47 USC 1741 – Enabling middle mile broadband infrastructure
(a) Definitions
In this section:
(1) Anchor institution
The term “anchor institution” means a school, library, medical or healthcare provider, community college or other institution of higher education, or other community support organization or entity.
(2) Assistant Secretary
The term “Assistant Secretary” means the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information.
(3) Commission
The term “Commission” means the Federal Communications Commission.
(4) Eligible entity
The term “eligible entity” means—
(A) a State, political subdivision of a State, Tribal government, technology company, electric utility, utility cooperative, public utility district, telecommunications company, telecommunications cooperative, nonprofit foundation, nonprofit corporation, nonprofit institution, nonprofit association, regional planning counsel, Native entity, or economic development authority; or
(B) a partnership of 2 or more entities described in subparagraph (A).
(5) FCC fixed broadband map
The term “FCC fixed broadband map” means the map created by the Commission under section 642(c)(1)(B) of this title.
(6) Indian Tribe
The term “Indian Tribe” has the meaning given the term in section 5304 of title 25.
(7) Interconnect
The term “interconnect” means the physical linking of 2 networks for the mutual exchange of traffic on non-discriminatory terms and conditions.
(8) Internet exchange facility
The term “internet exchange facility” means physical infrastructure through which internet service providers and content delivery networks exchange internet traffic between their networks.
(9) Middle mile infrastructure
The term “middle mile infrastructure”—
(A) means any broadband infrastructure that does not connect directly to an end-user location, including an anchor institution; and
(B) includes—
(i) leased dark fiber, interoffice transport, backhaul, carrier-neutral internet exchange facilities, carrier-neutral submarine cable landing stations, undersea cables, transport connectivity to data centers, special access transport, and other similar services; and
(ii) wired or private wireless broadband infrastructure, including microwave capacity, radio tower access, and other services or infrastructure for a private wireless broadband network, such as towers, fiber, and microwave links.
(10) Middle mile grant
The term “middle mile grant” means a grant awarded under subsection (c).
(11) Native entity
The term “Native entity” means—
(A) an Indian Tribe;
(B) an Alaska Native Corporation;
(C) a Native Hawaiian organization (as defined in section 7517 of title 20;
(D) the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands; and
(E) the Office of Hawaiian Affairs.
(12) State
The term “State” has the meaning given the term in section 153 of this title.
(13) Submarine cable landing station
The term “submarine cable landing station” means a cable landing station, as that term is used in Section 1.767(a)(5) of Title 47, Code of Federal Regulations (or any successor regulation), that can be utilized to land a submarine cable by an entity that has obtained a license under the first section of the Act entitled “An Act relating to the landing and operation of submarine cables in the United States”, approved May 27, 1921 (47 U.S.C. 34) (commonly known as the “Cable Landing Licensing Act”).
(14) Tribal government
The term “Tribal government” means the recognized governing body of any Indian or Alaska Native tribe, band, nation, pueblo, village, community, component band, or component reservation, individually identified (including parenthetically) in the list published most recently as of November 15, 2021, pursuant to section 5131 of title 25.
(15) Trust land
The term “trust land” has the meaning given the term in section 3765 of title 38.
(16) Underserved
The term “underserved”, with respect to an area, means an area—
(A) that is designated as a Tribally underserved area through the process described in subsection (g); or
(B) that—
(i) is of a standard size not larger than a census block, as established by the Commission;
(ii) is not an unserved area; and
(iii) as determined in accordance with the FCC fixed broadband map, does not have access to broadband service with—
(I) except as provided in subclause (II)—
(aa) a download speed of not less than 100 megabits per second; and
(bb) an upload speed of not less than 20 megabits per second; or
(II) minimum download and upload speeds established as benchmarks by the Commission for purposes of this Act after November 15, 2021, if those minimum speeds are higher than the minimum speeds required under subclause (I).
(17) Unserved
The term “unserved”, with respect to an area, means an area—
(A) that is designated as a Tribally underserved area through the process described in subsection (g); or
(B) that—
(i) is of a standard size not larger than a census block, as established by the Commission; and
(ii) as determined in accordance with the FCC fixed broadband map, does not have access to broadband service with—
(I) except as provided in subclause (II)—
(aa) a download speed of not less than 25 megabits per second; and
(bb) an upload speed of not less than 3 megabits per second; or
(II) minimum download and upload speeds established as benchmarks by the Commission for purposes of this Act after November 15, 2021, if those minimum speeds are higher than the minimum speeds required under subclause (I).
(b) Purpose; sense of Congress
(1) Purpose
The purposes of this section are—
(A) to encourage the expansion and extension of middle mile infrastructure to reduce the cost of connecting unserved and underserved areas to the backbone of the internet (commonly referred to as the “last mile”); and
(B) to promote broadband connection resiliency through the creation of alternative network connection paths that can be designed to prevent single points of failure on a broadband network.
