The proposed North American Numbering Plan Administration Fund size for FY 2023 will be $8.6 million with a contribution factor of 0.0000853, said an FCC Wireline Bureau public notice Monday in docket 92-237 (see 2108090060). The fund estimate and contribution factor will take effect Aug. 22 unless the commission acts.
The FCC Wireline Bureau wants comments by Sept. 6, replies by Oct. 3, on a Further NPRM proposing to update access stimulation rules, said a notice for Thursday's Federal Register (see 2207140055). Commissioners approved the item in July.
The National Lifeline Association asked the FCC to grant its petition for reconsideration and clarification of the Wireline and Enforcement Bureaus' authority to suspend an affordable connectivity program provider's participation and marketing of connected devices, in a letter posted Tuesday in docket 21-450 (see 2206160071). NaLA noted there was no opposition to its petition and said the "unenthusiastic participation" among providers offering a connected device is "likely because of unnecessary regulatory hurdles that have been erected, including the market value provision addressed in the petition."
SpaceX raised concerns about Viasat's "ongoing campaign" opposing its Rural Digital Opportunity Fund Phase I long-form application, in a letter posted Monday in docket 19-126 (see 2112230041). "Viasat is transparently attempting to have the commission impede competition at all costs to protect its legacy technology," SpaceX said, noting it has been "able to provide high-speed, low-latency broadband service vastly exceeding Viasat's performance."
The Lifeline minimum service standard for fixed broadband data will be 1,280 GB per month, beginning Dec. 1, said an FCC Wireline Bureau public notice Friday in docket 11-42. The bureau extended its pause on the mobile broadband data minimum service standard until "at least" Dec. 1, 2023. The indexed budget for Lifeline beginning Jan. 1 will be $2.6 billion.
The FCC Wireline Bureau extended until Oct. 31 the deadline for COVID-19 telehealth program round two recipients to purchase eligible devices and services, said a public notice Friday in docket 20-89. It also extended the deadline for submitting invoices by three months. The bureau said program participants have sought additional time due to "supply-chain delays and discontinuities, staff absences due to COVID, and challenges with state government purchasing regulations."
GCI Communications told the FCC there are "deficiencies across Alaska" in the broadband serviceable location fabric and it "undercounts Alaska's unserved locations," in separate meetings with an aide to Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, the Wireline Bureau and Broadband Data Task Force. "Entire communities are missing," GCI said, and others "have far fewer fabric points than other locations," per a filing Thursday in docket 19-195. The company asked the FCC to work with CostQuest, the fabric's architect, to update the fabric because the state "will lose access to badly needed funding" through NTIA's broadband, equity, access and deployment program if unserved locations are undercounted (see 2206290062).
The FCC Wireline Bureau granted waivers to restore originally requested Emergency Connectivity Fund support to the West Virginia Department of Education and Toms River (New Jersey) Regional School District after both applicants voluntarily reduced their months of service, said an order Wednesday in docket 21-93. The bureau also granted a waiver on its own motion to "similarly situated applicants who modified a first or second window recurring service funding request" prior to the bureau extending the service delivery date to June 30, 2023. Affected applicants have 30 days to file requests with the Universal Service Administrative Co. to "restore the voluntarily reduced months of service" in their initial funding requests. The bureau denied Wellpinit (Washington) School District 49's waiver request because it sought to "increase its support amount beyond what was previously approved and committed."
The FCC committed more than $77 million in additional Emergency Connectivity Fund support Wednesday. The new money will support more than 175,000 students covered by applications from all three application windows, said a news release. The program is "providing millions of students with the essential digital tools they need to succeed in school," said Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. More than $5.6 billion has been committed to date (see 2207130054).
Incompas asked the FCC to create an additional layer on its forthcoming broadband maps that shows "which areas have received broadband funding for network deployment," said an ex parte filing posted Tuesday in docket 21-476. It could help determine areas that may still need funding and whether adjustments to high-cost programs are necessary "before committing new funding," Incompas said in a meeting with an aide to Commissioner Brendan Carr. The group also met with an aide to Commissioner Geoffrey Starks, asking the FCC to include broadband internet access service (BIAS) revenues in the USF contribution base. The Information Technology Industry Council also met with an aide to Carr regarding contribution reform. The group backed refreshing the record in the FCC's contribution methodology proceeding to consider whether BIAS revenue should be assessed.