HR-1343-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
Sponsored by August Pfluger (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would require the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) to submit a plan to Congress for tracking the status of applications for communications use authorizations on federal public lands and National Forest System land. These authorizations include easements, rights-of-way, leases, licenses, and other permissions needed to place or modify transmitting devices, support structures, or other communications facilities on those lands.
Who benefits
Broadband and wireless infrastructure companies that apply for permits on federal lands, who would gain greater visibility into application status and processing timelines. Rural and underserved communities that depend on infrastructure built on public lands for broadband access. Congress, which would receive a formal accountability mechanism. Smaller telecommunications providers who may lack the resources to navigate opaque permitting processes. Researchers and advocates tracking broadband deployment gaps.
Who is hurt
Federal land management agencies — particularly the NTIA and the U.S. Forest Service — that would bear the administrative cost of developing and implementing a new tracking system. Taxpayers who would fund that administrative work. Potentially, applicants whose applications are more closely scrutinized as a result of increased tracking and transparency.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that slow and opaque permitting on federal lands is a documented bottleneck in broadband deployment, particularly in rural areas where public land is the only viable route for infrastructure. They contend that a formal tracking plan would create accountability, reduce processing delays, and help Congress identify where the permitting system is failing — a necessary step before billions in broadband funding can be effectively deployed.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that requiring a plan to track applications — rather than directly fixing permitting timelines or mandating processing deadlines — is a procedural half-measure that adds bureaucratic reporting without guaranteeing any improvement in deployment outcomes. They contend that the NTIA already has existing reporting obligations and that this bill duplicates administrative work without providing the enforcement tools or resources needed to actually accelerate broadband buildout.