FCC plan calls for 'minimal' public safety fee for all broadband users
Funds would go toward a new $16B nationwide wireless emergency response network
Computerworld - The FCC's National Broadband Plan, released today, calls for a new "minimal" fee on all U.S. broadband users to help pay for a new $16 billion nationwide emergency response wireless network.
Public safety officials have pleaded for such an interoperable network to aid their response to disasters and potential attacks since firefighters and police could not communicate effectively during the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the response following Hurricane Katrina.
"If we don't get the funding, this network won't be possible and following 9/11 and Katrina, we need the funding," said Charles Werner, chief of the Charlottesville, Va., fire department and chairman of the executive committee of Safecom, a public safety communications organization that works with the Department of Homeland Security.
"The key thing is to achieve a public interoperable network and this is a must. Failure is not an option," Werner said.
In its 19-page section on public safety, the plan calls for creating the national wireless network for first responders and says that the cost of between $12 billion and $16 billion over 10 years could be paid with state and local contributions.
But the plan also argues for a "nominal" fee on all U.S. broadband users to "ensure that this country's emergency responders have access to critical communications capabilities when and where they need them."
The plan urges Congress to authorize the FCC to impose or require the fee or another funding means. The plan adds: "It is essential that the United States establish a long-term, sustainable and adequate funding mechanism to help pay for the operation, maintenance and upgrade of the public safety broadband network."
"America's safety depends on it ... Recognizing that Americans will obtain substantial benefits from the creation of this network, imposing a minimal public safety fee on all U.S. broadband users would be a fair, sustainable and reasonable funding mechanism," the section reads.
Werner said he wanted to study the plan more thoroughly before reacting to the funding proposal and related measures. In February, he said public safety officials were "disappointed" with the bare bones of the broadband plan presented at that time, because it called for a reserved portion of spectrum, known as the D block, to be auctioned off to private entities and shared with public safety groups who have wanted total control of the D block.
But today, Werner seemed to soften his earlier comment and said that since the FCC now wants the D block auctioned off, "we need to focus on the outcome of how we can achieve the network."
Another element in the plan calls on the FCC to consider designating LTE technology as the standard that would be used for the public safety network in the 700 MHz band.
Broadband battle
- FCC chairman: U.S. needs to do better in broadband
- FCC moves to switch phone subsidy to broadband
- Emergency network still needed, FCC public safety chief says
- FCC set to take first steps toward national broadband plan
- Public safety fee on wireless users a challenge for industry
- National broadband plan: What's in it for businesses?
- FCC should expect opposition to broadband plan, official says
- Public safety fee for broadband will be less than $1 a month
- Broadband plan gives FCC wider cybersecurity role
- FCC plan calls for 'minimal' public safety fee for all broadband users



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