S-3264-116
Committee on Indian Affairs. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.
What it does
This bill would create a coordinated program across multiple federal agencies to expand broadband internet access on tribal lands. It would set aside dedicated funding for broadband deployment in tribal areas and establish a pilot program allowing tribes to grant rights-of-way — legal permission for construction and maintenance — for broadband infrastructure on their land.
Who benefits
Members of federally recognized tribes living on tribal lands who currently lack reliable broadband access would be the primary beneficiaries. Tribal governments would gain new authority to manage rights-of-way for broadband infrastructure. Broadband service providers and contractors hired to build and maintain infrastructure on tribal lands would also benefit from new business opportunities. Schools, health clinics, and businesses on tribal lands could gain improved connectivity.
Who is hurt
Existing broadband providers in adjacent or overlapping service areas could face increased competition from newly subsidized tribal broadband networks. Taxpayers would bear the cost of the set-aside funding. Non-tribal rural communities competing for the same limited federal broadband funding pools could receive a smaller share of available resources if tribal set-asides reduce the overall pot available to them.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that tribal communities face some of the worst broadband access gaps in the country, leaving residents without reliable access to telehealth, remote education, economic opportunity, and emergency services that most Americans take for granted. They contend that existing federal broadband programs have consistently failed to reach tribal lands due to geographic remoteness, complex land ownership structures, and insufficient dedicated funding. A coordinated interagency approach with dedicated set-asides, they argue, would cut through bureaucratic fragmentation and give tribal governments meaningful control over infrastructure on their own lands — consistent with the federal government's trust responsibility to tribes. Without targeted intervention, supporters say, market forces alone will not close this gap.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a separate, tribe-specific broadband program duplicates existing federal broadband initiatives — such as those administered by the FCC and USDA — and adds bureaucratic complexity without guaranteeing better outcomes. They contend that set-aside funding for one group necessarily reduces resources available to other underserved rural communities with equally urgent connectivity needs. Some critics argue that a pilot program for tribal rights-of-way may create legal ambiguities around land use authority and slow rather than accelerate deployment. Others question whether interagency coordination mandates are enforceable in practice, and whether the program would produce measurable results or simply add administrative overhead without closing the connectivity gap.