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After BEAD: The Future of Broadband and Accountability - Episode 663 of the Community Broadband Bits Podcast

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Trump FCC Begins Dismantling Agency Civil Rights Reforms

After decades of redlining and broadband “digital discrimination” by the nation’s biggest telecom monopolies, the FCC rules taking aim at the problem are poised to be dismantled, courtesy of the Trump administration’s broad, controversial frontal assault on discrimination reforms and civil rights. Trump’s incoming FCC boss Brendan Carr issued a statement falsely claiming that the administration is eliminating discrimination reforms to purportedly stop…discrimination. The move is primarily to the benefit of telecom monopolies accused of discrimination, which filed a federal lawsuit to prevent the rules last year via the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Save the Date: Next B4DE Marks Pivotal Time In ‘Charting the Course’ Forward

With uncertainty swirling around the future of BEAD and Digital Equity Act programs, the next Building for Digital Equity (#B4DE) live stream is shaping up to be perhaps the most monumental one to date. “Charting the Course: Adapting to Policy Shifts While Keeping Our Eyes on the Prize” promises to bring hundreds of digital inclusion practitioners together to offer insights on how communities continue to move forward at a time when the programs established to do so have been tossed into disarray.

Four Tribal Communities in Alaska Ready To Come Out Of Connectivity Freeze

If the cloud of uncertainty suddenly hovering over federal broadband funding programs is lifted, four Tribal co mmunities in Alaska can fully celebrate an NTIA grant that will help bring state-of-the-art fiber connectivity to their homes on Kodiak Island just off the south coast of Alaska. Old Harbor Native Corporation will undertake the project, named Project Nunapet for an Alutiiq word meaning “our lands,” in partnership with Alaska Communications.

New York City Expands Free Wireless, But Missed Opportunities Loom Large

New York City Mayor Eric Adams recently unveiled plans to improve public safety, housing, and the overall livability of the Big Apple, which includes $6 million in new funding to expand the New York Public Library’s (NYPL) “Neighborhood Internet” network. But the effort still remains a far cry from the bolder, bigger, “master plan” initiative scrapped by the Adams administration in 2022.

Lack Of Progress, Transparency Mar Augusta County, Virginia Fiber Partnership

In Virginia, a partnership with a local private ISP and several nearby cooperatives to finally expand affordable fiber into long unserved portions of eight predominantly rural Virginia counties doesn’t appear to be working out all that well for Augusta County. All Points Broadband originally claimed it would have 267 miles of new fiber optic cable installed in Augusta County by the end of the 2024 calendar year. That hasn’t happened yet, and nobody appears to know why.

Wadsworth, Ohio Converting City-Owned Broadband Network From Coaxial To Fiber

Wadsworth, Ohio officials say they’re making steady progress on the expansion of a city-owned broadband network that’s extending affordable fiber connectivity to the city’s nearly 25,000 residents. Originally a coaxial-based network, the city now says it’s in the process of delivering Wi-Fi to many city residents while they go block-by-block removing older coaxial cable and upgrading residents to more future-proof fiber optic connectivity.