Congress should renew the affordable connectivity program (ACP) and protect local authority in the right of way (ROW), mayors attending the U.S. Conference of Mayors conference said Sunday. City leaders adopted resolutions on ACP, ROW compensation and opposing the American Broadband Act (HR-3557), which is a package of GOP-led connectivity permitting revamp measures (see 2311060069). The conference adopted the resolutions as part of a unanimous consent agenda Sunday after the Technology and Innovation Committee approved them unanimously Friday. ACP “has been one of the most effective broadband benefit programs to date with its direct-to-consumer model to enroll low-income households and help ensure they can afford the internet connections they need for work, school [and] healthcare,” the first resolution said: The conference urges Congress to renew and extend ACP this year “to ensure eligible households have access to affordable high-speed internet.” The second resolution on local compensation noted that some members of the FCC, Congress and state legislatures “have wrongly characterized this balancing act among competing interests for the public rights-of-way and maintenance of local authority as a barrier to broadband deployment, putting the interests of national corporations ahead of the needs of communities by effectively granting those corporations subsidized access to local public rights-of-way that do not belong to the federal or state government.” Congress should pass a bill amending the Cable Act’s franchise fee section to correct the FCC and the 6th U.S. Circuit of Appeals misreading of the act “and make clear that no other provision of the Cable Act limits or preempts state or local fees or taxes on cable operators or on the non-cable services they provide,” it said. Also, Congress should approve the Protecting Community Television Act (HR-907 and S-340) “to make clear that the cost of non-monetary franchise obligations do not constitute a ‘franchise fee’ under the Cable Act,” the resolution said. And the FCC should act soon on a related remand from the 6th Circuit that has been waiting for action for more than two years, it said. The third resolution urged that Congress drop HR-3557, which “would bestow on broadband providers an unprecedented federal grant of access to state and local public property but impose no obligations on those providers to serve ‘unserved’ and ‘underserved’ Americans.”
The Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials opposed an ATIS petition for reconsideration or clarification of the agency’s January outage reporting order (see 2406120043). Oppositions were due Monday. The ATIS petition is confusing, APCO said in a filing posted Monday in docket 21-346. ATIS asked the FCC to clarify the application of its waiver of network outage reporting system filings during disaster information reporting system activations. “If ATIS’s request is to excuse service providers from their obligation to provide timely notifications” to 911 call centers “of network outages and disruptions affecting 9-1-1 calls, APCO opposes the request,” the filing said.
USDA Rural Utilities Service wants applications by Aug. 20 for its FY 2024 broadband technical assistance program, a notice for Friday's Federal Register said. "Late or incomplete applications will not be eligible for funding," the notice said.
The FCC asked the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to dismiss Consumers' Research's challenge of the agency's USF contributions methodology. Consumers' Research "made the same arguments before the Sixth and Eleventh Circuits," the agency said in a petition filed Monday (docket 22-60008), adding the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the decisions (see 2406110008). "Those decisions are thus final and not subject to further review," the FCC said, and "petitioners are precluded from raising the same claims here." Also, Consumers' Research filed a motion for the D.C. Circuit for a voluntary dismissal regarding one of its challenges to the USF contribution factor.
The FCC wants comments by July 17, replies Aug. 1, on a Further NPRM addressing border gateway protocol security practices in docket 24-146, a notice for Monday's Federal Register said. Commissioners adopted the FNPRM during the agency's June meeting (see 2406060028).
FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez will host a listening session about incarcerated people's communications services on June 18 in Phoenix, a public notice said Wednesday in docket 23-62. Gomez will meet with current and former IPCS consumers for "first-hand accounts of the critical importance of affordable communications services to incarcerated people." The listening session will also offer "additional public comment regarding the commission's ongoing efforts" to establish new IPCS rates and charges. The event will take place from 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the Arizona State University Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law.
The USF contribution factor for Q3 2024 will be 34.4%, an FCC Office of Managing Director public notice said Wednesday in docket 96-45. That's an increase from 32.8% in Q2 (see 2403150004).
The FCC Public Safety Bureau sought comment on Wednesday on an ATIS petition for reconsideration of the agency’s January outage reporting order (see 2401250064). Comments are due June 24, replies July 5, in docket 24-341. ATIS sought clarification of the decision codifying the FCC practice of waiving network outage reporting system filings that would be due while the disaster information reporting system is activated. ATIS also sought clarification and reconsideration of the order’s requirements on submitting a final DIRS report. ATIS urged “reconsideration of the requirement that final reports include the estimated dates by which all issues will be resolved” given that “it may not be possible for providers to accurately determine such information within the 24-hour window provided.”
The "cascading levels of responsibility built into" NTIA's broadband, equity, access and deployment program "open multiple doors through which devilish details ... might slip and cause havoc," Free State Foundation Senior Fellow Andrew Long wrote in a blog Monday. Long warned of potential rate regulation, a bias for fiber technology and "other elements of the Biden Broadband Plan" that weren't included in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (see 2405310050). The "multitiered process" creates "numerous opportunities for motivated mischief-makers to inject their policy biases ... into the day-to-day administration" of BEAD, Long said. All 56 eligible states and territories have submitted initial BEAD proposals and received approval for volume I.
The FCC’s rechartered Communications Security, Reliability and Interoperability Council will meet for the first time June 28, the FCC announced Monday. FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said Billy Bob Brown from the Department of Homeland Security's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and Todd Piett of Motorola will serve as co-chairs. It will have three working groups: Harnessing AI/Machine Learning to Ensure the Security, Reliability and Integrity of the Nation’s Communications Networks; Ensuring Consumer Access to 911 on All Available Networks as Technology Evolves; and Preparing for 6G Security and Reliability. The group last met a year ago (see 2306260058).