www.broadband.gov
The US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has unveiled its
National Broadband Plan, detailing plans for expanding high-speed
Internet services across the nation in an effort to connect consumers
and economy with next-generation networks. The FCC has pledged to free
up 500 MHz of spectrum over the next ten years for licensed and
unlicensed use in an effort to foster innovation and leadership in
mobile broadband services.
Today, the Federal Communications Commission delivered to Congress a
National Broadband Plan setting an ambitious agenda for connecting all
corners of the nation while transforming the economy and society with
the communications network of the future -- robust, affordable Internet.
“The National Broadband Plan is a 21st century roadmap to spur
economic growth and investment, create jobs, educate our children,
protect our citizens, and engage in our democracy,” said Chairman
Julius Genachowski. “It’s an action plan, and action is necessary to
meet the challenges of global competitiveness, and harness the power of
broadband to help address so many vital national issues.”
“In every era, America must confront the challenge of connecting
the nation anew,” said Blair Levin, Executive Director of the Omnibus
Broadband Initiative at the FCC. “Above all else, the plan is a call
to action to meet that challenge for our era. If we meet it, we will
have networks, devices, and applications that create new solutions to
seemingly intractable problems.”
Closing Broadband Gaps
Titled “Connecting America: The National Broadband Plan,”
the Plan found that while broadband access and use have increased over
the past decade, the nation must do much more to connect all
individuals and the economy to broadband’s transformative benefits.
Nearly 100 million Americans lack broadband at home today, and 14
million Americans do not have access to broadband even if they want it.
Only 42 percent of people with disabilities use broadband at home,
while as few as 5 percent of people living on Tribal lands have
access. Meanwhile, the cost of digital exclusion for the student
unable to access the Internet to complete a homework assignment, or for
the unemployed worker who can’t search for a job online, continues to
grow.
Other gaps threaten America’s global competitiveness. A
looming shortage of wireless spectrum could impede U.S. innovation and
leadership in popular wireless mobile broadband services. More useful
applications, devices, and content are needed to create value for
consumers. And the nation has failed to harness broadband’s power to
transform delivery of government services, health care, education,
public safety, energy conservation, economic development, and other
national priorities.
America’s 2020 Broadband Vision
The Plan’s call for action over the next decade includes the following goals and recommendations:
- Connect 100 million households to affordable
100-megabits-per-second service, building the world's largest market of
high-speed broadband users and ensuring that new jobs and businesses
are created in America.
- Affordable access in every American
community to ultra-high-speed broadband of at least 1 gigabit per
second at anchor institutions such as schools, hospitals, and military
installations so that America is hosting the experiments that produce
tomorrow's ideas and industries.
- Ensure that the United
States is leading the world in mobile innovation by making 500
megahertz of spectrum newly available for licensed and unlicensed use.
- Move
our adoption rates from roughly 65 percent to more than 90 percent and
make sure that every child in America is digitally literate by the time
he or she leaves high school.
- Bring affordable broadband
to rural communities, schools, libraries, and vulnerable populations by
transitioning existing Universal Service Fund support from yesterday’s
analog technologies to tomorrow’s digital infrastructure.
- Promote
competition across the broadband ecosystem by ensuring greater
transparency, removing barriers to entry, and conducting market-based
analysis with quality data on price, speed, and availability.
- Enhance
the safety of the American people by providing every first responder
with access to a nationwide, wireless, interoperable public safety
network.
The Plan was mandated by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
in February 2009 and produced by an FCC task force that set new
precedents for government openness, transparency, and rigor.
Information for the plan was gathered in 36 public workshops, 9 field
hearing, and 31 public notices that produced 75,000 pages of public
comments. The debate went online with 131 blogposts that triggered
1,489 comments; 181 ideas on IdeaScale garnering 6,100 votes; 69,500
views on YouTube; and 335,000 Twitter followers. The task force
augmented this voluminous record with independent research and
data-gathering.
About half of the Plan’s recommendations are
addressed to the FCC, while the remainder are for Congress, the
Executive Branch, state and local government, working closely with the
private and nonprofit sectors.
Read the National Broadband Plan: http://download.broadband.gov/plan/national-broadband-plan.pdf
More information about the National Broadband Plan can be found at www.broadband.gov
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