With
the House of Representatives’ failure to schedule a vote on the American
Broadband Deployment Act of 2025, we may have reached an impasse, at least for
the moment, on achieving additional permitting reform at the state and
local levels. Congress has taken several steps forward on reform at the federal
level. But these mostly involved changes to the National Environmental Policy
Act or the National Historic Preservation Act, the statutes that govern the
majority of federal permitting decisions. However, one past attempt at
negotiation may offer some lessons.
The
success at the federal level led many to conclude that circumstances might be
right for a more comprehensive reform to remove obstacles at the state and
local levels. On March 24, Representative Buddy Carter (R-GA) introduced H.R. 2289, the
American Broadband Deployment Act, which combined provisions from roughly
20 previous bills, including shot clocks and limits on fees, to accomplish
broad reform. The bill passed the House Committee on Energy and Commerce and
was scheduled to go before the House Rules Committee on April 20th.
However, a vote was indefinitely postponed once it became obvious that the bill
lacked the votes to pass. This change in outlook was widely attributed to
opposition from a number of associations representing state and local
government, including the National Association of Counties and the U.S.
Conference of Mayors.

Although
Congressman Carter expressed confidence that the bill
would pass later this Congress, the debate currently seems to be at an impasse.
While the FCC is pursuing permitting reform under its own authority, the timing
of any decision is not known and any significant change will be immediately
challenged in court, delaying its effect. Meanwhile the significant increase in
buildout activity due to the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD)
is approaching.
This
is a shame because sensible permitting reforms would benefit both broadband
providers and local governments. To start, unnecessary time and costs delay the
build-out and use of broadband coverage to local households. Coverage in turn
is firmly linked to greater economic activity and higher living standards. In
the short-run permitting also increases local demand for skilled labor. So far
much of the debate has been confined to anecdotes regarding specific experiences
and limitations on the FCC’s powers, especially in light of recent Supreme
Court decisions. While a list of unreasonable fees, unrelated construction
requirements, poor construction planning, and damage to state and local
property catches one’s attention, it is probably not the best grounds for
determining public policy.
Almost
two years ago the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society teamed up with
the Georgetown Law Institute for Technology Law & Policy and groups of both
Internet supporters and state and local governments to explore the possibility
of improving the permitting process in ways that benefit all stakeholders. The
effort involved a survey of stakeholders, a one-day conference, and a written report.
The
report contained several sensible suggestions for reform. It listed three
findings, each of which produced more specific suggestions. First, the parties
should foster a partnership between the permit seeker and the permitting
authority. They should try to create trust and accountability by meeting early
and often and understanding the role of both local government and the proposed development.
According to the report, one key issue is determining when any shot clock would
start.
Second,
the parties should maximize the resources available to the permitting
authority. There was a consensus that many permitting agencies lack the
resources needed to handle the normal permitting volume, let alone the
significant increase expected from BEAD disbursements. Given BEAD’s history and
the current delay in announcing how the government will spend approximately $21
billion in non-deployment funds, one should not be surprised if a large number
of projects experience significant delays from a variety of causes, placing
greater strains on agencies. Given that much of the under capacity may be due
to the increase in BEAD-funded construction projects, perhaps using some of the
excess to increase local capacity, at least through the surge, makes sense.
Providers should also help agencies build public support by articulating the
benefits of broadband delivery.
Third,
the process should be transparent and consistent. Efforts to modernize the
process by allowing builders to download forms, submit applications online, and
look up the current status of projects can lower total costs and reduce
unnecessary duplication. Modern online dashboards are already being used
successfully in some jurisdictions.
In
general, and certainly in the abstract, the Benton Institute report
recommendations are sensible and merit action. However, they do not address some
of the worst abuses regarding permitting at the local government level. These
abuses increase the costs of broadband deployment projects and delay the
provision of new or improved service to consumers.
Taking
the position that state and local governments should face no deadlines, should
be able to charge whatever fees they suggest are reasonable, and should be
allowed to require substantial unrelated improvements seems like something we should
avoid.