[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 104 (Wednesday, June 14, 2023)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2086-S2089]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Broadband
Mrs. CAPITO. Mr. President, I rise to talk about something that is
unseen but really impacts every aspect of our daily lives, something
that has major implications on the future of my State and many rural
States just like the Presiding Officer's rural areas, and that is
reliable broadband connection and the implementation of service in our
unserved and underserved areas.
Internet connection is something that we often take for granted,
certainly in the DC area we do--especially in our cities and urban
communities. It is a mainstay of so many facets of our life.
So just think about it. We rely on internet connection for our
communication with our family and friends, our emergency services,
obtaining information. I have already done that about five times today,
getting some additional information--banking, conducting business, and
as we experienced firsthand during the pandemic, essential aspects of
our workforce participation, the education of our children, and I would
add in healthcare here. Even as we transitioned back to in-person work
and school post-pandemic, these capabilities are so essential and
greatly beneficial.
In West Virginia, our State is the only State entirely encompassed by
Appalachia, and we are recognized across the world for our mountainous
terrain. So we love our mountains in West Virginia, but our topography
in West Virginia has dealt us a challenging hand when it comes to
adopting needed advancements to connect people to the internet.
So we know one thing: It is expensive, and it is a lot easier said
than done. But this lack of broadband connectivity and reliability is
one of the biggest concerns that I hear every time I travel in the
State. That is because our homes, our schools, our hospitals, our
health clinics, our churches, our businesses, if they lack the
appropriate level of connectivity or lack it entirely, you are behind.
You are behind. You are not participating. You can't get the help that
you need. You can't communicate the way you want to. And in a lot of
cases, you are not going to live in a place that doesn't have
connectivity. So this is something that must change and something that
I am committed to changing.
So one of my first initiatives as a U.S. Senator was launching my
Capito Connect Plan to help bridge this digital divide that we see in
the country. The plan served as a roadmap for bringing affordable,
high-speed internet connection and access to our homes, our businesses,
and our classrooms throughout the State. Since launching this
initiative, we have made a lot of progress--we have--connecting our
communities in our State. We have had a lot of conversation, and,
really, we have kind of bridged a lot of what we thought would be the
impossible.
We have expanded cellular service in Paw Paw, a very remote area, and
in Lincoln County, a very rural area, by initiating searches for
providers. We have secured millions of dollars in broadband funding
investments through the USDA programs, and we have hosted multiple
visits with our FCC officials to bring attention to our State's
broadband needs.
Increasing rural broadband funding has been a focus of the
Appalachian Regional Commission. I have also supported major broadband
builds like Zayo's announcement to connect a fiber optic network right
through the North Central part of our State. We have also been
receiving critical feedback from listening sessions in all 55 counties,
including soliciting all kinds of data back from folks in West Virginia
onto our website. Also, when we were leading efforts to craft the
bipartisan infrastructure law, I made sure, along with many others,
that this was included because this is an essential part of our
infrastructure. And we are making a difference.
So we have made a lot of advances. We have. But there is still much
more work to accomplish. Now is not the time to look back and see what
we didn't do and how maybe we could have done it better. Now is the
time to look forward and see where we are and where we are going to be.
So we are at a really critical moment here and one we must take
advantage of.
We have all prioritized funding and provided funding for broadband in
many different pieces of legislation. We have done that every year in
appropriations--and I am on appropriations--and I personally have made
sure that we have included this not just in the appropriations bill but
also in the bipartisan infrastructure package.
So, on Monday, I was back home in West Virginia and got the chance to
speak to some of the greatest young men and women in our State at West
Virginia Girls State and West Virginia Boys State. It is clear in
talking to some of them that our best and brightest are unlikely to
stay in our State if they don't have this reliable broadband. It just
doesn't make sense. The lack of internet connectivity will impact how
they join the workforce, how they further their education or perform
the tasks of everyday living that have become so dependent on
broadband.
So Congress has a much needed and very important role to play here,
and I am confident in our ability to rise to this occasion in the face
of this challenge.
But in order to distribute the unprecedented funding that is coming
from the bipartisan infrastructure law to the communities and States
that need it, we have got to have accurate data.
This has been a flaw in the system. That is why NTIA and FCC have
been tasked with developing the National Broadband Map, to determine
where the unserved and the underserved communities were located.
Why is that important? Because much of the funding, as it should be,
is
[[Page S2087]]
not to up your service in an urban area or up my service in Charleston,
WV, in a more, I would say, suburban-type area, but it is to go to
these unserved and underserved areas. We have to have accurate data. So
with accurate data, we can work and distribute funding as we should, as
is proper.
