Senate Passes Broadband Data Act; Commerce GOP Urges 'Accurate' Maps on 5G Funding
The Senate approved Tuesday the House-passed version of the Broadband Deployment Accuracy and Technological Availability Act (S-1822) by unanimous consent. Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and seven other committee Republicans are meanwhile calling for the FCC to distribute…
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money from its proposed 5G Fund based on accurate broadband coverage data. The FCC has been considering what to ask in its coming NPRM to set up the new $9 billion USF program, which replaces Mobility Fund Phase II (see 2002130020). Senate passage of the House-altered S-1822 sends the measure on to President Donald Trump, who’s expected to sign it. The House last week amended S-1822 to included language from its House-passed companion (HR-4229), which was expanded into a larger broadband mapping legislative package (see 2003030064). S-1822 now also includes language from the House-passed Mapping Accuracy Promotes Services Act (HR-4227), which would bar companies from knowingly giving the FCC inaccurate broadband coverage data. “Flawed broadband maps are a huge problem for rural and underserved communities, including many in Mississippi,” Wicker said. “I expect the FCC and other federal agencies to use these new maps when awarding funding.” Unless "appropriately targeted," the 5G Fund "risks deepening the digital divide,” Wicker and the other senators wrote FCC Chairman Ajit Pai in a letter released Tuesday. The other GOP senators signing were: Communications Subcommittee Chairman John Thune of South Dakota; Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee; Roy Blunt of Missouri; Deb Fischer of Nebraska; Ron Johnson of Wisconsin; Jerry Moran of Kansas; and Todd Young of Indiana. The senators noted they had repeatedly criticized MF-II. Wicker was on the verge of seeking an amendment to FY 2019 federal spending legislation that would force the FCC to revisit its MF-II maps before the FCC decided to investigate if top wireless carriers submitted incorrect coverage maps in violation of program rules (see 1812100056). “Although this program appears to focus on forward looking technologies that preserve and expand service in areas that otherwise may not be economical to serve, our concerns remain with regards to reliable underlying coverage data that is used to determine funding eligibility,” the senators said. The agency didn’t comment.