Tuesday, June 11, 2024

CTIA Once Again Asks FCC to Declare that Light Poles Are "Poles"

In a letter dated June 7, 2024, CTIA urges the Commission to at long last clarify that the term "pole" in Section 224 of the Communications Act encompasses both utility poles and light poles. Doing so, it argues, will "bring uniformity to the pole attachment and broadband deployment processes leading to more and faster broadband being available to more people."

In a 2019 Petition for Declaratory Ruling, CTIA asked the FCC, among other things, to "declare that the term 'pole' in Section 224 includes light poles and that utilities must afford nondiscriminatory access to light poles on rates, terms and conditions consistent with Section 244 and the Commission's implementing pole attachment rules."

And while the Wireline Competition Bureau did issue a Declaratory Ruling in July 2020 addressing other aspects of CTIA's petition, it sidestepped this particular topic, writing in a footnote that "[w]e do not address CTIA's request concerning light poles in this Declaratory Ruling, and this issue remains pending."

In light of rapidly growing demand for 5G, including fixed wireless access home broadband, CTIA once again is seeking clarification from the FCC that the reference in Section 224(f)(1) to "any pole, duct, conduit, or right-of-way owned or controlled by" a utility includes light poles.

Light poles and other "street furniture," it turns out, are "well-suited" for the attachment of small cells, which are predicted to make up more than 80 percent of infrastructure deployments going forward. This is especially true in areas where power lines are buried underground and, consequently, utility poles are not available.

Given the current uncertainty, however, CTIA reports that "wireless providers that have sought access to light poles have faced opposition from electric utilities, including flat denials of access, as well as attachment charges that exceed lawful rates." A ruling by the Commission that "any pole" includes a light pole, it maintains, "will serve the public interest by preventing disputes with electric utilities over this issue, thereby removing barriers to wireless deployment."