(2) Sense of Congress
It is the sense of Congress that—
(A) in awarding middle mile grants, the Assistant Secretary should give priority to—
(i) projects that leverage existing rights-of-way, assets, and infrastructure to minimize financial, regulatory, and permitting challenges;
(ii) projects in which the eligible entity designs the route of the middle mile infrastructure to enable the connection of unserved anchor institutions, including Tribal anchor institutions; and
(iii) projects that facilitate the development of carrier-neutral interconnection facilities; and
(iv) projects that—
(I) improve the redundancy and resiliency of existing middle mile infrastructure; and
(II) reduce regulatory and permitting barriers to promote the construction of new middle mile infrastructure; and
(B) a regulated utility should use funds received from a middle mile grant as a supplement to the core utility capital investment plan of the regulated utility to—
(i) facilitate increased broadband resiliency or redundancy of existing middle mile infrastructure; or
(ii) provide connectivity to unserved areas and underserved areas within the service territory of the utility and nearby communities.
(c) Middle mile grants
Terms Used In 47 USC 1741
- Assets: (1) The property comprising the estate of a deceased person, or (2) the property in a trust account.
- association: when used in reference to a corporation, shall be deemed to embrace the words "successors and assigns of such company or association" in like manner as if these last-named words, or words of similar import, were expressed. See 1 USC 5
- Corporation: A legal entity owned by the holders of shares of stock that have been issued, and that can own, receive, and transfer property, and carry on business in its own name.
- Evidence: Information presented in testimony or in documents that is used to persuade the fact finder (judge or jury) to decide the case for one side or the other.
- Fraud: Intentional deception resulting in injury to another.
- Jurisdiction: (1) The legal authority of a court to hear and decide a case. Concurrent jurisdiction exists when two courts have simultaneous responsibility for the same case. (2) The geographic area over which the court has authority to decide cases.
- Oversight: Committee review of the activities of a Federal agency or program.
- Partnership: A voluntary contract between two or more persons to pool some or all of their assets into a business, with the agreement that there will be a proportional sharing of profits and losses.
- Rescission: The cancellation of budget authority previously provided by Congress. The Impoundment Control Act of 1974 specifies that the President may propose to Congress that funds be rescinded. If both Houses have not approved a rescission proposal (by passing legislation) within 45 days of continuous session, any funds being withheld must be made available for obligation.
- State: means a State, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any other territory or possession of the United States. See 1 USC 7
- writing: includes printing and typewriting and reproductions of visual symbols by photographing, multigraphing, mimeographing, manifolding, or otherwise. See 1 USC 1
The Assistant Secretary shall establish a program under which the Assistant Secretary makes grants on a technology-neutral, competitive basis to eligible entities for the construction, improvement, or acquisition of middle mile infrastructure.
(d) Applications for grants
(1) In general
The Assistant Secretary shall establish an application process for middle mile grants in accordance with this subsection.
(2) Evaluation of applications
In establishing an application process for middle mile grants under paragraph (1), the Assistant Secretary shall give priority to an application from an eligible entity that satisfies 2 or more of the following conditions:
(A) The eligible entity adopts fiscally sustainable middle mile strategies.
(B) The eligible entity commits to offering non-discriminatory interconnect to terrestrial and wireless last mile broadband providers and any other party making a bona fide request.
(C) The eligible entity identifies specific terrestrial and wireless last mile broadband providers that have—
(i) expressed written interest in interconnecting with middle mile infrastructure planned to be deployed by the eligible entity; and
(ii) demonstrated sustainable business plans or adequate funding sources with respect to the interconnect described in clause (i).
(D) The eligible entity has identified supplemental investments or in-kind support (such as waived franchise or permitting fees) that will accelerate the completion of the planned project.
(E) The eligible entity has demonstrated that the middle mile infrastructure will benefit national security interests of the United States and the Department of Defense.
(3) Grant application competence
The Assistant Secretary shall include in the application process established under paragraph (1) a requirement that an eligible entity provide evidence that the eligible entity is capable of carrying out a proposed project in a competent manner, including by demonstrating that the eligible entity has the financial, technical, and operational capability to carry out the proposed project and operate the resulting middle mile broadband network.
(e) Eligibility
(1) Prioritization
To be eligible to obtain a middle mile grant, an eligible entity shall agree, in the application submitted through the process established under subsection (d), to prioritize—
(A) connecting middle mile infrastructure to last mile networks that provide or plan to provide broadband service to households in unserved areas;
(B) connecting non-contiguous trust lands; or
(C) the offering of wholesale broadband service at reasonable rates on a carrier-neutral basis.
(2) Buildout timeline
Subject to paragraph (5), to be eligible to obtain a middle mile grant, an eligible entity shall agree, in the application submitted through the process established under subsection (d), to complete buildout of the middle mile infrastructure described in the application by not later than 5 years after the date on which amounts from the grant are made available to the eligible entity.
(3) Project eligibility requirements
(A) Capability to support retail broadband service
A project shall be eligible for a middle mile grant if, at the time of the application, the Assistant Secretary determines that the proposed middle mile broadband network will be capable of supporting retail broadband service.
(B) Mapping data
(i) Use of most recent data
In mapping out gaps in broadband coverage, an eligible entity that uses a middle mile grant to build out terrestrial or fixed wireless middle mile infrastructure shall use the most recent broadband mapping data available from one of the following sources:
(I) The FCC fixed broadband map.