There is no doubt that the first maps that came out in November were
inaccurate. They failed to properly account for the connectivity
needs--I know I can speak for my State, but I am sure it is the same
all across the country. And this is something that our State of West
Virginia, we really took it personally because we know that this is a
once-in-a-lifetime chance to really get it right.
So they invited challenges. They said if you can identify a residence
or a home or business that is shown as being served, and you are
unserved or underserved, then you can challenge the map to say that is
an inaccurate recording of the status of broadband activity.
So we had over 120,000 challenges of which 86,000 of these were
accepted. That means they went back and looked, and working with our
State broadband council that has done a phenomenal job, they went back
and looked and found that 86,000 homes or businesses that were recorded
as being served in actuality had either no service or very little
service--something that was considered underserved. This is going to
help us as the distribution of the larger sums of money come to
actually provide the dollars to get to those places.
These developments are encouraging and the FCC will continue to
improve this and two future versions are being planned.
The need for connectivity remains. Updated mapping shows that over
271,000 locations in my State now remain without service. I think some
people watching this would probably say: It can't possibly be that you
don't have service. But if you get to some of these remote areas, and
sometimes they are not even that remote, you get out into some of the
more rural areas where there is maybe one provider or there is no
competition, it is not an economic model to serve one home that is 10,
15 miles away.
So there are people. When I get a show of hands in classrooms in West
Virginia, I get at least 20 percent to 30 percent of the students in
those classrooms do not have good service. Think about doing their
homework when they get home. They can't do it. Most of it relies on
information that you get from the internet. So it really puts those
students and those families behind.
While funding will be allocated by the end of this month, we have to
make sure also that it is not wasted. Sadly, we have seen this happen.
In our own State in 2010, money was wasted when our first chance came
along to be able to connect more people. So we have to make sure that
that doesn't happen. That is why I have introduced the Rural Broadband
Protection Act. It is a bill with broad bipartisan support that would
improve government programs responsible for connecting people. I look
forward to marking up this legislation in committee here soon.
West Virginians have been persistent and diligent and, honestly, I
think, quite patient--but are now very frustrated--throughout the
process. They can always expect the same from me, as however they are
feeling is however I am going to feel, because that is how you are as a
representative.
So I will continue my efforts for these broadband capabilities--to go
to that last house, that last home, that last business--in this
Mountain State. We are on the cusp, I think, of a major breakthrough
here--we are all on board on this--and one that I am committing to see
through.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Cortez Masto). The Senator from Kansas.
Mr. MORAN. Madam President, I rise this afternoon to discuss, along
with a number of my other colleagues who share the understanding, the
importance of broadband access, especially to rural America.
A recent study by the University of Kansas found that up to 1 million
Kansans live in regions that lack access to high-speed broadband
services. Often, rural areas have the worst quality broadband or, as is
too often the case, they have no access to broadband.
The benefits of access to high-quality broadband are clear. They are
known. We have worked hard to be in positions here in the U.S. Senate
in which we are fully engaged on the issue of making sure that all
Americans have access to this service. Broadband access is correlated
with more jobs, greater economic growth, better healthcare outcomes,
and increased educational performance.
This means our country will be weaker as we confront the economic and
security challenges we are facing, including labor shortages, STEM
education shortcomings, and the lagging American leadership in key
technology areas. When millions are without broadband, we limit our
potential as a nation.
Lack of access or lack of access to good-quality broadband is
certainly a local issue. It is an individual issue. It is a local
business, a local family, a local school, a local library issue. But
the consequence of those individuals, those families, those schools
being absent broadband service is a detriment to our Nation.
Recognizing the importance of access to high-quality broadband,
Congress has allocated significant resources to help bridge the digital
divide, but the first step in appropriately allocating those resources
is knowing where the money needs to go.
I sponsored the Broadband DATA Act, which was enacted in 2020, to
require the FCC to use granular data to create a more accurate and
refined broadband map to better target areas so we know where the new
investments are needed. Getting these maps right is critical and has
not been easy. The first time I saw the maps that were developed, it
was like, this doesn't reflect at all what I know about my home State
of Kansas.
Congress has devoted significant resources. We were involved in the
effort to allocate additional dollars so that broadband maps could be
updated and the data could be improved and hopefully get the
information correct. We have been working on this since 2020.
If the FCC maps aren't accurate, a large portion of funding will be
poorly used, and areas in need won't get the resources required to
increase access to broadband. Millions of dollars in new resources for
Kansas rely upon the accuracy of the maps. It would be poor government
and a waste of taxpayer dollars if the outcome is that we are only
providing money to places that already have broadband service or have
quality broadband service and once again forgetting, forgoing those
that don't.
