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tv   Communications Technology Leaders Discuss Broadband Readiness  CSPAN  March 12, 2024 10:54pm-11:24pm EDT

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other entities who are right no. what do they need to do if they are not already preparing what did the need to will let amanda go first. what's my one thing you have to be engaged with each state or territory. each process is going to look a little different you have to engage with each one. >> my piece of advice is to call the broadbent office and talk to people at the broadbent office not the governor's office. [laughter] >> it's very good advice, you all should follow it. >> okay be uniform message and givea pot of federal funding currently building out or getting ready to deploy, talk to your state broadbent office. communicate let them know your timing is, what your plans are, we havefj1 reiterated this to or awardees. other agencies it's funding out there are focus on the stupid
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states have a tremendous amount of work ahead of them was sooner we get the better we can plan it. >> thank you so much all of you. please join me in thanking the panelists and we will move on. [applause] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible
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>> a listen to the last panel, i thought about how many years we have heard the challenges of our broadband. hearing after hearing complaining about the lack of accurate map really was refreshing of the work for the fcc, the state really a comprehensive all of government and all of our states working together to get an accurate assessment of where broadbent is and is not. i think it is very important to commend all of those especially sally for my home state i went
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to give a shout out. went to get that right in this panel get the implementation of the defending rights as well as the best practices localities and states to follow so the private investments which is an all-time high and coming out of the pandemic federal funding is at a historic transformational high we have a mission as a nation. a bipartisan american. this panel is going to talk but the best way to get there from where we are today. i'm very proud it encompasses over the last three years. i really did help shape the legislation that eventually passed. the guidance and now we are working with state broadbent offices like kansas and
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mississippi. a lot of our member companies have really been leaders are cities and localities ready for this mass deployment and modernization of all of our broadband networks? a lot of different technologies from fiber, the wireless, the 5g, the fixed wireless to lower it satellite. this is a critically important effort. i want to thank the breath and campaign. talk about in celebrates and the difference we believe the■; campaign made in the policymaking. and now the implementation of the legislation. on the awarding soon. so i'm going to start with you.
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introduce yourself. tell a little bit of your background but then talk about the work kansas is doing to help your cities adopt best practices. and what does it take for a town in kansas what you're trying to encourage and incentivize. >> thank you. around the state broadband. was on the private side. the did mostly rural communities for about seven years. coming at this from a couple of different ways appreciate all the work the compass has done on elevating the permitting iue time delays in the can be
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avoided with education and community. wanting to build a $10 million facility are streamlined permits are wavered. but when the private provider comes into a community invested in broadband hurdles are erected. it's a home rule state with structures. it's a simple ordinance with a r community. with all issues related to broadband project. to reviewing permits in 30 days a commitment to having a
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reasonable fee structure outlined in the ordinance. and practicing and nondiscriminatoryqg practices. we heard from our providers that some providers they're not treated in the same fashion and they want to come to the community. it just a commitment to that. we'll revisit after every three years. >> i know kansas is tornado alley. fresh air and the leadership you have provided, understand the competitive industry and new entrants and fiber. just the challenges they historically have faced. but also all network cpanies are deploying networks right now.
