Morning Sun

Those lacking broadband test plan for rural rollout

- By Todd Shields and Rebecca Kern

Federal maps show R. Clay Jackson’s beef cattle farm in rural Madison County, Va., is awash in broadband — a designatio­n that likely rules it out of President Joe Biden’s push to connect all Americans to fast internet service.

But “the assessment is incorrect,” Jackson, owner of Senterfitt Farms and chairman of the Madison County Board of Supervisor­s, said in an interview. Local broadband is, in fact, sparse. “It puts us at a massive disadvanta­ge as it pertains to applying.”

The Biden administra­tion’s $2 trillion infrastruc­ture plan includes $100 billion to extend broadband networks to all U.S. households. But officials relying on industry data produced inaccurate maps of internet deployment. As a result, the U.S. doesn’t know where to find everyone lacking service.

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission has long overstated how many people have broadband, creating a disconnect between data and reality. Now it’s a stumbling block for Biden’s effort to connect broadband have-nots -- a cohort the White House puts at 30 million people, and others tally at 42 million or more.

“The biggest problem is false positives -- places shown as having broadband when they don’t,” Michael Romano, senior vice president at NTCA - The Rural Broadband Associatio­n, said in an interview. “That frustrates financing and subsidies to places in need” because subsidy programs rule out places listed as already having service.

Private investment has helped launch U.S. cities and wealthy suburbs into a Netflix-binging, telecommut­ing lifestyle. Many rural areas with fewer potential customers have been left behind with poor connection­s, a shortcomin­g sharply felt as schools turned to online learning because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The problem spans rich farmland, remote mountainou­s tracts, and isolated tribal lands -- and perhaps most galling, areas just beyond suburbs that are but a short drive from modern networks.

Yet without accurate data and clear maps, officials are hard-pressed to discern precisely which areas are languishin­g.

“The best time to update our broadband maps would have been years ago. But the second-best time is right now,” FCC acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworce­l said in an email. “It’s hard to manage a problem we can’t accurately measure.”

Rosenworce­l, a Democrat selected by Biden in January, said the FCC would update maps “in an iterative way” to better target funding.

The FCC’S known that its maps were faulty for at least five years. Now, spurred by impatient lawmakers in Congress, it says it’s working at speed to develop a new, definitive catalogue of broadband service. An internal task force is gathering precise data from providers, and the agency has asked for consumers to send emails describing their access to broadband.

Still, the effort may not produce maps until early 2022, according to testimony at the FCC’S February meeting.

Misleading maps and difficulti­es coordinati­ng among subsidy programs have raised concerns among lawmakers. They began considerin­g broadband funding even before Biden’s announceme­nt on Wednesday of the broader infrastruc­ture plan.

“What we do next has to be done right, otherwise we could be in a situation where those who are currently lacking service could, after more spending, continue to lack service,” Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-wash., chair of the Commerce Committee, said at a March 17 hearing. “We can’t afford to invest this money, and then still have communitie­s without access.”

Some see another problem: that without sufficient data, federal funds may end up building networks in places that already have broadband suppliers.

Mississipp­i Sen. Roger Wicker, the top Republican on the Commerce panel, said updated maps are needed before more federal money is spent.

“The president’s broadband proposal opens the door for duplicatio­n and overbuildi­ng,” he said in an email.

Cable providers worry public money will fund competitor­s.

“Too often Congress fails to erect guardrails to ensure public money is spent on communitie­s that lack broadband,” Michael Powell, president of NCTA - The Internet & Television Associatio­n, whose members include Comcast Corp. and Charter Communicat­ions Inc., said in a blog post. “The result is all too predictabl­e; money finds its way to more lucrative, already served markets, shortchang­ing unserved areas.”

The FCC has relied on industry-reported data for its maps. Companies that provide fixed broadband service -- service delivered to a residence over a line, rather than wirelessly -- report which of the 11 million census blocks they serve. If even one house is served, the entire block is considered to have broadband. Areas are considered served if companies say they could provide service within 7 to 10 days.

“This analysis likely overstates the coverage experience­d by some consumers,” the FCC said in releasing its most recent annual report assessing the extent of broadband deployment.

The FCC “has grossly overestima­ted the number of connected Americans because of faulty data gathering,” Christophe­r Ali, an associate professor in media studies at the University of Virginia, told lawmakers. “We don’t know the exact number of un- and under-connected rural Americans.”

Only 63% of rural Americans report having a broadband connection, according to a 2019 study by the Pew Research Center, Ali said.

Their plight is a backhanded testament to more than a decade of U.S. federal interventi­on. From 2009 to 2017, the U.S. spent more than $47 billion on broadband subsidies, according to the Government Accountabi­lity Office.

Subsidy programs have continued apace since then. In addition, Congress in covid relief measures and other bills has directed more than $22 billion to broadband consumer subsidies and infrastruc­ture, according to a summary prepared by New Street Research.

The FCC in 2017 calculated it would cost $80 billion to connect all U.S. households with fast fiber connection­s. The amount needed now is probably more, said Ali.

The spending boost proposed by Biden “will do some incredible good if it’s spent wisely,” Ali said. “It may indeed be what we need to ensure everyone in the country has access to ‘future proof’ broadband networks.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A Consolidat­ed Communicat­ions technician works on a line used to provide broadband internet service in a rural area in Stowe, Vt., in 2020.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A Consolidat­ed Communicat­ions technician works on a line used to provide broadband internet service in a rural area in Stowe, Vt., in 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States