(II) The State in which the area that will be served by the middle mile infrastructure is located, or the Tribal government with jurisdiction over the area that will be served by the middle mile infrastructure (if applicable).
(III) Speed and usage surveys of existing broadband service that—
(aa) demonstrate that more than 25 percent of the respondents display a broadband service speed that is slower than the speeds required for an area to qualify as unserved; and
(bb) are conducted by—
(AA) the eligible entity;
(BB) the State in which the area that will be served by the middle mile infrastructure is located; or
(CC) the Tribal government with jurisdiction over the area that will be served by the middle mile infrastructure (if applicable).
(ii) Sharing facility locations
(I) Definition
In this clause, the term “covered recipient”, with respect to an eligible entity, means—
(aa) the Assistant Secretary;
(bb) the Commission;
(cc) the Tribal government with jurisdiction over the area that will be served by the middle mile infrastructure (if applicable); and
(dd) the State broadband office for the State in which the area that will be served by the middle mile infrastructure is located.
(II) Provision of information
Subject to subclauses (III) and (IV), an eligible entity that constructs, improves, or acquires middle mile infrastructure using a middle mile grant shall share with each covered recipient the location of all the middle mile broadband infrastructure.
(III) Format
An eligible entity shall provide the information required under subclause (II) to each covered recipient in a uniform format determined by the Assistant Secretary.
(IV) Protection of information
(aa) In general
The information provided by an eligible entity under subclause (II) may only be used for purposes of carrying out the grant program under subsection (c) and any reporting related thereto.
(bb) Legal defenses
(AA) In general
A covered recipient may not receive information under subclause (II) unless the covered recipient agrees in writing to assert all available legal defenses to the disclosure of the information if a person or entity seeks disclosure from the covered recipient under any Federal, State, or local public disclosure law.
(BB) Rule of construction
Nothing in subitem (AA) is intended to be or shall be construed as a waiver of Tribal sovereign immunity.
(C) Connection to anchor institutions
To the extent feasible, an eligible entity that receives a middle mile grant to build middle mile infrastructure using fiber optic technology shall—
(i) ensure that the proposed middle mile broadband network will be capable of providing broadband to an anchor institution at a speed of not less than—
(I) 1 gigabit per second for downloads; and
(II) 1 gigabit per second for uploads to an anchor institution; and
(ii) include direct interconnect facilities that will facilitate the provision of broadband service to anchor institutions located within 1,000 feet of the middle mile infrastructure.
(D) Interconnection and nondiscrimination
(i) In general
An eligible entity that receives a middle mile grant to build a middle mile project using fiber optic technology shall offer interconnection in perpetuity, where technically feasible without exceeding current or reasonably anticipated capacity limitations, on reasonable rates and terms to be negotiated with requesting parties.
(ii) Nature of interconnection
The interconnection required to be offered under clause (i) includes both the ability to connect to the public internet and physical interconnection for the exchange of traffic.
(iii) Inclusion in application
An applicant for a middle mile grant shall disclose the applicant’s proposed interconnection, nondiscrimination, and network management practices in the application submitted through the process established under subsection (d).
(4) Accountability
The Assistant Secretary shall—
(A) establish sufficient transparency, accountability, reporting, and oversight measures for the grant program established under subsection (c) to deter waste, fraud, and abuse of program funds; and
(B) establish—
(i) buildout requirements for each eligible entity that receives a middle mile grant, which shall require the completion of a certain percentage of project miles by a certain date; and
(ii) penalties, which may include rescission of funds, for grantees that do not meet requirements described in clause (i) or the deadline under paragraph (2).
(5) Extensions
(A) In general
At the request of an eligible entity, the Assistant Secretary may extend the buildout deadline under paragraph (2) by not more than 1 year if the eligible entity certifies that—
(i) the eligible entity has a plan for use of the middle mile grant;
(ii) the project to build out middle mile infrastructure is underway; or
(iii) extenuating circumstances require an extension of time to allow completion of the project to build out middle mile infrastructure.
(B) Effect on interim buildout requirements
If the Assistant Secretary grants an extension under subparagraph (A), the Assistant Secretary shall modify any buildout requirements established under paragraph (4)(B)(i) as necessary.
(f) Federal share
The amount of a middle mile grant awarded to an eligible entity may not exceed 70 percent of the total project cost.
(g) Special rules for Tribal governments
(1) Waivers; alternative requirements
The Assistant Secretary, in consultation with Tribal governments and Native entities, may waive, or specify alternative requirements for, any provision of subsections (c) through (f) if the Assistant Secretary finds that the waiver or alternative requirement is necessary—
(A) for the effective delivery and administration of middle mile grants to Tribal governments; or
(B) the construction, improvement, or acquisition of middle mile infrastructure on trust land.
(2) Tribally unserved areas; tribally underserved areas
The Assistant Secretary, in consultation with Tribal governments and Native entities, shall develop a process for designating Tribally unserved areas and Tribally underserved areas for purposes of this section.
(h) Authorization of appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated to carry out this section $1,000,000,000 for fiscal years 2022 through 2026.