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and we are not stopping there. of course, to fiberoptics whether on the ground or on poles requires permits, locatesd that cities have. we very much from the broadband ready checklist, we are taking the incentives approaches as opposed to a punishment approach. the carrot, not the stick. and the idea there is our cities are who we are partnering with. when we are deploying assets on the ground or on poles these are long-term commi not here for a few years. so we want to make sure that we are having healthy long-term relationships with communities so we are theree show up and we listen. what are the things that we are struggling with the cities, what can we be doing to help partner. we are not perfect on the private side as well so we want
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ng good resources but it also means that there are a set of checklists that you'll see just on your screen here that we've come up as as whether the communities can be doing right now to help help bring broadband deployments. in terms of highlighting cities, we have had the opportunity to work with many incredible cities who are doing excellent work when it comes to permitting. one thing i have here, the city of raleigh north carolina is one that we've been really happy with deploying. they have and again these are things that you m think are happening all over the country but are actually not, so the city of raleigh, for example, their permitting is fully online, what, not all permits are online. yes, sometimes we have to fax them in depending on the city so that is an excellent one. for every permit so that every builder can upload their plans to those permit numbers and also autogenerates e-mails to the
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operate distribution list for everyone that's on the permit to get relevant updates. i'm going to stop there. >> that was great. good morning, my name is dominic, i work for crown castle, external affairs and in that role i cover michigan, ohio, western pa, west virginia. what that means is i am really getting down into a local level and meeting with jurisdictions that are a lot more rural, they're smaller, so for me the best part of that is -- is the education piece, right, -- i get to come to a jurisdiction and have a conversation with folks that have no idea what we are doing and what we are talking about and bring them along the process. , so as far as using the checklist there are many things, we talk about innovation and we talk about streamline
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the process to these get networks built and, you know, it's as simple as having an updated permitting system, right, it's as simple as being able to bring that permitting system online so folks can see it and have a transpaw of how their application is being handled. but to go into the local level and be able to educate local elected officials and local leaders around how to do that is certainly a challenge, you know, a lot of local municipalities that i go into, hey, this is the way we've done it here and this is the way we will continue to do it here. i don't know what you're coming here to tell me or sell me but i don't want to hear it, right, and for me i take that as a challenge, right, because i want to educate and i want to get that community up to speed on what a, what's available to them as far as■daz fundi b,
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the benefit of us coming in here and building that network and i think jay touched on that a little bit. it's not something that you see, right, it's not -- i hear a loft elected officials say, well, what's in it for me to change our, the way we do things, right, and that's where the education piece goes in and that's where i get really excited when i start to have that conversation because they say what's in it for you is bringing your community into that -- into the 21st century, right, bringing your community and being able to have those opportunities for the cons.%tituents, being able to he opportunities for your schools, your hospital systems and even maybe your municipal network that might need upgrading, so i will stop there but i could go on for the whole half hour, i won't, but that is really for me, you know, that piece, i helping the jurisdictions understand what that means and what that means for them.
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checklists, 3 years ago alan davidson right after the confirmation to be head of ntia came to a board dinner we had after the policy summit and as we were debating and looking at the infrastructure funding and what it was going to mean, he heard from member after member after member that really didn't really talk as much about the money although the money is critical. they talked about the barriers to deployment and he established an office, permitting reform and best practices as a result of those conversations and in just a little bit he will be coming to give us a of what we are trying to do is create common language among rulators, industry, state and mayors.
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and this campaign created a common language of best practices as we have seen it now whether it's kansas, mississippi, our other states use the checklist as a reference for what is a broadband ready city. part of the guidance and also the conversations with ntia is the importance of wholesale competition and open access that if you're going to build to unserved area and say rural mississippi and you're going to connect the post office there or the wal-marts or the pharmacy and maybe it's the only should be because it's unserved the only broadband line that meets the new definitions in that small community. why is wholesale access so seeing on the ground and working
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with your companies and communities. >> great, thank you, jeff, forns mike galvin, i'm chief administrative officer, granite serves businesses and governmental agencies taking a lot of the network infrastructure that we've been discussing and wrapping it up and making it available for end users for the schools and libraries in those communities for the small businesses, for the mid-size businesses, frankly for evsken the businesses that have very commonly broadly dispersed retail stores, locations, other network facilities, pipelines for some of our federal customers, bases in -- in certain locations, frankly, recruitment centers for the army or air force, all of
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whom need the additional bandwidth that are often in unserved or underserved areas. the broadband industry has changed over the past ten years involved in that change is ntia and i'm glad alan is going to be here to talk about thereies they implemented with encompasses help but even before then leading to the changes there were other federal agency that is had foresight to think about the policies that should be in place when building out new infrastructure with federal taxpayer expenses, money to build new network connections were first-time network connections in unserved areas, the department of agriculture as the broadband and internet of things spread to agriculture you
