Insightful data points about communities served by ACA members include the following:
- "Members reached 31% more households via FTTH over the last year, a rate far higher than their overall increase in coverage."
- "96% of households have two or more fixed broadband options—and 85% have three or more options."
- "Over a third of all households (37%) in areas served by ACA Connects Members have access to gigabit broadband service."
- "The ACA Connects Members increased gigabit service availability in [] rural communities from 24% in 2022 to 33% in 2023."
The ACA Connects report also includes figures about trends in the wider broadband market. This includes a breakdown of the share of U.S. households with competitive presence by technological capabilities of 100/20+ Mbps. According to FCC and Cartesian data for 2022-2023, almost 95% of households are in census blocks where there is an actual or potential presence of a cable, fiber, or licensed fixed wireless access (FWA) broadband provider offering speeds of 100/20+ Mbps. For 89.1% of households, a cable provider offering those speeds has a competitive presence, for 49.7% a fiber provider has a competitive presence, and for 39.6% a licensed FWA has a competitive presence. While those figures are higher than actual access figures for households, there are strong pro-deployment and pro-competitive trends. Back in 2017, only 69% of households had access to a provider offering 100/20+ Mbps, with a cable/fiber/licensed FWA competitive presence breakdown in 2017 of 59.3%/19.4%/1.7%.
The ACA Connects report was filed with an ex parte regarding the FCC's proposal to reclassify broadband Internet services as Title II telecommunications services and subject them to public utility regulation, including conduct-based restrictions that could eliminate consumer choice for reduced pricing options such as usage-based billing or free-data mobile offerings.
In December 2023, the Free State Foundation filed comments opposing the FCC's Title II reclassification proposal. And in January of this year, FSF filed reply comments. If the Commission adopts its proposal, the harm to private market investments and the ability to generate returns on future investments would come to all broadband providers, with small and medium providers almost certainly being hit the hardest.