The FCC is required to allow Americans to challenge the inaccuracies
within the maps, making certain the maps improve over time. After
receiving feedback from Kansans over the last few weeks and months, a
second version of the map was released at the end of May. I understand
from talking with Kansans that this map is more accurate than the one
before. Continued oversight of the FCC's work will be necessary, and I
continue to work with my colleagues on those efforts.
Now that we know where the need exists--now that we better know where
the need exists, we need to make certain that investments are
appropriately targeted to those most in need and not waste it on
overbuilding existing networks. We also must ensure that the program
requirements encourage broadband providers to participate rather than
discourage them with burdensome requirements that do not line up with
congressional intent.
I also want to make certain that every dollar Congress has allocated
to broadband deployment actually goes to broadband deployment, not back
to the Treasury. This is why, in a bipartisan way, we have introduced
legislation to ensure that broadband grants are not considered taxable
income. This is particularly important as critical broadband deployment
programs at the Department of Commerce allocate funds at the end of
this month, just a few days from now. Every dollar taken back by
Treasury represents a community remaining disconnected, and I encourage
my colleagues to work with me so this is not the case.
As part of my oversight work as the ranking member of the Commerce,
Justice, Science Appropriations Subcommittee, I invited Commerce
Secretary Gina Raimondo to Kansas to hear directly from Kansans about
the
[[Page S2088]]
challenges they face when deploying broadband across our State. She
heard from County Commissioner Randy Leis about the benefits broadband
access has brought to Meade County, including education and business
opportunities. She also heard from a host of rural telephone and
telecom providers about what they need from the Department of Commerce
to successfully deploy broadband across Kansas.
During this visit, Secretary Raimondo--and I express my appreciation
here today on the Senate floor. I appreciate her coming to my State to
hear and see what is the circumstance. During this visit, Secretary
Raimondo reiterated her commitment to provide every Kansan with access
to high-quality broadband services.
To preserve the smalltown Kansas way of life that I and many Kansans
and Senators here today value, I look forward to working with Federal
and State officials to make certain that Kansas and particularly rural
Kansans are connected to quality broadband service. Of all the things
we do in my world to try to make sure Kansans have a bright future, one
of the important ones is to make sure we have access to the
technologies of today and tomorrow.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Carolina.
Mr. BUDD. Madam President, over the last several years, much has been
made about the digital divide that exists here in America. The more
digital the economy becomes, the bigger the divide between big cities
and small towns.
As someone who still lives on a family farm in Davie County in North
Carolina, I have always made it a priority to stand up for North
Carolinians who don't have the advantage of large population centers.
Rural Americans across our State and our Nation shouldn't have their
economic opportunities diminished because of their ZIP Code.
One of the biggest challenges we face in bridging the digital divide
is politicalization. An example of this is the Broadband, Equity,
Access, and Deployment--or BEAD--Program. This program provides ``over
$42 billion to expand high-speed internet access by funding planning,
infrastructure deployment and adoption programs'' across the country,
but once the Biden administration got a hold of this funding, they
began funneling it toward their liberal wish list instead of toward
commonsense broadband deployment.
Another example is the Biden administration's Notice of Funding
Opportunity, which gives favorable treatment to government-owned
networks over private ones, and they load up that funding with climate
mandates that drive up costs for these communities. This is
fundamentally the wrong approach.
At the end of the day, what rural Americans are looking for is pretty
straightforward: They want the highest quality internet for the most
affordable price as quickly as possible.
This is not the time or place for social agendas or for partisan
distractions. We have to keep our eye on bridging the digital divide so
that rural Americans have a fair shot at opportunities where they can
achieve their God-given potential. This is just one more way we can
build a strong nation.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alabama.
Mr. TUBERVILLE. Madam President, I join my Republican colleagues on
the floor today in support of expanding broadband access across rural
America.
I recently had the honor of becoming ranking member of the
Agriculture Committee's Subcommittee on Rural Development and Energy,
which has jurisdiction over the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
broadband programs. My top priority as ranking member is expanding
broadband access to unserved populations that need it most so our rural
communities are not left behind.
In today's economy, people need fast and reliable internet to work,
to go to school, have virtual meetings, and even see their doctors
through telemedicine. Our farmers need an internet signal to operate
their farms, their facilities, drive tractors, irrigate crops, apply
pesticides, and implement precision agriculture technologies. Without
it, they do not have an opportunity to compete.
Recently, the USDA increased the requirements for sufficient
broadband access from speeds of 25 over 3 megabits per second to 100
over 20 megabits per second download and upload speeds. Yet 1 out of 10
people in my State of Alabama didn't even meet the previous 25-over-3
threshold. So why change it? Either don't change it or build better
broadband.
