HR-1681-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
Sponsored by Gabe Evans (R-CO)
What it does
This bill would create an interagency "strike force" to help federal land management agencies process requests for communications use authorizations — the permits required to build or modify cell towers, fiber lines, and other communications infrastructure on public lands. The strike force would hold regular coordination calls, set review goals, monitor agency progress toward those goals, and report to Congress on its effectiveness.
Who benefits
Rural and underserved communities that currently lack broadband access and stand to gain connectivity faster if permitting delays are reduced. Telecommunications companies and broadband providers seeking to deploy infrastructure on federal lands. Contractors and construction workers employed in broadband deployment projects. Businesses and residents in areas where federal land is a geographic barrier to connectivity. State and local governments that depend on federal land coordination for regional broadband plans.
Who is hurt
Environmental and conservation groups that argue faster permitting may reduce the thoroughness of environmental review under laws like NEPA. Federal agency staff who may face increased workload or performance pressure from new accountability goals. Competing land users — such as ranchers, recreational groups, or mining interests — who may see communications infrastructure prioritized over other public land uses. Existing broadband providers in adjacent areas who could face increased competition if new infrastructure is deployed more quickly.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that permitting delays on federal lands are a well-documented bottleneck in broadband deployment, with some authorization requests taking years to process across multiple agencies. They contend that coordinated interagency oversight — with explicit goals and congressional reporting — would bring accountability to a fragmented process and accelerate connectivity for the roughly 21 million Americans the FCC estimates still lack access to broadband, many of whom live near or on federal lands.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a new bureaucratic layer — the strike force — without addressing the underlying resource constraints, such as understaffed field offices, that cause permitting delays in the first place. They contend that setting speed-focused goals and accountability measures could pressure agencies to rush reviews that exist to protect environmental, cultural, and public land values, potentially trading long-term land stewardship for short-term deployment metrics.