Sunsetting the High Cost Fund

SpaceX recently filed comments in the FCC’s open docket looking at the Universal Service Fund (USF) with a recommendation that the FCC should sunset the High-Cost Fund and eventually eliminate it. This is one of the four major components of USF, with an annual budget of $4.5 billion.

SpaceX argues that Starlink has now solved rural broadband connectivity issues with ubiquitous broadband available throughout the country. SpaceX argues that ongoing subsidy payments to support rural voice and broadband networks are no longer needed.

To put the SpaceX comments into perspective, let me start by reviewing the stated goals of the High Cost Fund:

  • Preserve and advance universal availability of voice service.
  • Drive universal availability of modern networks capable of providing voice and broadband service to homes, businesses, and community anchor institutions.
  • Drive universal availability of modern networks capable of providing advanced mobile voice and broadband service.
  • Ensure that rates for broadband and voice services are reasonably comparable in all regions of the nation.
  • Contain administrative costs and minimize the universal service contribution for consumers and businesses through efficient, effective program management.

The High-Cost Fund is the home to a multitude of different subsidy programs:

  • It’s the home of six different Connect America (ACAM) funding mechanisms.
  • This fund is still making the annual subsidy payments for RDOF, which were spread over ten years.
  • The fund has separate funds to support Alaska, Puerto Rico, and the US Virgin Islands.
  • The fund includes the Mobility Fund that pays subsidies to cellular carriers that operate in very rural markets.
  • There are also legacy funds that provide subsidies to regulated telcos operating in high-cost markets.

SpaceX’s recommendation to sunset the various programs refers to the fact that many of the subsidy programs will expire if not renewed. For example, RDOF payments end after the tenth year of payments.

This is not a surprising recommendation. SpaceX and Starlink have been claiming in other forums that satellite broadband technology has solved the universal service problem and that everybody in the U.S. now has access to broadband. That’s been a problematic argument to some extent, since Ookla has been reporting a lot of Starlink speed tests below the FCC’s definition of broadband of 100/20 Mbps. Ookla reported earlier this year that average Starlink speeds had exceeded the 100 Mbps download test and recently reported that Starlink is close to meeting the uplink speed threshold.

However, there is still one troubling aspect of declaring Starlink to be a universal solution everywhere, which is the affordability issue. It’s hard to argue that a product priced at $120 per month, and which requires the purchase of the receiver, is affordable for low-income households. However, there has been no federal effort to define an affordable broadband rate. In the early days of BEAD, before the Benefit of the Bargain changes, various State Broadband Offices around the country were considering a definition of affordable rates between $30 and $50.

There has been a lot of criticism of some of the High-Cost Fund programs over the years. I wrote many times about the ludicrous billions of dollars paid to the largest telcos in the CAF II program that required that rural broadband speeds be increased to 10/1 Mbps – with payments that started months before the FCC raised the definition of broadband to 25/3 Mbps. But there has also been a lot of demonstrable benefits from some of the programs. You don’t have to look much further than the fiber networks built by numerous rural electric cooperatives that were jump-started with the RDOF subsidy.

One thought on “Sunsetting the High Cost Fund

  1. Are they wrong?

    I mean, they’re not delivering 1-10G fiber equivalents for sure, but if you just look at what the federal programs are requiring, they aren’t delivering those speeds either. USF has been around a long time and the connectivity during all but the early days has lagged behind the rest of the developed world. The program itself isn’t working or we wouldn’t have programs like BEAD.

    Starlink, many wISPs, and soon Amazon have all of this covered for last mile.

    I’ll reiterate the issue that rural areas face. The fiber that is almost certainly ran through their areas is inaccessible, but it’s there. I have 5 counties that all have major carriers Lumen, Zayo, and Cogent run through them and 4 of those have ZERO pops to access that fiber. That fiber all being run with financial support from the fed at some point. We additionally have 2 smaller companies that have fiber in the ROW (also at least partially gov funded).

    The money/time/effort could be spent on forcing these fiber runs that were partially or mostly federally funded to open up pops and sell at tariffed rates in at least 1 facility in every county. It’d cost many billions of dollars less and utilize existing assets, open up competition, and not build monopolies. I’ve pitched that ROW access be free if some conditions are met, and if not then have a $10/mile (or whatever makes sense) charge. We can either fund new open access dark fiber runs via those fees or those vendors can open up POPs.

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