Fla. Enacts ETC, Pole-Attachment Laws; Other State Broadband Bills Advance
Florida will join other states that designate mobile phone providers as eligible telecom carriers (ETCs) for the federal Lifeline program. Also, the state will extend a pole attachments promotion that lets ISPs pay $1 a year per wireline attachment per pole to bring broadband to unserved or underserved areas in municipal electric utility service territories. Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed the wireless ETC (SB-478) and pole-attachments (HB-1147) bills on Monday. The bills became law Tuesday. Under SB-478, Florida will transfer wireless ETC designation powers from the FCC to the Florida Public Service Commission (see 2403050070). Meanwhile, HB-1148 will extend the pole-attachment promo until Dec. 31, 2028. It would have expired July 1 this year. Other state broadband bills also advanced this week. The Louisiana House voted 101-0 to pass a bill (HB-700) updating rules for the state’s Granting Unserved Municipalities Broadband Opportunities program. The bill addresses data reporting, award distributions, penalties and unobligated funds. It will go to the Senate. In Colorado, the Senate voted 31-1 to pass a bill (HB-1234) to indefinitely prolong the state’s high-cost support mechanism, which provides subsidies to a dozen rural telecom providers and is scheduled to sunset Sept. 1. The Appropriations Committee advanced the bill unanimously on Friday (see 2404120013). The House previously passed the bill but would have to agree with Senate changes before HB-1234 can go to Gov. Jared Polis (D). On Tuesday, the Vermont House passed a bill (S-199) updating merger rules for communications union districts (CUDs), groups of two or more municipalities that build infrastructure in rural parts of the state. The Senate passed the bill Feb. 28, but it still needs gubernatorial OK.