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Playing with our money: The FCC and
the Universal Service Fund
'Net Insider By
Scott Bradner, Network World
February 15, 2011 11:00 AM ET
You, your company
and I, along with just about everybody subscribing to telephone service in the
United States, is hit with a surcharge on our phone bills that goes into a
Universal Service Fund (USF).
This fund started
out with the simple goal of making telephone service affordable in rural, and
thus, high-cost parts of the country. Over the years, the USF goal has expanded
to cover Internet service. At best, this has been a controversial program.
Now the FCC is
proposing to significantly rework the existing program.
On Feb. 8 the FCC
released a "Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and Further Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking." (It is a measure of maturity of a bureaucracy when it can
double up the rulemaking in a single document.) This 289-page
document basically says that the FCC proposes to keep spending USF funds,
but now for new and better things. Pardon me if I'm skeptical.
The latest
FCC report on the USF shows just how big (and messy) this puppy has grown.
The USF spent $7.2 billion in 2009 (the last year reported on in the December
2010 report). That is small potatoes in comparison to the total telecom
industry revenues of $284 billion the same year, down from $301 billion in
2001, but real money nonetheless. One interesting factoid in the report -- wireless revenue
increased from $48 billion in 1999 to $120 billion in 2009, and that was before
the post-iPhone
smartphone explosion hit.
There are 4 parts to the USF:
* high-cost -- intended to keep
telephone service affordable in those parts of the country where it costs a lot
to deploy phone service;
* low income -- discounts on phone
service for low-income people;
* schools and libraries -- discounts
for Internet service for schools and libraries; and
* rural health care -- discounts on
video conferencing and Internet services for rural health centers.
About 60% of the USF went to the
aptly named high-cost program in 2009. Very few observers, including the FCC
commissioners themselves, think that this is a well-run program. The FCC now
plans to make this program more efficient and use the recovered money to expand
broadband service to the parts of the country currently underserved broadband
Internet-wise. The FCC says that 24 million Americans cannot get broadband
service (other than satellite) even if they want to get it. There might be many
reasons why the FCC has not fixed the high-cost program in years past but the one
that springs to mind is that it is not the FCC's money.
The $7 billion that the FCC currently
spends on these programs comes from you, me, your company and everyone you
know. For some reason the USF "contribution" (the quaint term that
one of the FCC commissioners used) is seen as a fee and not a tax.
Sure looks like a tax to me.
Last month my own contribution to the
USF was $6.88 plus whatever my VoIP provider pays. I have no idea what
Harvard's contribution might have been, but I expect I would not have wanted to
pay it by myself. I note that only one of the commissioners mentioned maybe
reducing the amount of money that we contribute -- the rest seem to think that
our money is rightfully theirs and their job is to figure out how to spend it.
Universal Internet service would be
nice but, based on the history of the USF, I very much doubt that the FCC is
the most efficient way to achieve that goal.
Disclaimer: I'm sure that Harvard
laments watching whatever money it needs to contribute to the USF be so poorly used,
but I did not get a formal opinion from the university, so the above whine is
mine.
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