S-2585-119
Passed Senate with an amendment by Voice Vote. (consideration: CR S2922-2924; text: CR S2923)
Sponsored by Deb Fischer (R-NE)
What it does
This bill would require the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to coordinate with the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) to collect data for the Broadband Funding Map — a federal tool that tracks the location of every federally funded broadband project. The FCC would also be required to seek public comment on the map's functionality, transparency, and data quality. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) would be required to report on how the map is managed, how it is used, and whether federal agencies are meeting their obligations to submit data to it.
Who benefits
Taxpayers broadly, who would gain greater visibility into how federal broadband dollars are spent. Rural and underserved communities awaiting broadband deployment, who could use the map to track project progress. Researchers, journalists, and watchdog organizations that monitor federal spending. State and local governments coordinating broadband projects with federal programs. Internet service providers seeking to avoid duplicating federally funded coverage areas. Congress, which would receive better data for oversight of broadband spending programs.
Who is hurt
Federal agencies that are not currently meeting data submission requirements would face increased scrutiny and compliance pressure. The FCC and NTIA would bear new administrative burdens from the coordination, public comment, and reporting requirements. The GAO would need to dedicate staff and resources to produce the required report. Broadband project recipients whose data is incomplete or inaccurate in the map could face reputational or compliance consequences once deficiencies are publicly documented.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the federal government has committed tens of billions of dollars to broadband deployment — including $42.5 billion through the BEAD program alone — and that the Broadband Funding Map is the primary tool for ensuring those funds are not duplicated or wasted. They contend that without accurate, complete, and publicly transparent data, agencies cannot coordinate effectively, and communities may receive overlapping coverage in some areas while remaining unserved in others. Requiring public comment and a GAO audit, they argue, are low-cost accountability measures proportionate to the scale of federal broadband spending.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding new reporting, public comment, and GAO audit requirements creates bureaucratic overhead that could slow broadband deployment at a time when speed of execution is critical for unserved communities. They contend that the FCC and NTIA already have existing coordination mechanisms, and that mandating additional process layers may divert agency resources from implementation to paperwork. Critics may also argue that map accuracy problems stem from underlying data quality issues at the project level, which this bill does not directly address.