Industry experts are hopeful the FCC will make several changes in a proceeding on draft rules for a proposed $200 million cybersecurity pilot program for schools and libraries (see 2405160076). While commissioners are expected to approve the order Thursday, officials said dissents are possible from Republican Commissioners Brendan Carr or Nathan Simington.
Vermont will adopt a connections-based contribution plan for the state's USF. Under the bill that Gov. Phil Scott (R) signed Monday, Vermont will assess 72 cents monthly per retail access line, including VoIP and postpaid wireless. Also, the new law adds the 988 mental health hotline to a list of what state USF may support and repeals Vermont taxes on telephone personal property and alternative telephone gross revenue. Before approving H-657 last month, legislators removed a proposed fee structure for communications facilities using state right of way (see 2405100017).
A coalition of industry groups on Friday challenged the FCC's net neutrality order and declaratory ruling reclassifying broadband as a Communications Act Title II telecom service (see 2405310074). The coalition asked the FCC to stay the effective date of its order and declaratory ruling pending judicial review. Coalition members included USTelecom, NCTA, CTIA, ACA Connects and several state broadband associations.
Comments on Wednesday by Diana Eisner, USTelecom vice president-policy and advocacy, that only 1.3% of ‘landline only’ Americans” use “expensive-to-maintain legacy copper networks" show the need for change, the Free State Foundation said Thursday on X, formerly Twitter. The group cited our report (see 2405290061). “It's wrong that, in such a radically changed market, @FCC is so slow to eliminate outdated regs!” FSF said. It would be “helpful to understand how much federal and state USF $$ is being expended to keep the copper going for the 1.3%, plus all the other households not using the copper for voice,” Lukas LaFuria’s David LaFuria responded.
Broadband access, equity and deployment program funding is flowing more slowly than expected and likely won’t start in mid-2025 as originally expected, Diana Eisner, USTelecom vice president-policy and advocacy, said during a Georgetown University Center for Business and Public Policy webcast Wednesday. Most of the money will start to flow in mid-2026 or later, she predicted. It could even be the second half of 2026, she said.
The Utah Public Service Commission should repay AT&T for the carrier's error of assessing a higher Utah Universal Service Fund (UUSF) surcharge than the PSC required for two years, AT&T officials said during testimony Friday. AT&T seeks recovery of overpayment to the Utah USF from July 2021 to June 2023 totaling $2.26 million, AT&T tax directors Jannet Tolley and Randy Phoenix testified in docket 24-087-02. The mistake occurred because AT&T failed to fully implement a July 2021 drop in the UUSF surcharge to 36 cents from 54 cents previously. AT&T properly entered the change in its systems for only AT&T affiliates but not the company itself, which uses a different billing system, Tolley testified. "The excess collection and remittances were the result of an inadvertent administrative error. The Company did not benefit from the error as the excess collections for July 2021 through June 2023 were not retained but were remitted to the UUSF each month.” Customers weren’t harmed because AT&T quickly provided credits after learning about the error in July 2023, Tolley said. AT&T has enhanced its billing system with automation features to prevent the problem from recurring, she said. AT&T overpayment to UUSF might mean a 38% increase to the surcharge will be needed, the PSC said in April (see 2404160023).
FCC commissioners approved 5-0 an NPRM Thursday that proposes barring test labs from entities on the agency’s “covered list” of unsecure companies from participating in the equipment authorization process. In addition, the FCC clamped down on political robocall violations. Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, working with Commissioner Brendan Carr, proposed the lab rules (see 2405020071).
Consumers' Research defended its position Tuesday to the U.S. Supreme Court that Congress and the FCC violated the nondelegation doctrine through the Universal Service Fund contributions mechanism (see 2405070042).
Incompas supports the FCC’s proposed 5G Fund but agrees with others who argue the agency should wait on making awards until after funding is released for the broadband access, equity and deployment program, a filing posted Friday in docket 20-32 said. FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel circulated an order on the fund in March (see 2403200071). Allowing NTIA to complete the BEAD allocation “will give the Commission a better understanding of where gaps in wireless 5G service exist and will help ensure that funding efforts are not duplicated and that USF funding will reach the areas where there is still a funding need,” Incompas said.
Liberty Communications of Puerto Rico told the FCC it's still working with the Universal Service Administrative Co. to "complete the steps necessary to engage in pre-testing performance measures" for USF Bringing Puerto Rico Together Fund Stage 2 recipients (see 2304190063). In a letter Friday (docket 18-143), Liberty said it "continues to have technical difficulties with accessing and uploading data" to USAC's performance measures module and can't begin pretesting for Q2 2024.