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   . ,  Congressional Research Service



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Broadband Deployment: Status and Federal Programs


Broadband-whether delivered via fiber, cable modem,
mobile or fixed wireless, copper wire, or satellite-is
increasingly the technology underlying telecommunications
services such as voice, video, and data. Since the initial
deployment of high-speed internet in the late 1990s,
broadband technologies have been deployed throughout the
United States primarily by the private sector. These
providers include telephone, cable, wireless, and satellite
companies as well as other entities that provide broadband
services to residential, business, and institutional customers.

The Federal Communications Commission's (FCC's) 2010
National Broadband Plan identified broadband as a basic
infrastructure necessary for improving economic growth,
job creation, civic engagement, global competitiveness, and
a better quality of life. Broadband enables or enhances
applications such as e-commerce, telemedicine, distance
education, telework, entertainment, public safety, and
energy conservation. Increasingly viewing broadband as a
basic infrastructure, Congress and successive
Administrations have focused on addressing gaps
specifically related to broadband availability and adoption.
Broadband availability refers to whether or not broadband
service is offered, while broadband adoption refers to the
extent to which American households actually subscribe to
and use broadband.

Availability
The lack of adequate broadband is most pressing in rural
America (especially tribal lands), where the costs of serving
large geographical areas, coupled with low population
densities, often reduce economic incentives for
telecommunications providers to invest in and maintain
broadband infrastructure and service. According to the
latest FCC data, in Dec. 2017, 93.5% of Americans had
fixed terrestrial broadband (e.g., fiber and cable modem
connections) at minimum speeds of 25 Mbps (download
speed)/3 Mbps (upload speed). Table 1 shows the
broadband availability gap between urban, rural, and tribal
lands in recent years. Table 2 shows percentages of
Americans with access to multiple providers.

Table I. Percentage of Americans with Access to
Fixed Terrestrial Broadband (2513 Mbps)
                 2014      2015      2016      2017
 United States     89.4%     89.9%     91.9%      93.5%
   Urban Areas     96.4%     96.7%     97.7%      98.3%
   Rural Areas     60.4%     61.5%     67.8%      73.6%
   Tribal Lands    57.2%     57.8%     63.1%      67.9%
Source: FCC, 2019 Broadband Deployment Report released May 29,
2019, p. 16, available at https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC-
19-44AI .pdf.


dated June 6, 2019


Table 2. Percentage of Americans With Multiple
Options for Fixed Terrestrial Broadband (2513 Mbps)
            No provider I provider 2 providers 3 or more
Nationwide        6.6%      29.4%       43.5%      20.5%
  Urban           1.9%      25.8%       48.4%        24%
  Rural          26.4%      44.4%       23.1%       6.1%
  Tribal         32.1%      36.3%       20.8%      10.8%
  Source: CRS, derived from FCC Fixed Broadband Deployment Map,
  data as of December 2017. (https://broadbandmap.fcc.gov/)

  Section 706 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (P.L.
  104-104) requires the FCC to regularly initiate an inquiry
  and release a report (commonly called the 706 report)
  assessing the status of broadband deployment to all
  Americans. In its 2019 Broadband Deployment Report, the
  FCC concluded that broadband is being deployed to all
  Americans in a reasonable and timely fashion, asserting that
  FCC policies are continuing to remove barriers to
  infrastructure investment and promote competition in the
  telecommunications market.

  The FCC determined that the current speed benchmark of
  25 Mbps/3 Mbps remains an appropriate measure by which
  to assess whether a fixed service provides advanced
  telecommunications capability. Regarding mobile
broadband, the FCC found that adoption of a single mobile
benchmark is still currently unworkable, given certain data
limitations and the inherent variability of mobile services.
As with its 2018 Report, the FCC concluded that mobile
broadband service is not a full substitute for fixed service at
this time.

Adoption
The National Broadband Plan also identified broadband
adoption as a problem, with a significant number of
Americans having broadband available, but choosing not to
subscribe. According to a November 2017 Census Bureau
survey compiled and reported by the National
Telecommunications and Information Administration
(NTIA), 85.9% of American households use wired
broadband at home. Table 3 shows that populations
continuing to lag behind in broadband adoption include
people with low incomes, certain minority populations, the
less-educated, the unemployed, the disabled, and
households in rural areas. According to the Pew Research
Center, in its broadband adoption survey Home Broadband
2015, the cost of monthly subscriptions is the leading
reason people do not have broadband connections.

Table 3. Percentage of Households with Home
Internet Use Having Wired Broadband Service
Total U.S.                           85.9%


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