California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB662 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Senate July 13, 2023 Amended IN Senate June 21, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 662Introduced by Assembly Member BoernerFebruary 09, 2023An act to add Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to communications. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 662, as amended, Boerner. Federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds: administration.Existing law vests the Public Utilities Commission with regulatory authority over public utilities. Pursuant to its existing authority, the commission supervises administration of the states telecommunications universal service programs, including, among others, the California Advanced Services Fund (CASF). Existing law requires the commission to develop, implement, and administer the CASF program to encourage deployment of high-quality advanced communications services to all Californians that will promote economic growth, job creation, and the substantial social benefits of advanced information and communications technologies. Existing law requires the commission to establish specified accounts within the CASF, including, among other accounts, the Broadband Infrastructure Grant Account and the Federal Funding Account.Existing federal law, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, establishes the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD Program). Under that act, Congress appropriated $42,450,000,000 to the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information to carry out the BEAD Program, under which the Assistant Secretary makes grants to states, as provided.This bill would require the commission, in administering federal BEAD Program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, to follow federal guidelines, as defined. Except as provided, the bill would prohibit the commission from imposing any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant, as defined, that are not explicitly required by the federal guidelines. The bill would require the commission, in exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer BEAD Program funds, to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that, among other things, use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data. The bill would require the commission to follow certain timelines, including, among other timelines, by requiring the commission to post a copy of the initial proposal submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration on its internet website at least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, as provided. This bill would require the commission to require require, consistent with federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded BEAD Program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option by satisfying at least 5 criteria, including, among other criteria, by offering subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, as specified. The bill would require the commission to establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines. The bill would authorize the commission to use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines and would require the commission to only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold. option, as defined. The bill would require the commission to approve or deny a completed application within 180 days after deeming an application complete and would require the commission to develop a plan for addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services, as provided. The bill would prohibit an applicant from imposing any surcharges or recurring fees beyond those approved by the commission on a low-cost broadband service option, as specified.This bill would require the commission, on or before January 10, 2024, to submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communication that contains certain information, including, among other information, an assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the BEAD Program into one last-mile broadband program. The bill would require the above-mentioned provisions to only be implemented to the extent that they do not conflict with federal law. The bill would also make related findings and declarations.Under existing law, a violation of any order, decision, rule, direction, demand, or requirement of the commission is a crime. Because a violation of an order or decision of the commission implementing this bills requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) In the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 (Public Law 117-58), the United States Congress established the BEAD Program, a competitive broadband grant program, recognizing that access to affordable, reliable, high-speed broadband is essential to full participation in modern life. The $42,450,000,000 BEAD Program directs grants to states to support broadband deployment.(2) Governor Gavin Newsom has designated the Public Utilities Commission as the recipient of, and administering agent for, the BEAD Program for California. As part of their responsibilities, the Public Utilities Commission is responsible for creating Californias plan for distributing BEAD Program funds. The plan must be approved by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.(3) The BEAD Program will reach its potential only if the Public Utilities Commission administers the program in a manner that maximizes provider participation through a fair and streamlined evaluation process using rational scoring criteria and a predictable schedule. Maximizing provider participation will help to ensure that BEAD Program funding is used to support broadband deployment as efficiently and effectively as possible.(4) In establishing the processes and procedures that will govern the BEAD Program and BEAD Program funds in California, the Public Utilities Commission shall aim to reduce barriers to participation in order to maximize the number of applications received. The scoring criteria should establish reasonable minimum standards for eligible projects while encouraging applicants to exceed them.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature that the requirements placed upon the Public Utilities Commission pursuant to this act are aligned with federal guidelines issued by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in their Notice of Funding Opportunity for the BEAD Program and subsequent guidance, in order to maximize the amount of BEAD Program funds awarded to California and avoid the National Telecommunications and Information Administration denying Californias plans for the use of these funds.(c) As used in this section, BEAD Program means the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program.SEC. 2. Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) is added to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:PART 5.5. Broadband Communications3265. As used in this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(b) Federal guidelines means guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c)Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d)(c) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan offered to a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) (e) of Section 3266.5. 3265.5.(e)(d) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(f)(e) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(g)State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall follow federal guidelines.(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(d) The commission shall approve or deny a completed application within 180 days after deeming an application complete.(e) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option.(f) Unless otherwise permitted pursuant to the federal guidelines, an applicant shall not impose any surcharges or recurring fees beyond those approved by the commission on a low-cost broadband service option offered pursuant to this section.(g) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines, for addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services.(h) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3266.(a)At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.(b)No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.(c)The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.3266.5.(a)The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:(1)Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.(2)Participates in the California Lifeline Program.(3)Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(4)Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.(5)Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(6)Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(7)Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(b)The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.(c)The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.(d)The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).(e)The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3267.(a)The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.(b)The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:(1)The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).(2)That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.(3)The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.3267.5.The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.3268.3266. (a)On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1)(a) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2)(b) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3)(c) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.3268.5.3266.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
1+Amended IN Senate June 21, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 662Introduced by Assembly Member BoernerFebruary 09, 2023An act to add Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to communications. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 662, as amended, Boerner. Federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds: administration.Existing law vests the Public Utilities Commission with regulatory authority over public utilities. Pursuant to its existing authority, the commission supervises administration of the states telecommunications universal service programs, including, among others, the California Advanced Services Fund (CASF). Existing law requires the commission to develop, implement, and administer the CASF program to encourage deployment of high-quality advanced communications services to all Californians that will promote economic growth, job creation, and the substantial social benefits of advanced information and communications technologies. Existing law requires the commission to establish specified accounts within the CASF, including, among other accounts, the Broadband Infrastructure Grant Account and the Federal Funding Account.Existing federal law, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, establishes the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD Program). Under that act, Congress appropriated $42,450,000,000 to the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information to carry out the BEAD Program, under which the Assistant Secretary makes grants to states, as provided.This bill would require the commission, in administering federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment BEAD Program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, to use processes and procedures that are consistent with guidelines adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration for the use of the program funds. The Act of 2021, to follow federal guidelines, as defined. Except as provided, the bill would prohibit the commission from imposing any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant applicant, as defined, that are not consistent with or explicitly required by the federal guidelines. The bill would require the commission, in exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program BEAD Program funds, to aim to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that, among other things, use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data. The bill would authorize the commission to require applicants to commit to affordability requirements that are consistent with and do not exceed affordability requirements set by the commission for similar programs as of the enactment of the bill. The bill would require the commission to follow certain timelines, including, among other timelines, by requiring the commission to post a copy of the initial proposal submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration on its internet website at least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, as provided. This bill would require the commission to require each grant applicant awarded BEAD Program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option by satisfying at least 5 criteria, including, among other criteria, by offering subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, as specified. The bill would require the commission to establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines. The bill would authorize the commission to use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines and would require the commission to only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.This bill would require the commission, on or before January 10, 2024, to submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communication that contains certain information, including, among other information, an assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the BEAD Program into one last-mile broadband program. The bill would require the above-mentioned provisions to only be implemented to the extent that they do not conflict with federal law. The bill would also make related findings and declarations.Under existing law, a violation of any order, decision, rule, direction, demand, or requirement of the commission is a crime. Because a violation of an order or decision of the commission implementing this bills requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) In the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 (Public Law 117-58), the United States Congress established the BEAD Program, a competitive broadband grant program, recognizing that access to affordable, reliable, high-speed broadband is essential to full participation in modern life. The $42,450,000,000 BEAD Program directs grants to states to support broadband deployment.(2) Governor Gavin Newsom has designated the Public Utilities Commission as the recipient of, and administering agent for, the BEAD Program for California. As part of their responsibilities, the Public Utilities Commission is responsible for creating Californias plan for distributing BEAD Program funds. The plan must be approved by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.(3) The BEAD Program will reach its potential only if the Public Utilities Commission administers the program in a manner that maximizes provider participation through a fair and streamlined evaluation process using rational scoring criteria and a predictable schedule. Maximizing provider participation will help to ensure that BEAD Program funding is used to support broadband deployment as efficiently and effectively as possible.(4) In establishing the processes and procedures that will govern the BEAD Program and BEAD Program funds in California, the Public Utilities Commission shall aim to reduce barriers to participation in order to maximize the number of applications received. The scoring criteria should establish reasonable minimum standards for eligible projects while encouraging applicants to exceed them.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature that the requirements placed upon the Public Utilities Commission pursuant to this act are aligned with federal guidelines issued by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in their Notice of Funding Opportunity for the BEAD Program and subsequent guidance, in order to maximize the amount of BEAD Program funds awarded to California and avoid the National Telecommunications and Information Administration denying Californias plans for the use of these funds.(c) As used in this section, BEAD Program means the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program.SECTION 1.SEC. 2. Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) is added to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:PART 5.5. Broadband Communications3265. (a)As used in this section, part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(1)(b) Federal guidelines means guidelines guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c) Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 3266.5.(e) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(2)(f) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(b)(g) State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall use processes and procedures that are consistent with follow federal guidelines.(c)The commission(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not consistent with or explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(d)(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall aim to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(e)Notwithstanding subdivision (c), the commission may require applicants to commit to affordability requirements that are consistent with and do not exceed existing affordability requirements set by the commission for similar programs as of the enactment of this section.3266. (a) At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.(b) No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.(c) The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.3266.5. (a) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:(1) Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.(2) Participates in the California Lifeline Program.(3) Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(4) Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.(5) Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(6) Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(7) Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(b) The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.(c) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.(d) The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).(e) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3267. (a) The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.(b) The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:(1) The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).(2) That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.(3) The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.3267.5. The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.3268. (a) On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.3268.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.SEC. 2.SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
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3- Amended IN Senate July 13, 2023 Amended IN Senate June 21, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 662Introduced by Assembly Member BoernerFebruary 09, 2023An act to add Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to communications. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 662, as amended, Boerner. Federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds: administration.Existing law vests the Public Utilities Commission with regulatory authority over public utilities. Pursuant to its existing authority, the commission supervises administration of the states telecommunications universal service programs, including, among others, the California Advanced Services Fund (CASF). Existing law requires the commission to develop, implement, and administer the CASF program to encourage deployment of high-quality advanced communications services to all Californians that will promote economic growth, job creation, and the substantial social benefits of advanced information and communications technologies. Existing law requires the commission to establish specified accounts within the CASF, including, among other accounts, the Broadband Infrastructure Grant Account and the Federal Funding Account.Existing federal law, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, establishes the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD Program). Under that act, Congress appropriated $42,450,000,000 to the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information to carry out the BEAD Program, under which the Assistant Secretary makes grants to states, as provided.This bill would require the commission, in administering federal BEAD Program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, to follow federal guidelines, as defined. Except as provided, the bill would prohibit the commission from imposing any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant, as defined, that are not explicitly required by the federal guidelines. The bill would require the commission, in exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer BEAD Program funds, to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that, among other things, use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data. The bill would require the commission to follow certain timelines, including, among other timelines, by requiring the commission to post a copy of the initial proposal submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration on its internet website at least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, as provided. This bill would require the commission to require require, consistent with federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded BEAD Program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option by satisfying at least 5 criteria, including, among other criteria, by offering subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, as specified. The bill would require the commission to establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines. The bill would authorize the commission to use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines and would require the commission to only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold. option, as defined. The bill would require the commission to approve or deny a completed application within 180 days after deeming an application complete and would require the commission to develop a plan for addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services, as provided. The bill would prohibit an applicant from imposing any surcharges or recurring fees beyond those approved by the commission on a low-cost broadband service option, as specified.This bill would require the commission, on or before January 10, 2024, to submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communication that contains certain information, including, among other information, an assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the BEAD Program into one last-mile broadband program. The bill would require the above-mentioned provisions to only be implemented to the extent that they do not conflict with federal law. The bill would also make related findings and declarations.Under existing law, a violation of any order, decision, rule, direction, demand, or requirement of the commission is a crime. Because a violation of an order or decision of the commission implementing this bills requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3+ Amended IN Senate June 21, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 662Introduced by Assembly Member BoernerFebruary 09, 2023An act to add Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to communications. