NTCA: Some Rural Broadband Rates May Near $200 Monthly Without More USF Support
NTCA and members pressed the FCC for $260 million in additional annual funding for rate-of-return USF mechanisms distributing model-based and non-model support. Without the additional funding for the non-model mechanisms, standalone broadband loop rates could be $20 to $100 over…
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the $42 broadband-only monthly benchmark the commission specified in its March overhaul order, said an NTCA filing posted Monday in docket 10-90 on meetings with aides to all five commissioners and Wireline Bureau officials. Those rates are not for the actual retail service to consumers, but just the broadband-only loop components of that service, it said. When the component costs are combined "with unavoidable costs" -- access recovery charges, transport and transit costs, other operating costs and USF contribution fees -- "the actual retail broadband prices to consumers (putting aside any prospect of actual return or profit margin) would need to be $90 to $110 per month in some cases, and in some very rural service areas with few standalone broadband consumers to start the rates could approach $200 per month," the group said.