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    Phone companies present rural broadband plan

    WASHINGTON (AP) — AT&T Inc., Verizon Communications Inc. and four other telecom companies are offering a proposal to overhaul the $8 billion federal phone subsidy program to pay for high-speed Internet connections in rural and other underserved areas.

    They say the plan, which was filed with the Federal Communications Commission Friday, would bring broadband service to nearly all Americans within five years.

    The proposal is one of dozens that the FCC will likely receive as it seeks to bring the federal program, called the Universal Service Fund, into the digital age. The agency voted unanimously in February to begin drafting a blueprint to modernize the fund.

    But the new plan is particularly significant since it has the backing of six key telecommunications companies that are some of the biggest recipients of Universal Service dollars. In addition to AT&T and Verizon, the nation's two largest phone companies, the plan is supported by CenturyLink Inc., Fairpoint Communications Inc., Frontier Communications Corp. and Windstream Corp.

    "To truly bring broadband services to all Americans, the rules of the road for the black rotary phone desperately needed to be updated for today's competitive, high-speed communications networks," said Hank Hultquist, vice president of federal regulatory at AT&T.

    The Universal Service Fund was created to ensure that all Americans have access to a basic telephone line. It is supported by a surcharge on long-distance phone bills. The program subsidizes phone service for the poor and pays for Internet access in schools, libraries and rural health clinics. But more than half the money goes to pay phone companies that provide voice service in rural places where phone lines are unprofitable.

    The FCC now wants to tap the rural program, called the High Cost Fund, to pay for broadband too. It envisions gradually transforming the High Cost program into a new Connect America Fund that would underwrite the cost of building and operating high-speed Internet networks in places that are too sparsely populated to justify costly corporate investments.

    The agency's actions could have profound consequences not just for rural Americans still stuck with dial-up links or painfully slow broadband connections, but also for rural phone companies that rely heavily on Universal Service funding.

    The telecom company proposal takes aim at several key criticisms of the Universal Service Fund, including complaints by Republicans that the program promotes waste by subsidizing multiple rural phone companies in places where the free market doesn't support even one and by giving telecom carriers little incentive to keep their costs down.

    The telecom company plan would cap the size of the new Connect America Fund at $4.5 billion annually, provide subsidies for only one provider in an area and target funding at places where there is no business case for companies to provide service on their own. In addition, it would create an Advanced Mobility/Satellite Fund to provide mobile broadband access in some of the hardest-to-serve areas.

    The new proposal also seeks to overhaul the multibillion-dollar "intercarrier compensation" system, the Byzantine menu of charges that phone companies pay each other to connect calls and link their networks. Any changes to the Universal Service Fund would also require changes to intercarrier compensation because rural phone companies tend to rely heavily on both funding sources.

    The existing intercarrier compensation program is widely seen as outdated and irrational since phone company payments vary widely based on the type of carrier involved, the type of network traffic being exchanged and the distance that the traffic travels. The new telecom plan would set one low, uniform rate for these payments.

    The FCC welcomed the companies' proposal and the industry's efforts to tackle Universal Service reform. "We're pleased that many have taken up that challenge, and we will consider those proposals as we finalize reforms," the agency said in a statement.

    That was echoed by the top Republican on the Senate Commerce Committee, Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas. "I am pleased to see such a diverse group of small and large telecommunications providers working together to find consensus, which is no small feat on this complex and difficult issue," she said. "I urge the FCC to continue the momentum generated by this proposal and to keep our nation's rural communities in mind as it moves forward with the reform process."

     