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 662, as amended, Boerner. Federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds: administration.Existing law vests the Public Utilities Commission with regulatory authority over public utilities. Pursuant to its existing authority, the commission supervises administration of the states telecommunications universal service programs, including, among others, the California Advanced Services Fund (CASF). Existing law requires the commission to develop, implement, and administer the CASF program to encourage deployment of high-quality advanced communications services to all Californians that will promote economic growth, job creation, and the substantial social benefits of advanced information and communications technologies. Existing law requires the commission to establish specified accounts within the CASF, including, among other accounts, the Broadband Infrastructure Grant Account and the Federal Funding Account.Existing federal law, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, establishes the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD Program). Under that act, Congress appropriated $42,450,000,000 to the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information to carry out the BEAD Program, under which the Assistant Secretary makes grants to states, as provided.This bill would require the commission, in administering federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment BEAD Program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, to use processes and procedures that are consistent with guidelines adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration for the use of the program funds. The Act of 2021, to follow federal guidelines, as defined. Except as provided, the bill would prohibit the commission from imposing any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant applicant, as defined, that are not consistent with or explicitly required by the federal guidelines. The bill would require the commission, in exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program BEAD Program funds, to aim to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that, among other things, use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data. The bill would authorize the commission to require applicants to commit to affordability requirements that are consistent with and do not exceed affordability requirements set by the commission for similar programs as of the enactment of the bill. The bill would require the commission to follow certain timelines, including, among other timelines, by requiring the commission to post a copy of the initial proposal submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration on its internet website at least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, as provided. This bill would require the commission to require each grant applicant awarded BEAD Program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option by satisfying at least 5 criteria, including, among other criteria, by offering subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, as specified. The bill would require the commission to establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines. The bill would authorize the commission to use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines and would require the commission to only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.This bill would require the commission, on or before January 10, 2024, to submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communication that contains certain information, including, among other information, an assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the BEAD Program into one last-mile broadband program. The bill would require the above-mentioned provisions to only be implemented to the extent that they do not conflict with federal law. The bill would also make related findings and declarations.Under existing law, a violation of any order, decision, rule, direction, demand, or requirement of the commission is a crime. Because a violation of an order or decision of the commission implementing this bills requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
44
5- Amended IN Senate July 13, 2023 Amended IN Senate June 21, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023
5+ Amended IN Senate June 21, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023
66
7-Amended IN Senate July 13, 2023
87 Amended IN Senate June 21, 2023
98 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023
109
1110 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1211
1312 Assembly Bill
1413
1514 No. 662
1615
1716 Introduced by Assembly Member BoernerFebruary 09, 2023
1817
1918 Introduced by Assembly Member Boerner
2019 February 09, 2023
2120
2221 An act to add Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to communications.
2322
2423 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2524
2625 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2726
2827 AB 662, as amended, Boerner. Federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds: administration.
2928
30-Existing law vests the Public Utilities Commission with regulatory authority over public utilities. Pursuant to its existing authority, the commission supervises administration of the states telecommunications universal service programs, including, among others, the California Advanced Services Fund (CASF). Existing law requires the commission to develop, implement, and administer the CASF program to encourage deployment of high-quality advanced communications services to all Californians that will promote economic growth, job creation, and the substantial social benefits of advanced information and communications technologies. Existing law requires the commission to establish specified accounts within the CASF, including, among other accounts, the Broadband Infrastructure Grant Account and the Federal Funding Account.Existing federal law, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, establishes the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD Program). Under that act, Congress appropriated $42,450,000,000 to the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information to carry out the BEAD Program, under which the Assistant Secretary makes grants to states, as provided.This bill would require the commission, in administering federal BEAD Program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, to follow federal guidelines, as defined. Except as provided, the bill would prohibit the commission from imposing any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant, as defined, that are not explicitly required by the federal guidelines. The bill would require the commission, in exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer BEAD Program funds, to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that, among other things, use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data. The bill would require the commission to follow certain timelines, including, among other timelines, by requiring the commission to post a copy of the initial proposal submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration on its internet website at least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, as provided. This bill would require the commission to require require, consistent with federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded BEAD Program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option by satisfying at least 5 criteria, including, among other criteria, by offering subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, as specified. The bill would require the commission to establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines. The bill would authorize the commission to use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines and would require the commission to only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold. option, as defined. The bill would require the commission to approve or deny a completed application within 180 days after deeming an application complete and would require the commission to develop a plan for addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services, as provided. The bill would prohibit an applicant from imposing any surcharges or recurring fees beyond those approved by the commission on a low-cost broadband service option, as specified.This bill would require the commission, on or before January 10, 2024, to submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communication that contains certain information, including, among other information, an assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the BEAD Program into one last-mile broadband program. The bill would require the above-mentioned provisions to only be implemented to the extent that they do not conflict with federal law. The bill would also make related findings and declarations.Under existing law, a violation of any order, decision, rule, direction, demand, or requirement of the commission is a crime. Because a violation of an order or decision of the commission implementing this bills requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
29+Existing law vests the Public Utilities Commission with regulatory authority over public utilities. Pursuant to its existing authority, the commission supervises administration of the states telecommunications universal service programs, including, among others, the California Advanced Services Fund (CASF). Existing law requires the commission to develop, implement, and administer the CASF program to encourage deployment of high-quality advanced communications services to all Californians that will promote economic growth, job creation, and the substantial social benefits of advanced information and communications technologies. Existing law requires the commission to establish specified accounts within the CASF, including, among other accounts, the Broadband Infrastructure Grant Account and the Federal Funding Account.Existing federal law, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, establishes the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD Program). Under that act, Congress appropriated $42,450,000,000 to the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information to carry out the BEAD Program, under which the Assistant Secretary makes grants to states, as provided.This bill would require the commission, in administering federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment BEAD Program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, to use processes and procedures that are consistent with guidelines adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration for the use of the program funds. The Act of 2021, to follow federal guidelines, as defined. Except as provided, the bill would prohibit the commission from imposing any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant applicant, as defined, that are not consistent with or explicitly required by the federal guidelines. The bill would require the commission, in exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program BEAD Program funds, to aim to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that, among other things, use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data. The bill would authorize the commission to require applicants to commit to affordability requirements that are consistent with and do not exceed affordability requirements set by the commission for similar programs as of the enactment of the bill. The bill would require the commission to follow certain timelines, including, among other timelines, by requiring the commission to post a copy of the initial proposal submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration on its internet website at least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, as provided. This bill would require the commission to require each grant applicant awarded BEAD Program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option by satisfying at least 5 criteria, including, among other criteria, by offering subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, as specified. The bill would require the commission to establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines. The bill would authorize the commission to use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines and would require the commission to only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.This bill would require the commission, on or before January 10, 2024, to submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communication that contains certain information, including, among other information, an assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the BEAD Program into one last-mile broadband program. The bill would require the above-mentioned provisions to only be implemented to the extent that they do not conflict with federal law. The bill would also make related findings and declarations.Under existing law, a violation of any order, decision, rule, direction, demand, or requirement of the commission is a crime. Because a violation of an order or decision of the commission implementing this bills requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
3130
3231 Existing law vests the Public Utilities Commission with regulatory authority over public utilities. Pursuant to its existing authority, the commission supervises administration of the states telecommunications universal service programs, including, among others, the California Advanced Services Fund (CASF). Existing law requires the commission to develop, implement, and administer the CASF program to encourage deployment of high-quality advanced communications services to all Californians that will promote economic growth, job creation, and the substantial social benefits of advanced information and communications technologies. Existing law requires the commission to establish specified accounts within the CASF, including, among other accounts, the Broadband Infrastructure Grant Account and the Federal Funding Account.
