WISPA_23_Day2

DAY 2 6 WISPAMERICA I MARCH 6 - 9, 2023 www.bekabusinessmedia.com The NTIA’s BEAD NOFO will fall short of connecting all Americans online because it is not based on sound economic and other policy principles, concludes Dr. Bill Lehr in a white paper released in February. By designating fiber as a “priority broadband project” for NOFO deployments and excluding from the definition of “reliable broadband service” other viable technologies, NTIA’s total increased cost of opting for fiber could raise the costs of addressing U.S. broadband needs by tens of billions of dollars – potentially by as much as $60 billion – while also imposing significant delay in reaching truly unserved areas, foregoing billions more in lost consumer surplus and opportunity costs. “Prioritizing fiber projects over other broadband technologies represents a significant departure from the sound regulatory principle of technological neutrality,” states Lehr. This unreasonable bias “could increase costs by upwards of $30 to $60 billion depending on the distribution of fiber deployment costs for the unserved locations.” WISPA commissioned the paper to help NTIA and state policymakers realize the greatest success in bridging the digital divide through the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) and the NTIA’s BEAD NOFO. The NOFO provides the states approximately $42 billion to deploy broadband where it is not. In framing the IIJA, Congress chose a tech-neutral path to roll-out needed services to all locations. NTIA, however, has eschewed that time-tested approach. The NOFO almost exclusively favors fiber deployments over other viable alternatives. Further, the NTIA has inexplicably removed unlicensed fixed wireless access (FWA) from the palette of “reliable broadband” solutions available to the states for BEAD projects. Technologies like FWA using only unlicensed spectrum, which the FCC has determined can be used by universal support program recipients to meet their performance obligations, can be deployed in a matter of months, not years, and at a fraction of the cost of fiber. According to Lehr, “Excluding broadband providers that use unlicensed spectrum to deliver broadband services … signals a threat to universal service policy goals and the healthy evolution of the internet ecosystem.” Using recent FCC data, Lehr calculates that walling off otherwise recognized broadband alternatives “unambiguously adds” at least 1.9 million new locations calling for government-funded overbuilding with BEAD funds. As a result, “the public funding challenge of promoting universal service to broadband in the U.S. may be elevated by a third, or by more than $10 billion,” states Lehr. By ignoring Congress’ tech-neutral intent, the NOFO’s fiber preference, which takes considerably more time (and in many cases years) to deploy, will certainly bring about expensive delay to communities that currently lack 25/3 Mbps and 100/20 Mbps broadband. “The increased costs and reduced options enabled for addressing unserved citizens will further delay the ability of those citizens to participate in the digital economy and contribute to the benefits that realization of universal service goals will deliver to all citizens.” Delaying the availability of broadband, if even for two years, could result in foregoing upwards of $30 to $60 billion in total surplus. Those “substantial opportunity costs cannot be overlooked,” in Lehr’s view. These infirmities might be mitigated if states could flexibly use the tools they deemed fit for their NOFO projects. But the latitude to employ anything other than fiber has been all but foreclosed by the NTIA. In fact, the agency doublesdown on its fiber bet by urging states to reach the highest possible costs when calculating an exception to its preference – e.g., the NOFO’s extremely high-cost per location threshold – essentially mooting that guidance, which would have allowed states to choose FWA, or other less-costly technologies, where the expense to wire via fiber was deemed exorbitant. The ”mistaken excessive prioritization of [fiber] … imposes unreasonable constraints on state broadband offices seeking to promote digital infrastructure goals efficiently,” concludes Lehr. To rectify this, he suggests states “actively engage with the FCC and NTIA to push for more sensible rules. Those efforts will be aided if the states have better and more granular data about the costs and available technical options for deploying broadband infrastructure in the state. That means better information regarding the costs of providing [fiber] to every location in the state, as well as the costs of using alternative technologies.” m To download a copy of the white paper go to this link: https://www.wispa.org/docs/Lehr_ White_Paper_Final.pdf By Mike Wendy Director of Communications, WISPA Positron VIRTUOSO GAM Makes Gig Managing Easier Positron Access announces the availability of VIRTUOSO (VIRTUalized Optimized Services and Operations), the element management and services platform for the Positron GAM. Managing the in-building delivery of Gigabit services over telephone pairs or coaxial; cabling now will be even easier. VIRTUOSO automatically discovers and provides comprehensive management information for your Positron GAM devices. Using the popular JSON API of GAM devices, the simple and effective dashboard provides a view of all your MDUs served with GAM devices along with the state of the Gigabit services you deliver to your subscribers. You have a global view of the state of each G.hn link serving your subscribers and you have access to detailed information about the health and performance of each individual links with a few clicks. VIRTUOSO aggregates alarm information from managed devices. Without leaving VIRTUOSO, you can connect to the GAM reporting the alarm and use the built-in spectrum analyzer of the GAM to troubleshoot and correct problems ahead and sometimes without having to dispatch a field technician on site. Firmware management for your devices can be automated. VIRTUOSO is free of charge and runs on a Virtual Linux server in your cloud. Reach out to sales@positronaccess.com for more information and to get access to your copy of VIRTUOSO. Positron Access also offers OMCI integration and interoperability with OLTs which allows service providers to manage the customer endto-end as another XGS-PON subscriber. m Visit Positron Access in booth 619 for more information. NTIA’s Technological Bias Could Raise Cost of BEAD by Tens of Billions of Dollars

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