programs. The Senate version of this bill was introduced in the Senate by Sens Shelley Capito (R-WV) and Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) in 2023. The Federal Communications Commission's high-cost programs funds telecommunications carriers who provide service in rural areas where the market alone cannot support the substantial cost of deploying network infrastructure and providing connectivity. This modernized program is called the Connect America Fund, and it consists of a series of new funds that rely on incentive-based models and competitive bidding to award carriers a set amount of support to build out broadband to a defined number of locations in unserved and underserved areas. The bill would provide essential safeguards to the FCC’s high-cost programs by ensuring that funding goes to companies with both a proven track record of success and have demonstrated sound judgment in deploying in hard-to-serve areas.

Schools, Health, and Libraries Broadband Coalition Supports Federal Communications Commission's Initiative for Off-Campus E-rate Support

The Schools, Health & Libraries Broadband (SHLB) Coalition along with the Open Technology Institute at New America (OTI), filed comments responding to the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) in support of E-Rate support for off-campus internet access. The NPRM proposes to allow schools and libraries to apply for funding from the FCC’s E-Rate program for Wi-Fi hotspots and wireless internet access services to be used by students and library patrons in need. The NPRM aims to address the Homework Gap that was exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and the increased use of online learning. SHLB, the Open Technology Institute, and others jointly filed a Petition for Rulemaking in January 2021, specifically calling for E-Rate funding to be used to support broadband access at home. The FCC took comment on that proposal but did not take further action after Congress created the Emergency Connectivity Fund (ECF). The ECF program is set to expire at the end of June 2024.  

Green Loans for Fiber

Doug Dawson  |  Analysis  |  CCG Consulting

Ubiquity, which builds and operates open-access networks, recently obtained a green loan to help finance fiber network construction. It’s an interesting concept that other providers might want to consider. Green loans (and bonds) are a special form of funding that is aimed at financing environmentally friendly projects. Ubiquity was able to justify that building a fiber network is ‘green’ under the principles created by the Loan Market Association (LMA) and under Generate Capital’s Green Financing Framework. It seems like the primary benefit of a green loan for a fiber network is the ability to tout the social responsibility of the provider building and operating the network. Ubiquity can advertise in its markets that the network was funded by a lender that certified the project as green. That seems like something that would play well with the public.

Net Neutrality

Cable Internet Service Providers Look To Shape Expected Return of FCC’s Net Neutrality Rules

John Eggerton  |  Multichannel News

Likely seeing the re-regulatory handwriting on the wall, cable internet service providers have told the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) just how it should reclassify broadband as a Title II service and what it should and shouldn’t do when it reimposes new net neutrality rules, as it is expected to do after a suitable timespan following the public comment period on its reclassification proposal. NCTA – The Internet & Television Association, joined by over a half-dozen state associations, said if the FCC goes ahead with the plan, it should do the following:

  1. Provide exceptions for reasonable network management;
  2. Permit usage-based billing and zero-rating;
  3. Refrain from extending those rules to non-BIAS [broadband internet access service] data services or internet interconnection and traffic exchange arrangements;
  4. Avoid drawing “unwarranted” distinctions between broadband technologies (as in, apply it to wireless, fixed wireless, satellite-delivered broadband or any other broadband delivery technology).
  5. Forbear from all Title II provisions that would authorize the FCC to regulate rates and mandate unbundling, as well as from other “burdensome and ill-fitting” provisions of Title II.
  6. Preempt state and local regulation of broadband services and reject proposals to deem any federal framework as merely a “floor,” “as such an approach would only invite states and localities to attempt to override federal policy determinations.”

Wireless

Four prominent wireless leaders testify about open RAN at Congressional hearing

Linda Hardesty  |  Fierce

Some of the top proponents of open RAN in the US warned lawmakers that the technology remains in danger of sliding into irrelevance if trends toward fragmentation and proprietary solutions continue. John Baker, senior vice president of Ecosystem Business Development at Mavenir warned that there can be different flavors of open RAN. "Just as open RAN has been embraced by nearly all within the industry, we risk repeating history by having suppliers again lock up networks with proprietary solutions that are only partially based on O-RAN Alliance specifications." Similarly, Dish Network's Jeff Blum warned of possible open RAN fragmentation. Mavenir, Dish and others at the hearing urged lawmakers to support a handful of strategic initiatives they said could propel open RAN forward.

Journalism

Federal Communications Commission Adopts Proposal to Support Local Journalism

Press Release  |  Federal Communications Commission

The Federal Communications Commission adopted a proposal to advance its longstanding policy goal of supporting local journalism and broadcasters’ commitment to meet the needs and interests of local communities. The proposal explores incentivizing the production of local programming by prioritizing the processing and review of applications from broadcast stations that invest in and prioritize local programming in communities across the country. Specifically, the FCC proposes to adopt an application processing policy that, with respect to applications for renewal, transfer, or assignment of a license, would prioritize evaluation of those applications filed by stations that certify that they provide locally originated programming. These applications would be the first to be reviewed, which would likely result in quicker action and, if the application is granted, quicker approval of these applications.

The news business faces a reckoning in 2024

Sara Fischer  |  Axios

A new report saying billionaire Patrick Soon-Shiong has sunk hundreds of millions of his own money into an unprofitable Los Angeles Times underscores how desperate the news industry is to chart a plan for survival in the digital era. If billionaire owners can't make the L.A. Times or the Washington Post profitable, then the news industry has to ask itself: What can? Every news company is trying to dig out of this hole — even ones that are still minting money. That includes CNN, where new CEO Mark Thompson unveiled his strategy in a memo that carried the rallying cry: "We need to organize around the future not the past. We need to recapture some of the swagger and innovation of the early CNN." Thompson acknowledged that CNN is now a tenured incumbent, saying "Like so many other news players with a broadcast heritage, CNN's linear services and even its website can sometimes have an old-fashioned and unadventurous feel as if the world has changed and they haven't."

Submit a Story

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 Zoe Walker (zwalker AT benton DOT org) — we welcome your comments.


© Benton Institute for Broadband & Society 2023. Redistribution of this email publication — both internally and externally — is encouraged if it includes this message. For subscribe/unsubscribe info email: headlines AT benton DOT org


Kevin Taglang

Kevin Taglang
Executive Editor, Communications-related Headlines
Benton Institute
for Broadband & Society
1041 Ridge Rd, Unit 214
Wilmette, IL 60091
847-220-4531
headlines AT benton DOT org

Share this edition:

Benton Institute for Broadband & Society Benton Institute for Broadband & Society Benton Institute for Broadband & Society

Benton Institute for Broadband & Society

The Benton Institute for Broadband & Society All Rights Reserved © 2023