Saturday, October 29, 2011

FCC OKs $4.5 Billion Annually for Rural Broadband

The Federal Communications Commission has approved the creation of a new Connect America Fund for extending the nation's communications infrastructure to reach millions of Americans currently without access Relevant Products/Services to broadband services. The new program's annual investment of $4.5 billion over the next six years will be drawn from funds already being collected under existing regulations, the FCC said.

For example, the FCC intends to redirect the Universal Service Fund (USF) introduced in 1997 to ensure that Americans had universal access to voice Relevant Products/Services communications. As of early 2011, USF fees were equivalent to 15.5 percent of each U.S. telecom company's interstate and end-user revenues.

Given that USF has long since succeeded in fostering the availability of voice services across the U.S., the FCC is shifting the nation's universal connectivity commitment to broadband, said FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski.

"We are taking a system designed for the Alexander Graham Bell era of rotary telephones and modernizing it for the era of Steve Jobs and the Internet future he imagined," Genachowski said.

Financial Incentives For Carriers

The FCC aims to provide the nation's broadband service providers with the requisite financial incentives for extending their infrastructures to accommodate the needs of 7 million rural Americans without broadband access today. However, participating carriers must demonstrate they are deploying a full range of broadband capabilities to currently unserved customers.

For example, the new Connect America Fund benchmarks require service operators to deliver actual broadband speeds of at least 4 megabits per second downstream and 1 Mbps upstream. Furthermore, the monthly usage capacity available to consumers must be reasonably comparable to the services delivered to residential terrestrial fixed broadband networks in urban areas. In addition, the network Relevant Products/Services's latency performance must be able to support real-time applications and services such as VoIP Relevant Products/Services.

The availability of high-speed broadband within currently unserved parts of the nation is expected to lead to the creation of 500,000 new jobs over the next six years.

"We estimate that the [new initiative] as a whole will unleash billions in private-sector broadband infrastructure spending in rural America over the next decade," Genachowski said.

A New Mobility Fund

Another important aim of the FCC's new plan is to empower small businesses that otherwise couldn't exist in the small towns scattered throughout rural America, and as a result to create additional job opportunities within their communities. (continued...)

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