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The Federal Communications Commission's ("FCC") recent release of the national Broadband Map, which purports to identify all locations in the U.S. where fixed and mobile broadband internet service ...
FCC’s new broadband map greatly ... of over 60,000 broadband-serviceable locations. The map also lists service availability ... from the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment ...
The new maps will be used to help distribute $42.45 billion from the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program created by Congress in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
That’s important because a new pile of federal money — $42.45 billion via the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program — is being distributed on the basis of how many ...
The Wisconsin Public Service Commission says it’s identified 7,000 locations not even on the new FCC map. The State of New York said it found 31,000 missing unserved or underserved locations.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — States are racing against a deadline to challenge the map federal officials will use to divvy up the nation’s largest-ever investment in high-speed internet. At stake is a ...
Based on real-world experiences in Montana and other areas, experts offer these best practices for implementing location data services and creating broadband coverage maps: ...
Of the 2.6 million serviceable locations noted on the map, 131,373 locations are considered underserved for 100/20 Mbps service, while 278,270 are considered unserved.
The Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) latest update to the National Broadband Map will mean the opportunity for broadband funding for an additional 80,700 unserved and underserved ...
The map will help the Office of Broadband Development determine how to efficiently distribute $1.7 billion it received from the federal Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program.
Indiana County is watching as Pennsylvania offers another round of broadband, equity, access and deployment funds.
The discrepancy was tracked using data from the FCC’s map and Virginia’s broadband connectivity map, the Commonwealth Connection. Through that method, the DHCD identified 248,000 addresses.