S-1822-116
Became Public Law No: 116-130.
Sponsored by Roger Wicker (R-MS)
What it does
The Broadband DATA Act requires the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to overhaul how it collects, verifies, and publishes data about where broadband internet service is available across the United States. The FCC must build a location-by-location dataset — called the Broadband Serviceable Location Fabric — and layer provider-reported coverage maps on top of it. The law also creates a formal process for states, tribes, local governments, consumers, and other parties to challenge the accuracy of those maps, and requires the FCC to audit provider-submitted data regularly.
Who benefits
Rural residents and communities currently underserved by broadband who have been miscounted as "served" under the old system, making them invisible to federal funding programs. State, local, and tribal governments gain tools to contest inaccurate coverage claims and direct infrastructure spending more precisely. Small broadband providers receive data-submission assistance. Indian tribes receive dedicated collection and submission support. Researchers, policymakers, and consumers gain access to more granular, verifiable broadband availability data. Future broadband subsidy recipients benefit indirectly, as more accurate maps would direct funding to genuinely unserved areas.
Who is hurt
Broadband providers — particularly large incumbent carriers — face increased compliance costs from new, more detailed reporting requirements and mandatory audits. Providers whose prior coverage claims were overstated may lose eligibility for certain federal subsidies or face reputational and regulatory scrutiny. The FCC faces a significant administrative burden and resource demand to build and maintain the Fabric dataset, conduct audits, and manage a challenge process. Taxpayers fund the increased FCC operational costs and the Government Accountability Office reporting requirements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the existing FCC broadband maps — based on Form 477 data — are deeply flawed because they count an entire census block as "served" if even one location in that block can receive service. This systemic overcounting has caused billions of federal dollars to flow to areas already served while genuinely unserved communities, disproportionately rural and tribal, are left without funding or connectivity. The Broadband DATA Act would fix this by requiring location-specific data, independent verification, and a formal challenge process — ensuring that future broadband subsidies reach the people who actually need them. Supporters contend that accurate maps are a prerequisite for any effective broadband policy, and that the compliance burden on providers is a reasonable cost for the public benefit of reliable data.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the law imposes substantial new reporting and compliance costs on broadband providers, particularly small and rural carriers that lack the administrative capacity to meet granular, geocoded data requirements. Critics contend that the challenge process, while well-intentioned, could be weaponized by competitors or local governments to tie up accurate coverage claims in prolonged disputes, creating regulatory uncertainty that discourages network deployment. Some argue that the FCC already has authority to improve its data collection without new legislation, and that the Fabric dataset — a novel, large-scale geocoding infrastructure — introduces its own risks of error and delay. Opponents also question whether the added administrative overhead will meaningfully accelerate broadband deployment or primarily generate bureaucratic process.