Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Senate Bill Would Improve Permitting for Broadband Projects on Federal Land

On September 21, Senators John Barrasso and Kyrsten Sinema introduced the Closing Long Overdue Streamlining Encumbrances to Help Expeditiously Generate Approved Permits (CLOSE THE GAP) Act. The purpose of the bill is to make permitting processing faster and more efficient for broadband infrastructure projects on federal lands.

Among other things, the CLOSE THE GAP Act would require federal land management agencies – namely, National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, Bureau of Reclamation, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Forest Service  – to adopt new rules for streamlining the process for considering and approving broadband project applications on federal lands. Within a year of the Act becoming law, the Secretary of the Interior would be required to adopt regulations that, the maximum practical extent, require federal land management agency permitting processes be "uniform and standardized." Also, the regulations must require that applications to locate or modify broadband facilities must be granted on a "competitively neutral, technologically neutral, and nondiscriminatory basis." And agency cost recovery fees for locating or modifying facilities must be cost-based. 

 

Additionally, the CLOSE THE GAP Act would make it easier to monitor the status of broadband infrastructure projects by making those projects trackable under the Permitting Dashboard that was established pursuant to the Fixing America's Surface Transportation (FAST) Act of 2015. The Permitting Dashboard is "an online tool for Federal agencies, project developers, and interested members of the public to track" federal environmental reviews and authorization processes for "large or complex infrastructure projects." Additionally, the bill would establish online portals for submissions of Standard Form-299 Applications (SF-299s), which are standard forms required by federal land management agencies in applying for access to rights-of-way, leases, licenses, or permits involving federal lands. 

 

Furthermore, the CLOSE THE GAP Act includes exemptions from the National Environmental Policy Act for broadband infrastructure on federal lands that previously received permit approval as well as exemptions from NEPA and the NHPA for collocations of radio towers on existing towers as well as for removal or replacement of radios on existing towers. These exemptions and others included in the bill would reduce likely unnecessary permitting expenses and delays in building out broadband infrastructure.

 

The permitting process reforms included in the CLOSE THE GAP Act are particularly important in western states like Wyoming and Arizona, where large geographic areas are designated as federal lands. In the past few years, Congress has dedicated over $100 billion to expanding access to broadband services, including about $65 billion in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021. In order to help ensure that those substantial sums are spent timely and efficiently to bring broadband access to unserved and underserved areas, improved permitting processes should be a priority of Congress. Senators Barrasso and Sinema are to be applauded for introducing the bill. The Senate should give the legislation timely consideration. 

 

The House of Representatives has pending legislation that would streamline permitting processes for broadband deployments on federal lands. For more, see my FSF Blog post from April 23 of this year, "Subcommittee Looks at Legislation Promoting Broadband Infrastructure Buildout," and my May 2023 post, "House Committee Passes Reforms for Broadband Infrastructure Siting on Federal Property." 

 

(Note: A Senate bill number for the CLOSE THE GAP Act has yet been provided. This post will be updated with the number and link to the filed bill when it is made available.)