3332
3433 Existing federal law, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, establishes the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD Program). Under that act, Congress appropriated $42,450,000,000 to the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information to carry out the BEAD Program, under which the Assistant Secretary makes grants to states, as provided.
3534
36-This bill would require the commission, in administering federal BEAD Program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, to follow federal guidelines, as defined. Except as provided, the bill would prohibit the commission from imposing any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant, as defined, that are not explicitly required by the federal guidelines. The bill would require the commission, in exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer BEAD Program funds, to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that, among other things, use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data. The bill would require the commission to follow certain timelines, including, among other timelines, by requiring the commission to post a copy of the initial proposal submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration on its internet website at least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, as provided.
35+This bill would require the commission, in administering federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment BEAD Program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, to use processes and procedures that are consistent with guidelines adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration for the use of the program funds. The Act of 2021, to follow federal guidelines, as defined. Except as provided, the bill would prohibit the commission from imposing any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant applicant, as defined, that are not consistent with or explicitly required by the federal guidelines. The bill would require the commission, in exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program BEAD Program funds, to aim to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that, among other things, use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data. The bill would authorize the commission to require applicants to commit to affordability requirements that are consistent with and do not exceed affordability requirements set by the commission for similar programs as of the enactment of the bill. The bill would require the commission to follow certain timelines, including, among other timelines, by requiring the commission to post a copy of the initial proposal submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration on its internet website at least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, as provided.
3736
38- This bill would require the commission to require require, consistent with federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded BEAD Program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option by satisfying at least 5 criteria, including, among other criteria, by offering subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, as specified. The bill would require the commission to establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines. The bill would authorize the commission to use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines and would require the commission to only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold. option, as defined. The bill would require the commission to approve or deny a completed application within 180 days after deeming an application complete and would require the commission to develop a plan for addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services, as provided. The bill would prohibit an applicant from imposing any surcharges or recurring fees beyond those approved by the commission on a low-cost broadband service option, as specified.
37+ This bill would require the commission to require each grant applicant awarded BEAD Program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option by satisfying at least 5 criteria, including, among other criteria, by offering subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, as specified. The bill would require the commission to establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines. The bill would authorize the commission to use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines and would require the commission to only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.
3938
4039 This bill would require the commission, on or before January 10, 2024, to submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communication that contains certain information, including, among other information, an assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the BEAD Program into one last-mile broadband program. The bill would require the above-mentioned provisions to only be implemented to the extent that they do not conflict with federal law. The bill would also make related findings and declarations.
4140
4241 Under existing law, a violation of any order, decision, rule, direction, demand, or requirement of the commission is a crime. Because a violation of an order or decision of the commission implementing this bills requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
4342
4443 The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
4544
4645 This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
4746
4847 ## Digest Key
4948
5049 ## Bill Text
5150
52-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) In the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 (Public Law 117-58), the United States Congress established the BEAD Program, a competitive broadband grant program, recognizing that access to affordable, reliable, high-speed broadband is essential to full participation in modern life. The $42,450,000,000 BEAD Program directs grants to states to support broadband deployment.(2) Governor Gavin Newsom has designated the Public Utilities Commission as the recipient of, and administering agent for, the BEAD Program for California. As part of their responsibilities, the Public Utilities Commission is responsible for creating Californias plan for distributing BEAD Program funds. The plan must be approved by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.(3) The BEAD Program will reach its potential only if the Public Utilities Commission administers the program in a manner that maximizes provider participation through a fair and streamlined evaluation process using rational scoring criteria and a predictable schedule. Maximizing provider participation will help to ensure that BEAD Program funding is used to support broadband deployment as efficiently and effectively as possible.(4) In establishing the processes and procedures that will govern the BEAD Program and BEAD Program funds in California, the Public Utilities Commission shall aim to reduce barriers to participation in order to maximize the number of applications received. The scoring criteria should establish reasonable minimum standards for eligible projects while encouraging applicants to exceed them.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature that the requirements placed upon the Public Utilities Commission pursuant to this act are aligned with federal guidelines issued by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in their Notice of Funding Opportunity for the BEAD Program and subsequent guidance, in order to maximize the amount of BEAD Program funds awarded to California and avoid the National Telecommunications and Information Administration denying Californias plans for the use of these funds.(c) As used in this section, BEAD Program means the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program.SEC. 2. Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) is added to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:PART 5.5. Broadband Communications3265. As used in this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(b) Federal guidelines means guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c)Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d)(c) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan offered to a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) (e) of Section 3266.5. 3265.5.(e)(d) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(f)(e) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(g)State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall follow federal guidelines.(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(d) The commission shall approve or deny a completed application within 180 days after deeming an application complete.(e) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option.(f) Unless otherwise permitted pursuant to the federal guidelines, an applicant shall not impose any surcharges or recurring fees beyond those approved by the commission on a low-cost broadband service option offered pursuant to this section.(g) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines, for addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services.(h) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3266.(a)At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.(b)No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.(c)The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.3266.5.(a)The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:(1)Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.(2)Participates in the California Lifeline Program.(3)Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(4)Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.(5)Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(6)Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(7)Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(b)The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.(c)The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.(d)The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).(e)The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3267.(a)The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.(b)The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:(1)The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).(2)That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.(3)The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.3267.5.The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.3268.3266. (a)On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1)(a) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2)(b) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3)(c) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.3268.5.3266.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
