The FCC Enforcement Bureau has reached a $287,820 settlement with Frontier Communications over the company's submission of inaccurate information during the Broadband Data Collection challenge process, said an order and consent decree in Wednesday’s Daily Digest. The carrier didn’t amend a submission to the FCC that accurately reflected a response to Frontier's broadband data submissions from the Wisconsin Public Service commission, said the consent decree. Along with the forfeiture, the decree requires Frontier to create a compliance training program and file regular reports with the FCC for two years.
Lumen launched a low-cost fiber broadband plan, Simply Fiber. The plan offers up to 200 Mbps speeds for $30 a month, Lumen said Tuesday, with eligibility based on participation in various government assistance programs. The company said the offering is available in its Quantum Fiber markets in 11 states.
The FCC Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau on Tuesday sought comment on changes to the telecommunications relay services that accessibility advocacy groups proposed in an August white paper. Comments are due Jan. 17, replies Feb. 18, in docket 03-123. The paper cites the “compelling need for Federal and state policymakers to proactively adapt TRS obligations and programs to reflect the evolution of the country’s analog telecommunications networks to IP-based networks.” TDIAccess, the National Association for State Relay Administration, Gallaudet University and Telecommunications Access of Maryland submitted the paper. According to the paper, “the transition to IP-based networks has caused substantial changes to the use of and demand for analog TRS, rendering some analog TRS obsolete for many uses, while such services continue to be the solutions of choice for parts of the affected community,” the bureau said: The groups assert that “alternative services need to be made available because ‘the transition from traditional analog communication systems to more advanced digital and IP-based networks is accelerating.’”
Investment in and spending on subsea fiber optic cable systems is expected to be robust at least through 2029, Analysys Mason said Friday. The submarine cable market -- including new system investment current maintenance -- is expected to grow from $8 billion in 2023 to $9.8 billion in 2029. It said trans-Pacific and trans-Asia-Pacific routes will account for the bulk of deployed cable between 2024 and 2029.
Public Knowledge supported an AT&T request to discontinue, effective Sept. 15, residential local service in nine wire centers in Oklahoma “where there is virtually no demand for the service.” The FCC Wireline Bureau sought comment on the application, due Thursday in docket 24-220. PK was the first to file. The group’s “sole addendum is to request that AT&T make regular reports in this docket as to the progress of the transition,” said a filing Monday. “This will assist the Commission and the public to monitor the progress of the transition, and provide other incumbent local exchange carriers with a guide to conducting their own transitions.” AT&T said last month it grandfathered the service in 60 wire centers in 13 states, with FCC approval. The local service is “outdated and prohibitively expensive for AT&T to maintain,” AT&T said: Discontinuing it “will benefit the public and serve as an important step toward meeting both AT&T’s and the Commission’s goals of advancing the IP revolution.”
Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) support recipients must notify the FCC Wireline Bureau if they can’t meet the program’s third-year service milestone, said a reminder public notice posted Monday. The milestone requires “building out to at least 40% of each support recipient’s RDOF locations,” the PN said. The bureau must be notified by the carrier’s third-year service milestone deadline, which is Jan. 15 for carriers authorized in 2021 and Jan. 15, 2026, for those authorized in 2022, the PN said. “An RDOF support recipient that does not meet its third-year service milestone shall be subject to quarterly reporting and have its support withheld if warranted in accordance with the Commission’s rules,” the PN said. The bureau announced a host of RDOF defaults last week (see 2411270049).
The FCC Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau on Wednesday asked for comment in 30 days on a petition for rulemaking by Fine Point Technologies seeking standardized broadband speed testing protocols. “This proposal is aimed at ensuring consistent, reliable, and equitable speed testing for broadband users, regardless of the specific hardware or proprietary technology implemented by individual manufacturers,” said a company filing. “Proprietary testing protocols tied to specific [equipment] manufacturers can create discrepancies that misrepresent actual user experiences, potentially leading to misinformation or unmet expectations,” Fine Point said. Comments should be filed in RM-11991.
The FCC Wireline Bureau approved a waiver for Indiana’s Rural Telephone Corp. (RTC) of the FCC’s Rural Digital Opportunity Fund milestone and noncompliance rules to permit it to pay early a portion of the required support recovery for defaulting on eligible census blocks within census block groups (CBGs) in its RDOF-funded service area. “Our grant of this limited waiver serves the public interest because we are able to safeguard the public’s funds by recovering support early for CBGs RTC will not serve pursuant to its RDOF obligations,” said an order posted Wednesday in docket 10-90. The waiver also “enables RTC to come into compliance with its RDOF obligations in its remaining CBGs, allowing RTC to continue receiving support, so that RTC can serve consumers with voice and broadband,” the bureau said.
The FCC’s Wireline Bureau in a public notice Wednesday formally announced a host of Rural Digital Opportunity Fund defaults and said the defaulting companies will face RDOF penalties and, for one of them, possible enforcement action. The defaults -- by Mercury Wireless, PVT Networks, Cable One, Sparklight and Fidelity Cablevision -- were previously announced by the companies in letters to the Wireline Bureau, and encompass census block groups (CBGs) in Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri and New Mexico, the PN said. Mercury's defaults are being referred to the Enforcement Bureau “for further consideration,” the PN said. Mercury is defaulting on 9,082 model-estimated locations in Indiana out of the 13,529 it agreed to serve, and 55,175 of 77,925 locations in Michigan, the PN said. It also defaulted on all 8,398 locations it agreed to serve in Illinois, all 29 locations in Kansas and all 5,023 locations in Missouri. “We expect carriers to live up to their deployment commitments, and those who fail to meet their obligations can jeopardize the opportunity to bring broadband to the promised areas and undermine the integrity of the programs,” said the PN. “Such defaults are particularly regrettable when the carrier waits years after authorization to default, making it difficult to correct the problem and otherwise accommodate the defaulted areas in other deployment programs.” Many funding programs make areas ineligible for broadband deployment funding where a provider is already under an enforceable commitment to serve, the PN said. Formally announcing the defaults and informing other governmental entities “avoids leaving these areas unserved for the duration of the RDOF deployment terms because providers may now have access to alternative funding to serve these areas,” the PN said. “This was a very difficult decision for Mercury to make, as we continually strive to deploy highspeed broadband throughout rural America,” the company said in a letter Monday informing the FCC about some of the Michigan defaults. “Factors outside of the company’s control, including rising costs and competitive encroachment, have rendered deployment to many RDOF CBGs economically unviable and ultimately unachievable,” it added.
The FCC’s extension for up to six years of its freeze on federal-state jurisdictional separations of telecom costs and revenue for rate-of-return incumbent local exchange carriers (see 2411130043) is now effective, said a notice in Monday’s Federal Register. The FCC referred to the Federal-State Joint Board on Jurisdictional Separations the issue of whether to permanently freeze the rules and whether carriers still using separations should be allowed to unfreeze their category relationship every few years.