    29 comments

    • Beer  •  10 mths ago
      Just jump right over the #$%$go for fiber optics to supply ultra fast bandwidth to dedicated high speed wireless internet towers in rural and any other area that needs it. The Netherlands can do it,why not us?
    • stew  •  10 mths ago
      hmmmm......connected at 24kbps right now....that's as good as it gets here. takes 30 minutes just to check email....
      • Beer 10 mths ago
        Been there,and not so long ago. It'll get better.
      • negativism 9 mths ago
        I remember the days of14.4kbps.Poor phone lines and i guess the Service fund wasn't used around here to fix them.Now im on a capped data card that gets me a whoping 200-300kbps on a good day.Guess that is a good thing so i wont be watching lots of videos and break their prescious bit limit.
    • Karen  •  10 mths ago
      Bring it on and the sooner the better; I'm tired of dialup and satellite.
    • Concerned In The Midwest  •  10 mths ago
      my DSL sucks out here, only 1 choice and its .66 mbps at its fastest. 512/256 my butt!!!!
      • Ray 10 mths ago
        .66 mbps is FASTER than 512 kbps
      • Frank 10 mths ago
        .66 Mbps is faster than 512 kbps, but it is stil slower than a snail.
      • VoteNixonshead2012 10 mths ago
        Thats why Competition is better than Big nanny state giving you one or no choices.
    • NSA  •  10 mths ago
      What some of you do not understand is if you have a cell phone that works where you live, then you can get highSpeed connectivity where you reside, But I will charge you for coming out and setting it up!
      • TOMCAT 10 mths ago
        There you hit it on the head, a cell phone that works where you LIVE.
      • RobW 9 mths ago
        My cell phone works where I live and I tether to my desktop but it is far from high speed. Connecting on EDGE and download speeds of 8-13 kbps is not high speed in my book. But if you can tell me how it is possible I am all ears. I have yet to find any company offering high speed internet where I live short of a dish.
      • spike8008 9 mths ago
        Are you serious? You think cell service is broadband? Yeah, I can see the local bank running their business through a cell phone.
    • MikeM  •  9 mths ago
      When ATT and Verizon agree on anything you can be sure they are the only ones that are going to profit from it. These companies are only interested in profits, they don't care if the money comes from the customer or from the taxpayer, as long as it comes to them.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  10 mths ago
      It may not be ideal, but nothing ever is. These people have dealt with dial-up for far too long.
    • Skye  •  10 mths ago
      We need it badly in Western AZ! There's only dial-up, or you can fork out hundreds of dollars for satellite broadband which is as good as using nothing.
      • Slap Chop 10 mths ago
        Just put a mexican on the roof, with a signal booster for wifi..
    • Beer  •  10 mths ago
      Supposedly I'm connected at 10MB according to my PC's factory "gauge",but it tests to more like 2-3MB d-load and just under 1MB upload. Or something like that.
    • L.C.by T.  •  10 mths ago
      Warning to those that are going to use one of these new services. Write down the persons name making you the offer, what you'll be billed and for what, when you'll receive the first bill, what the speed of the connection will be, and a phone number to call if you are over charged. I've dealt with two providers, the first said they wouldn't bill me until the next month, then charged my account the next day. The second quoted me a price but when I received the bill it was almost doubled. I think I have taken care of the overcharges but won't know for another week. Just be fresh and on your toes when you order a new service, it's all about ripping you off if they can.
    • Centrist  •  10 mths ago
      Quote: "...provide subsidies for only one provider in an area..."
      This I am worried about - a subsidized monopoly. Better than nothing, but there is no alternative in case of shoddy service.
    • JIMS  •  10 mths ago
      Rural coverage could be easily and cheaply accomplished by using Wimax technology. A thousand times cheaper than landlines.
    • NSA  •  10 mths ago
      Ah! The Last Mile finally Conquered! I will believe it when I see it, I wonder what Rural Development department will bring us this time?
    • Centrist  •  10 mths ago
      The broadband to rural areas will increase commercial opportunities just like a freeway grows businesses, malls, condos and cities in it's vicinity. The better work-ethic of rural areas will attract data firms, small businesses can expand their customer base, and work-at-home people will move away from cities into a better quality of life.
    • negativism  •  9 mths ago
      Is AT&T and Verizon going to bring their datacaps and throttling to rural America too?
    • not me  •  9 mths ago
      Not being tech minded, I don't understand why countries like norway and Seden can get cell phone reception in even the remotest areas, even off-shore islands or in mountainous regions. We can't even get a good connection driving down Hwy 280 in the middle of Silicon Valley in California. Korea has better cell connections than we have. I suspect our problem is the money to be made by keeping America's poor system.
    • Game Slayer  •  10 mths ago
      For once, I'd like to see the government actually eliminate a fee/tax that has already served its original purpose rather than seeking something else to spend the money on.
    • TOMCAT  •  10 mths ago
      There is NO way the phone companies will replace the outdated phone lines in rural America. All they will do is offer what they already offer, broadband in large towns and cities.
    • Jim  •  9 mths ago
      Telcos want MORE SUBSIDIES to EXTEND THEIR MONOPOLIES !!! Private Profit paid for by TAX DOLLARS !!! The Telcos GOT A RATE INCREASE in 1996 to give us "Broadband" but we got NOTHING BUT LARGER BILLS !!! End the Telcos RIPOFFS !!!
    • bt  •  10 mths ago
      What a crock of #$%$!!!!! All this is is a way to help dish network and hughes net get federal money for their HORRIBLY SLOW service. They both suck and are NOT broadband. The you have cellular companies claiming to provide "broadband" that is only marginally faster than satellite service. Lay the #$%$ fiber optic lines and be done with the absolute FARCE of satellite and/or cellular "broadband". There will NEVER be broadband service in rural America.
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