Marysville Appeal-Democrat

FCC has money for rural broadband but isn’t sure where to spend it

- Cq-roll Call (TNS)

WASHINGTON – Ever since Rep. Dave Loebsack, D-iowa, was first elected to the House in 2006, he has sought to ensure that Iowans and other rural Americans can access the internet.

But Loebsack, who is set to retire at the end of the 116th Congress, remains frustrated that the federal government still lacks accurate data showing where Americans can get a signal – and where they can’t.

“For years, it has been evident and clear to this committee, the stakeholde­rs, and indeed, the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, that the maps have been bad,” Loebsack said at a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on Sept. 17.

“All of you recognize that, all of you admit that,” Loebsack told the quintet of FCC commission­ers testifying before the House panel. “And yet we still haven’t fixed the maps. It’s kind of like when they say, ‘Just wear the damn mask.’ Let’s just fix the damn maps, right?”

But how to best go about correcting the maps is disputed. And despite cooperatio­n between

Democrats and Republican­s designed to force the FCC to fix them, sniping over who bears the responsibi­lity for the persisting inaccuraci­es is a matter of partisan debate.

At the hearing, Republican FCC Chairman Ajit Pai blamed Congress, which he claimed has hamstrung the agency’s ability to fix the maps by withholdin­g the necessary funding even though the agency approved a plan to fix the maps last year.

But Democratic Commission­er Jessica Rosenworce­l blamed Pai.

“We just haven’t made enough progress,” said Rosenworce­l, who is viewed as occupying pole position for Pai’s job if former Vice President Joe Biden, the Democratic nominee for president, wins the November election. “We’ve put it off for another day. We keep on claiming that we need additional funds, that we need additional time. It’s just not good enough.”

Brendan Carr and Michael O’rielly, Pai’s fellow Republican commission­ers, acknowledg­ed issues with the maps but defended efforts to correct them.

Pai has relied on the maps to assert that his efforts to reduce regulation­s on internet service providers has helped reduce the number of unconnecte­d Americans, even when that data has proven inaccurate because providers submitted faulty data.

Earlier this month, the FCC fined the New Yorkbased service provider Barrier Communicat­ions Corp. nearly $164,000 for submitting erroneous data that claimed the company offered coverage to the entire population­s of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvan­ia, Virginia, Maryland, Connecticu­t, Rhode Island and the District of Columbia – roughly 20% of the U.S. population.

The erroneous data was included in a draft of the FCC’S 2019 broadband deployment report, which claimed that the number of unconnecte­d Americans dropped about 25% from 26.1 million in 2016 to

19.4 million in 2017. After a nonprofit organizati­on, Free Press, pointed out the error, Pai issued a revised estimate that showed the tally dropping 18 percent, to 21.3 million.

The agency’s plan to use the current maps to begin auctioning off $20 billion in rural broadband funding starting in late October has concerned lawmakers who want to ensure the money is spent wisely.

“Without proper maps, much of the money may be wasted, and consumers left unserved,” said Energy and Commerce Chairman Frank Pallone Jr., D-N.J. “I just think we have to do better than this.”

In March, President Donald Trump signed bipartisan legislatio­n that gave the FCC six months to change how it collects and verifies broadband data, including giving the public a way to challenge informatio­n submitted by service providers. But the six-month deadline passed on Monday.

“We are careening towards a disaster with waste, fraud and abuse here,” Rosenworce­l said.

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