WASHINGTON — The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has launched an interactive map to encourage individuals and families to self-report on their broadband connectivity. The site also includes a bulk challenges page where Tribal governments can comment on broadband connectivity on Tribal lands.
The data will be utilized to allocate funding for the National Telecommunications and Information Administration’s Broadband Equity, Access and Development (BEAD) program.
More than half of Indian Country remains offline or underserved, thanks to poor connectivity in rural areas and a fiber backbone that avoids many tribal reservations, per prior Tribal Business News reporting. Part of the problem lies in incorrect data: the FCC census has routinely overstated the level of service in many rural communities — in particular tribal communities, according to Matthew Gregg, a senior economist at Minneapolis-based Center for Indian Country Development.
“The main reason is that internet service providers could claim that a location is completely served if the ISP provided internet to at least one household within a given location or if the ISP could serve that location soon,” Gregg told Tribal Business News. “The new FCC broadband map is meant to address these inaccuracies.”
Tribal or other officials who want to make bulk challenges and individual households are encouraged to visit the new National Broadband Map website and report connectivity issues or a lack of service, according to an FCC statement.
The FCC’s updated census comes after years of reflection and questions about tribal connectivity. COVID-19 has thrown the issue of Indian Country’s connectivity into sharp relief as communities suddenly in need of telehealth and distance learning services could not consistently connect to video calls or access online classes.
Federal responses to the increased need have included spectrum auctions, technical assistance and an unprecedented flood of funding for infrastructure and adoption programs. As a result, good data becomes a crucial component in determining grants and support for a given initiative, Gregg said.
The BEAD program, for example, aims to direct $42.5 billion in total at the broadband problem, distributed to — and eventually through — state governments. Since tribes can access that funding through partnerships with their surrounding states, good data can funnel more of that pot to those most in need of it, Gregg said.
“More accurate data will lead to a more efficient allocation of BEAD dollars,” Gregg said. “States with more unserved locations will receive more BEAD funding.”
In addition to this year’s allocation of BEAD funding, the Tribal Broadband Connectivity Program is nearing the end of its initial $1.98 billion pot of funding — though that amount falls well short of the initial $5 billion requested during the program’s first application period.
The National Telecommunications and Information Administration has promised a second funding opportunity of another $1 billion will arrive soon, according to recent statements, but has not specified when applications for that opportunity will begin.
Good data will play a role in where that money goes, according to prior Tribal Business News reports, as industry experts and tribal leaders continue discussing their needs with federal supporters.
A January 2022 story in Tribal Business News points to a Senate hearing on the issue, during which Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) said the FCC’s most recent data was “worse than nothing” since it pointed support efforts in the wrong direction.
“If we had nothing, we could use our intuition. Instead, we have actual bad data, which leads policymakers at the legislative level to engage in magical thinking about who has broadband connectivity and who doesn’t,” Schatz said. “It has to do with how the corporations want to count connectivity. It’s having an army of really well-educated individuals who work as hard as they can to remove their common sense when they’re trying to analyze whether people have connectivity to the internet.”
Lack of connectivity has been an ongoing problem throughout Indian Country as a result of issues such as digital redlining. Even when Natives can get online, they often pay more for the privilege and for less speed than their urban counterparts.
This story was originally published by Native News Online.
WASHINGTON — The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has launched an interactive map to encourage individuals and families to self-report on their broadband connectivity. The site also includes a bulk challenges page where Tribal governments can comment on broadband connectivity on Tribal lands.
The data will be utilized to allocate funding for the National Telecommunications and Information Administration’s Broadband Equity, Access and Development (BEAD) program.
More than half of Indian Country remains offline or underserved, thanks to poor connectivity in rural areas and a fiber backbone that avoids many tribal reservations, per prior Tribal Business News reporting. Part of the problem lies in incorrect data: the FCC census has routinely overstated the level of service in many rural communities — in particular tribal communities, according to Matthew Gregg, a senior economist at Minneapolis-based Center for Indian Country Development.
“The main reason is that internet service providers could claim that a location is completely served if the ISP provided internet to at least one household within a given location or if the ISP could serve that location soon,” Gregg told Tribal Business News. “The new FCC broadband map is meant to address these inaccuracies.”
Tribal or other officials who want to make bulk challenges and individual households are encouraged to visit the new National Broadband Map website and report connectivity issues or a lack of service, according to an FCC statement.
The FCC’s updated census comes after years of reflection and questions about tribal connectivity. COVID-19 has thrown the issue of Indian Country’s connectivity into sharp relief as communities suddenly in need of telehealth and distance learning services could not consistently connect to video calls or access online classes.
Federal responses to the increased need have included spectrum auctions, technical assistance and an unprecedented flood of funding for infrastructure and adoption programs. As a result, good data becomes a crucial component in determining grants and support for a given initiative, Gregg said.
The BEAD program, for example, aims to direct $42.5 billion in total at the broadband problem, distributed to — and eventually through — state governments. Since tribes can access that funding through partnerships with their surrounding states, good data can funnel more of that pot to those most in need of it, Gregg said.
“More accurate data will lead to a more efficient allocation of BEAD dollars,” Gregg said. “States with more unserved locations will receive more BEAD funding.”
In addition to this year’s allocation of BEAD funding, the Tribal Broadband Connectivity Program is nearing the end of its initial $1.98 billion pot of funding — though that amount falls well short of the initial $5 billion requested during the program’s first application period.
The National Telecommunications and Information Administration has promised a second funding opportunity of another $1 billion will arrive soon, according to recent statements, but has not specified when applications for that opportunity will begin.
Good data will play a role in where that money goes, according to prior Tribal Business News reports, as industry experts and tribal leaders continue discussing their needs with federal supporters.
A January 2022 story in Tribal Business News points to a Senate hearing on the issue, during which Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) said the FCC’s most recent data was “worse than nothing” since it pointed support efforts in the wrong direction.
“If we had nothing, we could use our intuition. Instead, we have actual bad data, which leads policymakers at the legislative level to engage in magical thinking about who has broadband connectivity and who doesn’t,” Schatz said. “It has to do with how the corporations want to count connectivity. It’s having an army of really well-educated individuals who work as hard as they can to remove their common sense when they’re trying to analyze whether people have connectivity to the internet.”
Lack of connectivity has been an ongoing problem throughout Indian Country as a result of issues such as digital redlining. Even when Natives can get online, they often pay more for the privilege and for less speed than their urban counterparts.
This story was originally published by Native News Online.