The FCC is focused on efforts to build a smart power grid, Commissioner Geoffrey Starks told the 2023 Clean Energy Transition Conference, according to text of the speech in Wednesday’s Daily Digest. Smart grids “show a clear path to tap into more renewable sources, strengthen our resilience in the wake of more frequent and more severe natural disasters, squeeze power routing efficiencies, and lower consumer costs on their utility bills,” he said. Starks highlighted a USF program push to connect more than 700,000 unserved rural locations with high-speed fixed broadband. “We’re also helping every community in America migrate to mobile 5G by increasing access to spectrum, accelerating deployment and supporting rural buildout through initiatives like our 5G Fund,” he said: “This is about much more than gaming and movies.”
The FCC's USF funding mechanism "violates the original understanding of the nondelegation doctrine, the modern intelligible-principle doctrine, and the private nondelegation doctrine" (see 2310060069), Consumers' Research told the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in a reply brief Thursday (docket 23-1091). The court should "make clear that Congress cannot delegate such power, let alone to a private entity," the group said.
Lumen won an approximately $110 million contract over a five-year performance period extending an existing network services contract with the Defense Information Systems Agency, the company said Tuesday. Lumen will "operate and maintain DISA's fiber backbone" and provide more than 11,000 fiber miles, per a news release.
The FCC draft digital discrimination order’s definition of “economic feasibility” and Public Knowledge’s proposed clarification for it are both bad for America, said the Free State Foundation in an ex parte filing Monday in docket 22-69. The draft item defines economic feasibility “in a way that will induce, if not require,” the agency to “conduct old-fashioned public utility style rate cases,” said the FSF filing. Under the clarification PK proposed last week, when determining if a policy is economically feasible, the agency wouldn’t look at the rate of return in only the area where discrimination was taking place but also at the expected rate of return for similarly situated areas that aren’t low income. “Because rates of return are lower for low-income areas, ISPs generally underinvest in these communities or avoid them completely,” PK said. That change would “render the task of evaluating ‘economic feasibility’ even less practically implementable” than the draft order’s proposal, FSF said. “The draft’s approach to defining the ‘economic feasibility’ standard is misguided. PK’s suggested “clarification” is doubly misguided,” said the FSF filing.
The FCC is “beleaguered” and “browbeaten by Congress,” and proposed rule changes on net neutrality and digital discrimination will marginalize the agency, said former agency senior aide Adonis Hoffman Monday in an opinion column that appeared in The Hill and was published on The Media Institute's website. Hoffman, CEO of consulting firm The Advisory Counsel, is a former aide to then-FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn. The FCC is criticized by consumers, and “pilloried in the press,” despite doing “amazing work," wrote Hoffman. Whether its woes are due to lack of leadership, errant enforcement or partisan politics is hard to say.” The agency will “more than likely” lose a court challenge against its net neutrality proposals, Hoffman said. The FCC would also lose legal challenges to a digital discrimination order, he said. “Signs are that the Commission is posturing to adopt a standard different from what other federal agencies have already adopted. If so, the agency’s ruling could once again be overturned by a federal appeals court.”
The USF contribution factor will likely increase to 35.4% during Q1 2024, emailed analyst Billy Jack Gregg Friday. Gregg noted that the USF contribution base for all of 2023 was $34.2 billion, the "lowest annual revenues in the history of the USF." The contribution factor could be even greater should quarterly revenues continue to decline, he added.
The FCC and Department of Health and Human Services will host a joint roundtable Nov. 17 on the intersection of broadband and maternal health. The event, beginning at 10:30 a.m. at the FCC's headquarters, will include a discussion on the role of broadband as a social determinant of health and how to improve maternal health outcomes, per a public notice Thursday in docket 23-309. The roundtable will also be livestreamed.
The FCC wants comments by Dec. 1, replies by Dec. 18, in docket 22-270 on a notice of inquiry kicking off the agency's evaluation of the state of broadband and setting higher broadband speed benchmarks (see 2307250068). "To get big things done, it is essential to set big goals," said Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel: "That is why we are kicking off this inquiry to update our national broadband standard and also set a long-term goal for gigabit speeds." Commssioners Brendan Carr and Nathan Simington approved and concurred in part the order, which was adopted Oct. 25 and released Wednesday. "As a policy matter, it makes sense that Congress would task the commission with this type of progress-based inquiry," Carr said, adding he was glad to see the item "takes a more holistic approach to the question of setting broadband speed metrics and other benchmarks" following the addition of language he sought. Simington shared Carr's concerns about "the misframing of our inquiry."
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied a joint motion from the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society, Center for Media Justice and National Digital Inclusion Alliance to intervene on behalf of the FCC in Consumers' Research's new challenge of the USF Q4 2023 contribution factor (see 2310030069). An order posted Monday in case 23-60525 was denied "without prejudice" should the groups want to file amicus curiae.
Tive received conditional certification to be compensated through the Telecom Relay Service Fund for providing video relay service, per an FCC Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau public notice Friday in docket 10-51. Tive also received a 60-day waiver regarding "documentary and other evidence demonstrating that the applicant leases, licenses, or has acquired its own facilities for VRS call centers."