51+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) In the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 (Public Law 117-58), the United States Congress established the BEAD Program, a competitive broadband grant program, recognizing that access to affordable, reliable, high-speed broadband is essential to full participation in modern life. The $42,450,000,000 BEAD Program directs grants to states to support broadband deployment.(2) Governor Gavin Newsom has designated the Public Utilities Commission as the recipient of, and administering agent for, the BEAD Program for California. As part of their responsibilities, the Public Utilities Commission is responsible for creating Californias plan for distributing BEAD Program funds. The plan must be approved by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.(3) The BEAD Program will reach its potential only if the Public Utilities Commission administers the program in a manner that maximizes provider participation through a fair and streamlined evaluation process using rational scoring criteria and a predictable schedule. Maximizing provider participation will help to ensure that BEAD Program funding is used to support broadband deployment as efficiently and effectively as possible.(4) In establishing the processes and procedures that will govern the BEAD Program and BEAD Program funds in California, the Public Utilities Commission shall aim to reduce barriers to participation in order to maximize the number of applications received. The scoring criteria should establish reasonable minimum standards for eligible projects while encouraging applicants to exceed them.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature that the requirements placed upon the Public Utilities Commission pursuant to this act are aligned with federal guidelines issued by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in their Notice of Funding Opportunity for the BEAD Program and subsequent guidance, in order to maximize the amount of BEAD Program funds awarded to California and avoid the National Telecommunications and Information Administration denying Californias plans for the use of these funds.(c) As used in this section, BEAD Program means the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program.SECTION 1.SEC. 2. Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) is added to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:PART 5.5. Broadband Communications3265. (a)As used in this section, part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(1)(b) Federal guidelines means guidelines guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c) Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 3266.5.(e) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(2)(f) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(b)(g) State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall use processes and procedures that are consistent with follow federal guidelines.(c)The commission(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not consistent with or explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(d)(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall aim to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(e)Notwithstanding subdivision (c), the commission may require applicants to commit to affordability requirements that are consistent with and do not exceed existing affordability requirements set by the commission for similar programs as of the enactment of this section.3266. (a) At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.(b) No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.(c) The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.3266.5. (a) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:(1) Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.(2) Participates in the California Lifeline Program.(3) Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(4) Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.(5) Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(6) Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(7) Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(b) The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.(c) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.(d) The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).(e) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3267. (a) The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.(b) The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:(1) The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).(2) That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.(3) The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.3267.5. The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.3268. (a) On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.3268.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.SEC. 2.SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
5352
5453 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5554
5655 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5756
5857 SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) In the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 (Public Law 117-58), the United States Congress established the BEAD Program, a competitive broadband grant program, recognizing that access to affordable, reliable, high-speed broadband is essential to full participation in modern life. The $42,450,000,000 BEAD Program directs grants to states to support broadband deployment.(2) Governor Gavin Newsom has designated the Public Utilities Commission as the recipient of, and administering agent for, the BEAD Program for California. As part of their responsibilities, the Public Utilities Commission is responsible for creating Californias plan for distributing BEAD Program funds. The plan must be approved by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.(3) The BEAD Program will reach its potential only if the Public Utilities Commission administers the program in a manner that maximizes provider participation through a fair and streamlined evaluation process using rational scoring criteria and a predictable schedule. Maximizing provider participation will help to ensure that BEAD Program funding is used to support broadband deployment as efficiently and effectively as possible.(4) In establishing the processes and procedures that will govern the BEAD Program and BEAD Program funds in California, the Public Utilities Commission shall aim to reduce barriers to participation in order to maximize the number of applications received. The scoring criteria should establish reasonable minimum standards for eligible projects while encouraging applicants to exceed them.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature that the requirements placed upon the Public Utilities Commission pursuant to this act are aligned with federal guidelines issued by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in their Notice of Funding Opportunity for the BEAD Program and subsequent guidance, in order to maximize the amount of BEAD Program funds awarded to California and avoid the National Telecommunications and Information Administration denying Californias plans for the use of these funds.(c) As used in this section, BEAD Program means the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program.
5958
6059 SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) In the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 (Public Law 117-58), the United States Congress established the BEAD Program, a competitive broadband grant program, recognizing that access to affordable, reliable, high-speed broadband is essential to full participation in modern life. The $42,450,000,000 BEAD Program directs grants to states to support broadband deployment.(2) Governor Gavin Newsom has designated the Public Utilities Commission as the recipient of, and administering agent for, the BEAD Program for California. As part of their responsibilities, the Public Utilities Commission is responsible for creating Californias plan for distributing BEAD Program funds. The plan must be approved by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.(3) The BEAD Program will reach its potential only if the Public Utilities Commission administers the program in a manner that maximizes provider participation through a fair and streamlined evaluation process using rational scoring criteria and a predictable schedule. Maximizing provider participation will help to ensure that BEAD Program funding is used to support broadband deployment as efficiently and effectively as possible.(4) In establishing the processes and procedures that will govern the BEAD Program and BEAD Program funds in California, the Public Utilities Commission shall aim to reduce barriers to participation in order to maximize the number of applications received. The scoring criteria should establish reasonable minimum standards for eligible projects while encouraging applicants to exceed them.(b) It is the intent of the Legislature that the requirements placed upon the Public Utilities Commission pursuant to this act are aligned with federal guidelines issued by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in their Notice of Funding Opportunity for the BEAD Program and subsequent guidance, in order to maximize the amount of BEAD Program funds awarded to California and avoid the National Telecommunications and Information Administration denying Californias plans for the use of these funds.(c) As used in this section, BEAD Program means the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program.
6160
6261 SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
6362
6463 ### SECTION 1.
