On July 29, Senators John Thune, Ben Ray Luján, and John Barrasso introduced the Accelerating Broadband Permits Act. The purpose of the bill is to improve executive agencies’ processing of permit applications for the construction of communications facility installations on federal land. Under the MOBILE NOW Act of 2018, executive agencies with supervision over federal lands have 270 days to make decisions on applications for permits to build towers, antennas, cables, or any other infrastructure associated with wireless or wireline services. An April 2024 Government Accountability Office Report found problems with agencies processing those applications within the deadline. The Accelerating Broadband Permits Act is intended to address those problems and help identify instances where the agencies are likely to fail to meet the deadline and ensure timely processing.
The FCC has long recognized that local permitting processes are often a major impediment to timely broadband access. The Accelerating Broadband Permits Act would help alleviate that impediment on federal lands. The Act appears to be worthwhile legislation that could help accelerate network infrastructure deployment to underserved and unserved Americans. Much land in western states is held in trust or owned by the federal government, and federal agencies must fulfill the responsibilities that come with being a trustee or property owner, not to mention comply with the MOBILE NOW Act.
Senators Thune, Luján, and Barrasso deserve credit for bringing forward this bill. Several billion dollars in subsidies are going to be distributed by NTIA to the states under the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program to fund new buildouts. The effectiveness of BEAD Program subsidy dollars will depend, to a significant extent, on having workable federal siting policies in place. The 118th Congress should give the Accelerating Broadband Permits Act timely consideration.