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can easily understand why it is so many communities and so many businesses there that are not served implemented in open access policy to try to have an option so that end better experience and there's more of a competitive presence even when there's only one physical network. the department of treasury, we will hear from joey who has led the capital project initiative also had the foresight to implement as part of their policies and open access preference which also got picked up by ntia and so that ntia recommended for guarantees who would be applying for founds make their networks in those underserved -- unserved areas available and a number of states have come forward with plans that do exactly that as
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recommended by ntaa, as implemented by agriculture and treasury as part of the recent changes in broadband infrastructure so that states includg massachusett illinois, colorado, washington, florida, pennsylvania have all implemented preference systems so that in evaluating guaranties, bids to provide services to unserved and underserved areas that that g taken up. i know at granite and other resellers we have customers that have hundred or thousands of locations who have both cutting-edge ai initiatives, sana was here for those who missed to help business customers do and they have the most advanced ai systems. they have fiber, data centers
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but they have hundred-year-old need that implemented andns and aggregated and resolve today make it functional for the business and that's the role that we serve and others like us serve within the industry. we really think it's critically important to have open access at a state and federal level. >> jade, one of the items on the checklist is innovative ways like micro speed deployment, minimize disruption or damage to the roads and the rights of way, quick restoration. what are some of the things that you see that would encourage and send the most innovative deployment technologies and methods and talk to us a little bit about that, dominic mentioned it. i would love to hear from those
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ariane and dominic, anything that you would like to add from your view. where's a lot of hesitation in employing innovative methods especially when utilizing public funds, the public sector is always keen on trying new things because the risk tolerance is so much lower for public funds. policymakers to consider that if you do things the same way you've always done them you will get what you've always got which is lack of broadband parity and underserved areas and dye --distressed areas and we are encouraging especially local policymakers to say we have always done it this way to really consider at least piloting more innovative options, seeing how it goes, recognizing that the world continues to spin and then maybe you can add as jumping off point to continuing their methods
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because we are know that we are not going to get there if we do done, deployment by definition are going to occur in areas that have been economically feasible without public investment right, and so without taking every single angle, you know, decreasing time delays, we are for all.g to get to the internet chip you hit on it a little bit on conditions of roads. that's a lot of the feedback they get when i meet with local jurisdictions, with their public works folks, their main concern is i want the integrity of that road to not be affected by right, and we know traditional
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construction methods, we are going to affect the integrity of that road and they are more timely and more■] costly, right, so the one thing that i try to do when i'm having these conversations is really just emphasize the fact that we areeo affect the integrity of your road, right, we want to use these innovative construction practices so that the integrity stays intact and once we start getting past that hurdle, they become a little more open at least to the conversation but you're right, it's very hard to get them past that this is the way we've always done it conversation. road integrity concerns can help to a way. record levels of private■s investment, historic levels of
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federal investment, some people worry about supply chain, some people worry aut workforce, any thoughts on -- on thousand best create and i will be having a great conversation with the ceo of tia later on efforts on workforce training but talk a little bit about supply chain, any othe■3 challenges that we my face as you all look at pursuing, partnering with others firms, companies that are going to be going after bead, how do we address those issues, practical issues of workforce and supply? >> i know that we look to partner with entities that have innovative products. i think you've mentioned a lot of the new wireless products, a lot of solutions. we and others have come up with
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other forms of tdm, we fully ino roll out as part next gen innovative solution. >> for workforce development. you'll find if your state is doing that and requirement and1f percent of our allocation go to workforce development opportunities in alignment with tia and other partners at the state agencies helping to get those dollars up front so that we can put those programs into use and get those certifications done before the actual -- people are needed. >> as we close this panel were r
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video that mingon clyburn did. i want to recognize jeff sharp who help lead and run the campaign broadband created great content all the way through at different stages to have legislative of the commerce department, guidance and then to the states and localities and to the mayors and this video, i think, cap hours the essence of what we are trying to achieve and it's extremely compelling i think, and so we will close here. we wanted our friend alan davidson to see this video. [laughter] >> and then we look forward to his keynote. [music] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ a land for you and me. demand our land, we need the internet. broadband is how we study, share,er, create, binge and work. but 30 million americans don't have access to the internet and million more in small towns and in growing cities are stuck with broadband that is old, slow and.
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broadband is infrastructure for wo meet our growing band with demand. we can help mayors and local leaders attract investment and give every neighborhood access to the job of tomorrow. wireless, satellite and 5g networks, we need them all and they all need fiber. if we are going to do the work, dig a trench, build a tower or hang a small cell, then it just makes sense to connect to the fastest future-forwardworks available. look, we are the nation that invented the internet. the land that may competition the law but other countries see
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our sluggishly slow internet speeds as a weakness. they are deploying fiber, 5g and setting giga bit speed goals. a land that unleashes competition and faster speed to every kid and every corner of america. because this is our land and the internet was made for you and me.

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