6564
6665 (1) In the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 (Public Law 117-58), the United States Congress established the BEAD Program, a competitive broadband grant program, recognizing that access to affordable, reliable, high-speed broadband is essential to full participation in modern life. The $42,450,000,000 BEAD Program directs grants to states to support broadband deployment.
6766
6867 (2) Governor Gavin Newsom has designated the Public Utilities Commission as the recipient of, and administering agent for, the BEAD Program for California. As part of their responsibilities, the Public Utilities Commission is responsible for creating Californias plan for distributing BEAD Program funds. The plan must be approved by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.
6968
7069 (3) The BEAD Program will reach its potential only if the Public Utilities Commission administers the program in a manner that maximizes provider participation through a fair and streamlined evaluation process using rational scoring criteria and a predictable schedule. Maximizing provider participation will help to ensure that BEAD Program funding is used to support broadband deployment as efficiently and effectively as possible.
7170
7271 (4) In establishing the processes and procedures that will govern the BEAD Program and BEAD Program funds in California, the Public Utilities Commission shall aim to reduce barriers to participation in order to maximize the number of applications received. The scoring criteria should establish reasonable minimum standards for eligible projects while encouraging applicants to exceed them.
7372
7473 (b) It is the intent of the Legislature that the requirements placed upon the Public Utilities Commission pursuant to this act are aligned with federal guidelines issued by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in their Notice of Funding Opportunity for the BEAD Program and subsequent guidance, in order to maximize the amount of BEAD Program funds awarded to California and avoid the National Telecommunications and Information Administration denying Californias plans for the use of these funds.
7574
7675 (c) As used in this section, BEAD Program means the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program.
7776
78-SEC. 2. Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) is added to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:PART 5.5. Broadband Communications3265. As used in this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(b) Federal guidelines means guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c)Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d)(c) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan offered to a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) (e) of Section 3266.5. 3265.5.(e)(d) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(f)(e) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(g)State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall follow federal guidelines.(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(d) The commission shall approve or deny a completed application within 180 days after deeming an application complete.(e) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option.(f) Unless otherwise permitted pursuant to the federal guidelines, an applicant shall not impose any surcharges or recurring fees beyond those approved by the commission on a low-cost broadband service option offered pursuant to this section.(g) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines, for addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services.(h) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3266.(a)At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.(b)No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.(c)The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.3266.5.(a)The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:(1)Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.(2)Participates in the California Lifeline Program.(3)Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(4)Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.(5)Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(6)Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(7)Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(b)The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.(c)The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.(d)The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).(e)The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3267.(a)The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.(b)The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:(1)The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).(2)That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.(3)The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.3267.5.The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.3268.3266. (a)On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1)(a) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2)(b) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3)(c) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.3268.5.3266.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.
77+SECTION 1.SEC. 2. Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) is added to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:PART 5.5. Broadband Communications3265. (a)As used in this section, part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(1)(b) Federal guidelines means guidelines guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c) Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 3266.5.(e) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(2)(f) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(b)(g) State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall use processes and procedures that are consistent with follow federal guidelines.(c)The commission(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not consistent with or explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(d)(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall aim to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(e)Notwithstanding subdivision (c), the commission may require applicants to commit to affordability requirements that are consistent with and do not exceed existing affordability requirements set by the commission for similar programs as of the enactment of this section.3266. (a) At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.(b) No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.(c) The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.3266.5. (a) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:(1) Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.(2) Participates in the California Lifeline Program.(3) Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(4) Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.(5) Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(6) Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(7) Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(b) The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.(c) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.(d) The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).(e) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3267. (a) The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.(b) The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:(1) The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).(2) That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.(3) The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.3267.5. The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.3268. (a) On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.3268.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.
7978
80-SEC. 2. Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) is added to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:
79+SECTION 1.SEC. 2. Part 5.5 (commencing with Section 3265) is added to Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:
8180
82-### SEC. 2.
81+### SECTION 1.SEC. 2.
8382
84-PART 5.5. Broadband Communications3265. As used in this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(b) Federal guidelines means guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c)Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d)(c) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan offered to a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) (e) of Section 3266.5. 3265.5.(e)(d) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(f)(e) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(g)State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall follow federal guidelines.(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(d) The commission shall approve or deny a completed application within 180 days after deeming an application complete.(e) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option.(f) Unless otherwise permitted pursuant to the federal guidelines, an applicant shall not impose any surcharges or recurring fees beyond those approved by the commission on a low-cost broadband service option offered pursuant to this section.(g) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines, for addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services.(h) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3266.(a)At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.(b)No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.(c)The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.3266.5.(a)The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:(1)Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.(2)Participates in the California Lifeline Program.(3)Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(4)Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.(5)Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(6)Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(7)Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(b)The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.(c)The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.(d)The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).(e)The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3267.(a)The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.(b)The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:(1)The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).(2)That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.(3)The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.3267.5.The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.3268.3266. (a)On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1)(a) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2)(b) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3)(c) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.3268.5.3266.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.
83+PART 5.5. Broadband Communications3265. (a)As used in this section, part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(1)(b) Federal guidelines means guidelines guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c) Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 3266.5.(e) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(2)(f) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(b)(g) State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall use processes and procedures that are consistent with follow federal guidelines.(c)The commission(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not consistent with or explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(d)(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall aim to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(e)Notwithstanding subdivision (c), the commission may require applicants to commit to affordability requirements that are consistent with and do not exceed existing affordability requirements set by the commission for similar programs as of the enactment of this section.3266. (a) At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.(b) No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.(c) The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.3266.5. (a) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:(1) Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.(2) Participates in the California Lifeline Program.(3) Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(4) Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.(5) Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(6) Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(7) Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(b) The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.(c) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.(d) The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).(e) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3267. (a) The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.(b) The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:(1) The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).(2) That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.(3) The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.3267.5. The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.3268. (a) On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.3268.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.
