Free Press: FCC used ‘flawed data’ in broadband plan

Turner said the FCC should be asking Internet service providers to define their service territories when it collects broadband data twice a year.

“Had the FCC acted in 2008 to start collecting that data, we may not have had to run the broadband stimulus programs in the dark like we did,” he said.

Lawmakers from both sides of the aisle appeared frustrated that the data may not be true representations of the state of broadband in America, especially after a $20 million plan that took nearly a year to complete.

Subcommittee Chairman Rick Boucher (D-Va.) said it seems the broadband plan’s numbers are overly “optimistic.”

Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), said “We should have gone about our mapping processes first and then we should have issued our definitions of unserved and underserved were going to be.”

Turner compared the availability of broadband in rural areas to a grocery store on a mountain. A road through the forest technically would allow trucks to deliver bread to the store, but that doesn’t mean bread distributors have made deliveries.

“If there’s no bread on the shelves, shoppers don’t much care that the bread could have been there,” he said. “It’s the same for broadband.”

The FCC wants to reform an $8 billion universal service fund to get broadband service to rural areas, because it largely does not make business sense for the private sector to run costly fiber lines to sparsely populated areas.

Turner said the FCC’s current, inaccurate data may “confound efforts to bring true high-quality services to every corner of the Union.”

Tags Marsha Blackburn

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