The American Cable Association is endorsing the Federal Communications Commission’s tentative plan to overhaul the Universal Service Fund (USF), including the effort to create a first-ever broadband deployment fund financed by capping and reforming the $4.4 billion High Cost Fund. At the same time, ACA believes the FCC must establish proper transition measures for the High Cost Fund so that truly small providers in rural areas can continue their mission of providing quality service to their consumers.

"Like the FCC, ACA is convinced that the time has come for the USF to focus on the infrastructure technology of the future: Broadband. In doing so, however, the FCC should allow small companies – those serving fewer than 100,000 access lines – to continue to rely on the High Cost Fund during a transition period to prevent a destructive spike in phone rates for millions of consumers living in the most economically challenging areas to provide service," said ACA President and CEO Matthew Polka in a statement.
 
The FCC has begun conducting USF reform proceedings in response to the National Broadband Plan’s call in March for the creation of a broadband subsidy program, called the Connect America Fund (CAF), which would likely receive financial support from funds previously intended for the voice-centric High Cost Fund.
 
The ACA generally agrees with this approach, convinced that the size of High Cost Fund needs to be capped at 2010 levels and reformed to eliminate a host of costly inequities and inefficiencies. Problems with the High Cost Fund range from the large growth in the size of the fund, which has resulted in unsustainably high taxes on monthly consumer phone bills, to the wasteful receipt of hundreds of millions of dollars in support by very large telecommunications carriers that face direct competition from upstart providers that are unable to receive a dime of USF support.

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Effros: The Utility of Competition

the underlying theories now being bandied about for either regulating broadband internet access services (BIAS) as a utility or something that should be freely competitive are in major conflict.

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