8584
86-PART 5.5. Broadband Communications3265. As used in this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(b) Federal guidelines means guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c)Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d)(c) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan offered to a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) (e) of Section 3266.5. 3265.5.(e)(d) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(f)(e) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(g)State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall follow federal guidelines.(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(d) The commission shall approve or deny a completed application within 180 days after deeming an application complete.(e) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option.(f) Unless otherwise permitted pursuant to the federal guidelines, an applicant shall not impose any surcharges or recurring fees beyond those approved by the commission on a low-cost broadband service option offered pursuant to this section.(g) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines, for addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services.(h) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3266.(a)At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.(b)No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.(c)The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.3266.5.(a)The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:(1)Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.(2)Participates in the California Lifeline Program.(3)Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(4)Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.(5)Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(6)Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(7)Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(b)The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.(c)The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.(d)The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).(e)The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3267.(a)The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.(b)The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:(1)The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).(2)That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.(3)The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.3267.5.The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.3268.3266. (a)On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1)(a) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2)(b) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3)(c) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.3268.5.3266.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.
85+PART 5.5. Broadband Communications3265. (a)As used in this section, part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(1)(b) Federal guidelines means guidelines guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c) Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 3266.5.(e) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(2)(f) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(b)(g) State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall use processes and procedures that are consistent with follow federal guidelines.(c)The commission(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not consistent with or explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(d)(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall aim to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(e)Notwithstanding subdivision (c), the commission may require applicants to commit to affordability requirements that are consistent with and do not exceed existing affordability requirements set by the commission for similar programs as of the enactment of this section.3266. (a) At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.(b) No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.(c) The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.3266.5. (a) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:(1) Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.(2) Participates in the California Lifeline Program.(3) Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(4) Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.(5) Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(6) Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(7) Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(b) The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.(c) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.(d) The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).(e) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.3267. (a) The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.(b) The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:(1) The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).(2) That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.(3) The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.3267.5. The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.3268. (a) On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.3268.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.
8786
8887 PART 5.5. Broadband Communications
8988
9089 PART 5.5. Broadband Communications
9190
92-3265. As used in this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(b) Federal guidelines means guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c)Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d)(c) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan offered to a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) (e) of Section 3266.5. 3265.5.(e)(d) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(f)(e) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(g)State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.
91+3265. (a)As used in this section, part, the following definitions apply:(a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.(1)(b) Federal guidelines means guidelines guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.(c) Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.(d) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 3266.5.(e) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.(2)(f) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.(b)(g) State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.
9392
9493
9594
96-3265. As used in this part, the following definitions apply:
95+3265. (a)As used in this section, part, the following definitions apply:
9796
9897 (a) Applicant means a subgrantee or subrecipient of program funds.
9998
100-(b) Federal guidelines means guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.
99+(1)
100+
101+
102+
103+(b) Federal guidelines means guidelines guidance and requirements adopted by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program and subsequent guidance issued to clarify the Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Equity, Access, and Employment Program for the use of program funds.
101104
102105 (c) Initial proposal means the plan submitted by the commission to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration that will, among other things, describe the competitive process the commission proposes to use to select applicants to construct broadband projects, as required and defined in the federal guidelines.
103106
107+(d) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 3266.5.
104108
109+(e) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.
110+
111+(2)
112+
113+
114+
115+(f) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.
116+
117+(b)
118+
119+
120+
121+(g) State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.
122+
123+3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall use processes and procedures that are consistent with follow federal guidelines.(c)The commission(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not consistent with or explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(d)(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall aim to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(e)Notwithstanding subdivision (c), the commission may require applicants to commit to affordability requirements that are consistent with and do not exceed existing affordability requirements set by the commission for similar programs as of the enactment of this section.
124+
125+
126+
127+3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall use processes and procedures that are consistent with follow federal guidelines.
128+
129+(c)The commission
130+
131+
132+
133+(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not consistent with or explicitly required by the federal guidelines.
105134
106135 (d)
107136
108137
109138
110-(c) Low-cost broadband service option means any subscription plan offered to a low-income household or middle-income household subscriber willingly chooses for their household, selected from among the criteria for a low-cost broadband service option pursuant to subdivision (a) (e) of Section 3266.5. 3265.5.
111-
112-(e)
113-
114-
115-
116-(d) Low-income household means any household at or below 80 percent of the area median income as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development. For projects that span multiple counties, the area median income for the project area shall be deemed the average median income of all the counties in the project area.
117-
118-(f)
119-
120-
121-
122-(e) Program funds means federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program funds.
123-
124-(g)State funds means funds collected pursuant to Section 281 or other state funds appropriated to the commission for use in conjunction with program funds.
125-
126-
127-
128-3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall follow federal guidelines.(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not explicitly required by the federal guidelines.(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:(1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.(2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.(3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.(d) The commission shall approve or deny a completed application within 180 days after deeming an application complete.(e) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option.(f) Unless otherwise permitted pursuant to the federal guidelines, an applicant shall not impose any surcharges or recurring fees beyond those approved by the commission on a low-cost broadband service option offered pursuant to this section.(g) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines, for addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services.(h) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.
129-
130-
131-
132-3265.5. (a) In administering program funds pursuant to the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58), the commission shall follow federal guidelines.
133-
134-(b) Except as authorized under this section, the commission shall not impose any additional rules, processes, procedures, prohibitions, funding prioritizations, or eligibility criteria on any applicant that are not explicitly required by the federal guidelines.
135-
136-(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:
139+(c) In exercising any discretion in adopting rules, processes, and procedures to administer program funds, the commission shall aim to adopt rules, processes, and procedures that do all of the following:
137140
138141 (1) Simplify the application process and minimize the levels of additional review for applications that otherwise meet the minimum financial, technological, and other requirements of the federal guidelines.
139142
140143 (2) Maximize the availability of federal funds available to California.
141144
142145 (3) Use the most robust, granular, and accurate broadband availability data.
143146
144-(d) The commission shall approve or deny a completed application within 180 days after deeming an application complete.
145-
146-(e) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option.
147-
148-(f) Unless otherwise permitted pursuant to the federal guidelines, an applicant shall not impose any surcharges or recurring fees beyond those approved by the commission on a low-cost broadband service option offered pursuant to this section.
149-
150-(g) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines, for addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services.
151-
152-(h) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing the middle-class affordability of broadband services and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.
147+(e)Notwithstanding subdivision (c), the commission may require applicants to commit to affordability requirements that are consistent with and do not exceed existing affordability requirements set by the commission for similar programs as of the enactment of this section.
153148
154149
155150
156-(a)At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.
151+3266. (a) At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.(b) No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.(c) The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.
