BEAD Data
NTIA Approves Louisiana Final BEAD Proposal
It's the first state to reach the deployment stage of the $42.5 billion program.
The Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment program is a $42.45 billion initiative administered by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration of the U.S. Commerce Department. Established by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, BEAD aims to expand high-speed Internet access by funding planning, infrastructure deployment and adoption programs.
BEAD Data
It's the first state to reach the deployment stage of the $42.5 billion program.
BEAD
States are beginning to get spending plans together for the $42.5 billion broadband expansion effort.
BEAD
More than half reveal permitting challenges, tariffs, and labor shortages threaten to impact BEAD rollout.
EVs
FCC does not seem to be affected by the bill.
BEAD Data
It's the final step before projects can get underway.
BEAD Data
At least 20 states have reached the milestone.
SpaceX
NTIA said it has significantly reduced barriers to participation by LEO satellite providers.
12 Days of Broadband
Loper Bright sets the stage for a Republican-led overhaul of broadband and telecom policy in 2025.
New Hampshire
The state will get $191 million for contracts with municipalities and commercial internet service providers to run fiber on remote roads.
12 Days of Broadband
Every state got its BEAD proposal approved, and at least 18 began fielding grant applications.
12 Days of Broadband
States, cities, and private providers led the charge as federal broadband affordability efforts falter.
BEAD Data
The state is set to get fiber to more than 80 percent of its eligible homes and businesses.
Committee on Commerce Science and Transportation
Two bills target BEAD delays, one focuses on U.S. wireless leadership
SpaceX
In our view, without Musk’s support, Trump would not have won the presidency.
Expert Opinion
BEAD money is start-up capital and not designed to provide on-going support for long-term operating expenses.
BEAD Data
It's at least the sixteenth state to start taking grant proposals under the $42.5 billion program.