I am grateful to the chairman of the Rural Development Subcommittee,
Senator Welch of Vermont, for his hard work and partnership on this
bipartisan issue. The subcommittee recently held our first meeting, and
it was a success. It was exactly what we needed. We had a great
discussion with witnesses and colleagues on the importance of
broadband.
Later this year, we will have a farm bill coming up in Congress--very
important. We need to ensure that expanding rural broadband is included
in this year's farm bill.
Also, earlier this year, I was proud to join a bipartisan group of my
colleagues to introduce the Broadband Grant Tax Treatment Act. This
bill would amend the Tax Code to ensure that Federal grant funding for
broadband isn't considered taxable income. It just doesn't make sense
to fund broadband and then tax broadband users for using it.
I want to thank my colleagues who are here on the floor today for
their support, and I want to encourage all of my colleagues to join us
in this effort. Rural broadband is vital for the success of our rural
communities and for the entire economy.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Kansas.
Mr. MARSHALL. Madam President, for the past 6 years, my staff, my
family, and I have traveled to every corner of the State. We have
crisscrossed it multiple times. We have been in every county in Kansas
multiple times--town halls and roundtables and listening sessions. In
fact, just last week--the last week we were on break--we probably made
a dozen stops. At every one of those stops, at every one of those
roundtables, I can guarantee you the subject of high-speed internet
came up.
Together, we built solutions to address the challenges our rural
areas are facing. Together, we built hospitals, municipal water
facilities, grocery stores, and critical infrastructure in our State's
communities. But despite all of these achievements, many Kansans agree
that one job is still not finished, and that is the crucial task of
building out high-speed broadband connectivity to every part of the
State.
Nothing highlighted the inadequate infrastructure for high-speed
broadband across Kansas more than the COVID-19 lockdowns. Our schools
and businesses across the State were shut down. Hundreds of thousands
of Kansans were sent home to do their jobs and schoolwork. A lackluster
internet connection impacted children's education across the State and
many families' ability to keep up with remote work.
Rural broadband's impacts go far beyond the classroom for our Kansas
communities. In today's quickly evolving cyber world, adequate internet
connection is a necessity, not just a luxury. Doctors at my alma mater,
KU Med Center in Wichita, are trying to offer clinical trials to rural
Kansan participants through secure video checkups. Having a premier
healthcare virtual consultation option in communities where there is a
shortage of access to quality care can save the patient hours of
driving and, in many cases, save their lives.
In addition to healthcare benefits, having high-speed internet brings
our farming techniques into the 21st century. In rural areas, the
capability of using the best technology available in farming practices
depends on a reliable internet connection. Precision agriculture
internet apps allow farmers to monitor conditions--hour by hour, second
by second--more effectively in the field, and they can track crop
yields and feed the world, producing more food with less--more food
with less water, more food with less fertilizers.
By utilizing this latest farm equipment, our State's farmers and
ranchers are able to leave the land cleaner, healthier, and safer than
when we found it.
Madam President, the call for a strong internet connection across
Kansas has only grown. That is why I rise
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today to highlight the importance of broadband expansion.
There is still so much work to be done to get rural America up to
speed, and I realize this work will never be done, just like our roads
and bridges that were amplified so much in the 1950s and 1960s. We
still have to go back and repair those roads and bridges. There is
always one more road and bridge that we need to go back and fix, and
that will be the rule with high-speed internet. There is always
something bigger and faster out there that we need to keep pace.
I am proud to have played a role as a member of the Kansas House
Agriculture Committee in 2018 when we drafted the farm bill, which
directed both the USDA and FCC with dollars to fund new and innovative
ways to connect rural residents.
In 2018, we authorized the ReConnect Program at the USDA, which
awarded funding for broadband connectivity services to under- and
unserved areas. ReConnect provided $5.2 million to connect over 1,300
households, 16 businesses, and 23 farms in Kansas during its first
round of funding.
In 2023, we introduced a new effort in the 2023 farm bill, with my
colleague and fellow member of the Senate Ag Committee, Senator Peter
Welch of Vermont. The ReConnecting Rural America Act provides a minimum
speed of 100/100 high-speed internet build-out speeds, prioritizing
long-term broadband infrastructure in our most rural communities.
Every Kansan I have spoken to has voiced the need for symmetrical
speeds in their community and for increasing investments in fiber to be
made by providers. By bolstering broadband infrastructure for our rural
communities, we are able to stay up to speed with what is happening in
the rest of the world.
Through these Federal efforts, combined with the administration of
funds at the State level, I believe that we are getting closer than
ever to making a real impact in rural broadband connectivity. Still, we
must stay dedicated to the task at hand and ensure that this
infrastructure is built to last.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Rosen). The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mrs. BLACKBURN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the
order for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.