157152
158153
159154
155+3266. (a) At least 45 days before the submission of the initial proposal, the commission shall post a copy of the initial proposal on its internet website and share the initial proposal with the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications.
156+
160157 (b) No later than 45 days after approval of the initial proposal from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration or after program funds are deposited in a state account, whichever occurs later, the commission shall begin accepting applications for program funds.
158+
159+(c) The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.
160+
161+3266.5. (a) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:(1) Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.(2) Participates in the California Lifeline Program.(3) Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(4) Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.(5) Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.(6) Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(7) Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.(b) The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.(c) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.(d) The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).(e) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.
161162
162163
163164
164-(c)The commission shall review and act on applications within 180 days following the application deadline or the date the grant was submitted, whichever occurs later.
165+3266.5. (a) The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:
166+
167+(1) Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.
168+
169+(2) Participates in the California Lifeline Program.
170+
171+(3) Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.
172+
173+(4) Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.
174+
175+(5) Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.
176+
177+(6) Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.
178+
179+(7) Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.
180+
181+(b) The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.
182+
183+(c) The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.
184+
185+(d) The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).
186+
187+(e) The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.
188+
189+3267. (a) The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.(b) The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:(1) The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).(2) That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.(3) The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.
165190
166191
167192
193+3267. (a) The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.
168194
195+(b) The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:
169196
170-(a)The commission shall require, consistent with the federal guidelines, each grant applicant awarded program funds to offer at least one low-cost broadband service option. An applicant shall be deemed to have satisfied this requirement if the applicant satisfies at least five of the following criteria:
197+(1) The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).
198+
199+(2) That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.
200+
201+(3) The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.
202+
203+3267.5. The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.
171204
172205
173206
174-(1)Participates in the federal Affordable Connectivity Program, or a successor federal program.
207+3267.5. The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.
208+
209+3268. (a) On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.
175210
176211
177212
178-(2)Participates in the California Lifeline Program.
213+3268. (a) On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:
214+
215+(1) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.
216+
217+(2) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.
218+
219+(3) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.
220+
221+3268.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.
179222
180223
181224
182-(3)Offers at least one all-inclusive subscription plan, the price of which shall include all taxes, fees, and charges with no additional nonrecurring costs or fees to the consumer. The commission shall initially set the qualifying price of the all-inclusive plan at no less than thirty dollars ($30) per month, and may annually adjust the price based on increases in the California Consumer Price Index, as calculated by the Department of Finance. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall provide either the typical download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and typical upload speeds of at least 20 megabits per second or the performance benchmark for fixed terrestrial broadband service established by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to Section 706(b) of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Sec. 1302(b)), as amended. The all-inclusive subscription plan shall not be subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and shall be subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.
225+3268.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.
183226
227+SEC. 2.SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
184228
229+SEC. 2.SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
185230
186-(4)Offers subscription plans based on nationwide pricing, with choices among multiple tiers of services and prices.
231+SEC. 2.SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
187232
188-
189-
190-(5)Offers subscription plans that require no contract or minimum subscription terms, are not subject to data caps, surcharges, or usage-based throttling, and are subject only to the same acceptable use policies to which subscribers to all other broadband internet access service plans offered to home subscribers by the applicant must adhere.
191-
192-
193-
194-(6)Offers no-cost installation and equipment rental for setting up a home WiFi network to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.
195-
196-
197-
198-(7)Offers one no-cost device per household to low-income households in the project area for a period of three years.
199-
200-
201-
202-(b)The commission may add other options for an applicant to satisfy subdivision (a), but shall not require an applicant to select from those additional options.
203-
204-
205-
206-(c)The commission shall develop a plan, consistent with the federal guidelines and Section 3265.5, for addressing middle-class affordability.
207-
208-
209-
210-(d)The commission may prioritize the selection of an applicant that commits to more than five of the criteria listed in subdivision (a).
211-
212-
213-
214-(e)The commission may prioritize the selection of applicants that demonstrate a commitment to addressing middle-class affordability and improve affordability to ensure that networks built using taxpayer dollars are accessible to all Americans.
215-
216-
217-
218-
219-
220-(a)The commission shall establish an extremely high cost threshold, as required by the federal guidelines, which helps ensure end-to-end fiber projects are deployed wherever feasible.
221-
222-
223-
224-(b)The commission shall determine the extremely high cost threshold using a methodology that reflects and considers all of the following:
225-
226-
227-
228-(1)The estimated cost to connect every unserved household to fiber technology is at least eight billion five hundred million dollars ($8,500,000,000).
229-
230-
231-
232-(2)That end-to-end fiber projects are not feasible for every unserved household under current budgetary constraints.
233-
234-
235-
236-(3)The number of households that would remain unserved if the commission relied only on fiber technology and awarded all the currently available last-mile broadband funding.
237-
238-
239-
240-
241-
242-The commission may use state funds to assist an applicant with meeting matching fund requirements established by the federal guidelines for use of the program funds and shall only authorize the use of state funds for that purpose on tribal lands, for projects submitted by or in conjunction with a tribe, or in project areas that exceed the extremely high cost threshold.
243-
244-
245-
246-3268.3266. (a)On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:(1)(a) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.(2)(b) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.(3)(c) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.
247-
248-
249-
250-3268.3266. (a)On or before January 10, 2024, the commission shall submit a written report to the Assembly Committee on Communications and Conveyance and the Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities, and Communications that contains all of the following information:
251-
252-(1)
253-
254-
255-
256-(a) An assessment of the feasibility of combining the Infrastructure Grant Account, the Federal Funding Account, and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program into one last-mile broadband program. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to combining the programs and potential solutions.
257-
258-(2)
259-
260-
261-
262-(b) An assessment of the feasibility of coordinating state funds, program funds, and other available funding into a universal application and single-review process. The assessment shall identify any hurdles to coordinating program funds into a universal application and potential solutions.
263-
264-(3)
265-
266-
267-
268-(c) Recommendations for statutory changes to assist with better coordinating and integrating the commissions various last-mile broadband programs.
269-
270-3268.5.3266.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.
271-
272-
273-
274-3268.5.3266.5. This part shall only be implemented to the extent that it does not conflict with federal law.
275-
276-SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
277-
278-SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
279-
280-SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
281-
282-### SEC. 3.
233+### SEC. 2.SEC. 3.