Government Spending Billions To Expand Broadband but Can't Tell Who Needs It
The Federal Communications Commission uses broadband coverage maps that are so severely flawed, states started shelling out to make their own.

In November 2021, Congress passed and President Joe Biden signed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), a $1.2 trillion grab bag of public spending wish list items. One of those projects, the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program, would expand broadband access to communities that currently lack access to high-speed internet. BEAD would dole out $42.45 billion in state grants, and the Government Accountability Office estimated that the projects could require as many as 23,000 additional telecom workers to complete.
The only problem is that the government currently has no idea where broadband actually is and is not available.
The government defines broadband as any high-speed internet connection that is always on without needing to dial up. According to the text of the IIJA, "Access to affordable, reliable, high-speed broadband is essential to full participation in modern life in the United States," especially in an era of remote work and Zoom schooling. As such, the law set out to bridge the so-called "digital divide" wherein some rural and low-income communities do not have easy broadband access.
To determine what areas need investment, the government relies on maps from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). But despite costing $350 million, the FCC's maps are notoriously unreliable and have been for many years. In 2021, The Washington Post noted the maps are based on census data, so "if even one household in a census block—a statistical area that conveys population data—has broadband available, then the agency considers the entire group served. In rural areas, one block could cover dozens of square miles." The FCC's maps also don't take into account physical impediments, like trees and mountains, which can disrupt wireless signals.
As Karl Bode noted this week at Techdirt, the FCC's maps were so unreliable that multiple states took it upon themselves to draw up their own. Vermont determined that more than 18 percent of its residents lack broadband access, while the FCC's newly redrawn maps put Vermont's shortfall at only 3 percent.
Now, with more than $40 billion in state grants on the line, states are scrambling to challenge the new maps, which cost the FCC nearly $45 million in addition to the $350 million previously spent. Of course, the best option would be for the federal government to not have spent those billions in the first place and let states address their own needs: Before the passage of the infrastructure bill, Georgia not only made its own maps but partnered with Windstream to jointly spend $300 million expanding high-speed fiber internet access in the state.
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"broadband for those who need it" is not the point of this spending.
Hope this helps.
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Two years ago they replaced our DSL (max 3MB) with fiber (max 100MB) and the lowest speeds they even offered on fiber were 25MB, but existing customers not willing to pay far more for the higher speeds were throttled to 3MB. This year I saw that they were dropping prices dramatically, now 50Mb cost what I was paying for 3MB, but of course they didn't just take me to 50, if I hadn't noticed and called them I'd still be paying more for 3MB than they sold 50MB for. I think so many people just stuck with the 3MB that it was causing problems throttling customers to below the lowest speed they even offered so they had to decrease the prices just to get people to buy the speeds they offered.
My local NPR station was enlisting listeners to correct the FCC map, but only if it wrongly identified their area as connected. There was no concern if an area was wrongly deemed unconnected. I thought I smelled a federal subsidy.
Government spending money to subsidize broadband based on information crowd-sourced at the direction of government-funded radio stations is the most government thing ever.
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Of course, the best option would be for the federal government to not have spent those billions in the first place and let
statespeople address their own needs:I'm trying to help you guys. this is a libertarian magazine after all.
Having state governments meddle in broadband markets is NOT the "best" option.
Yeah, but broadband companies have decided they won't bother with rural customers
Why should they?
Hey, if people want to live in the boondocks, that's their choice. But just like every other choice in life, there are both benefits and costs, and it's up to each person to decide whether the benefits outweigh the cost. If someone thinks the pleasures of rural living outweigh the cost of expensive or unavailable broadband, more power to them. That doesn't mean that other people should be expected to subsidize their choices.
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Starlink already solved this problem.
Only if you are rich. It's like $1000 for the equipment and $120 a month and there is a several year waiting list.
Well i guess we need the federal gov to build broadband then.. (sigh).
No, it’s $599 and $110/ month.
and you don't need to be rich to get starlink. what a stupid thing to say. the "poor" in the country all have iphones.
To be fair the federal subsidies probably come out to about 1 million per user connected. Probably.
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The libertarian complaint is that the FCC underestimates the amount of money it should spend on providing broadband?
"The only problem is that the government currently has no idea where broadband actually is and is not available."
Which is the only reason required to spend over $42 billion on it. I hear from some of my friends that finding "high-quality dog food" can be very tricky to locate in remote areas.... how many billions should the feds throw at that?
Don't give them ideas.
I would say that the government went to the dogs a long time ago, excepting that that would probably be an improvement over what we have today.
Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program
For equity's sake, just pass a law capping internet download speeds at 54 kbps. Easier, faster, cheaper, everybody's equal! That's how equity works, isn't it? Plus, as a bonus, it kills the e-commerce crap that's so unfair to brick-and-mortar retailers, kills apps such as Uber and Doordash, wipes out internet porn and TikTok, and returns kids to the good old days of playing platform-based video games.
Or just pass a law requiring everyone to have broadband access. Impose the death penalty on heads of households who don't have it by a certain deadline.
Why pass a law when you have a pen and a phone? Just do it by Executive Order/Fiat.
We don't even have a sitting Congress right now!
We don’t even have a sitting Congress right now!
And yet life goes on.
What happened to all the chairs?
Pretty sure there was porn back when I was on dial-up. It took a lot longer, but never underestimate people's desire to fap.
Remember that day the Constitution was amended to put Federal in charge of running an internet connectivity business?
Yea; Me neither....
F'En National Sozialists(syn; Nazi's).
I remember when we used to ask if the constitution allowed things.
Can we just go back to the technical meaning where "broadband" is simply the name for the technology where you use multiple radio frequencies over one wire, versus single-frequency "baseband"?
stop quoting the leftist website techdirt.
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