S-4459-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works.
What it does
This bill would require the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to conduct a study and report to Congress on whether the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) has the capability to incorporate satellite technology into its broadband projects. The study would specifically examine the capacity and cost-effectiveness of satellite broadband service for business use and economic development in the Appalachian region.
Who benefits
Residents and businesses in rural Appalachian communities that currently lack reliable broadband access. State and local governments in the Appalachian region seeking data to guide infrastructure decisions. Satellite broadband providers (such as companies offering low-earth-orbit services) who may gain visibility as a viable option for federal programs. Policymakers and the ARC, who would receive a structured evidence base for future funding decisions. Researchers and think tanks focused on rural economic development.
Who is hurt
Traditional wired broadband providers (fiber, cable, DSL) operating or seeking to expand in Appalachia, who could face increased competition if satellite is elevated as a preferred solution. Taxpayers bear the modest cost of the GAO study itself. Communities that need immediate broadband deployment may experience further delay if the study process postpones action. ARC staff who would need to cooperate with and support the GAO review process.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that large portions of Appalachia remain among the most persistently underserved broadband regions in the country, and that satellite technology — particularly newer low-earth-orbit systems — has dramatically improved in speed and latency, making it a potentially cost-effective option where laying fiber is prohibitively expensive. They contend that requiring a GAO study ensures that federal broadband dollars are spent based on rigorous, independent analysis rather than assumptions, and that the ARC needs a clear evidence base before committing to satellite-integrated projects.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that commissioning another federal study delays concrete action in communities that have waited decades for reliable broadband, and that sufficient data on satellite broadband's capabilities and costs already exists from FCC reports, existing ARC projects, and private-sector deployments. They contend that the bill's narrow geographic and technological focus — limited to one region and one technology type — produces findings of limited national utility, and that the same resources and legislative attention could instead be directed toward directly funding broadband deployment in underserved Appalachian areas.