Broadband Expansion Grant Program - FY 2018 Round 2 Broadband Expansion Grant Webinar - Wisconsin Public Service ...
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Broadband Expansion Grant Program FY 2018 Round 2 Broadband Expansion Grant Webinar Dennis Klaila & Jaron McCallum Public Service Commission of Wisconsin November 2017
Broadband Expansion Grant Program Purpose: To encourage the deployment of advanced telecommunications capability in underserved areas of the state.
FY 2018 Round 2 Broadband Expansion Grants The PSC is currently accepting applications for a second round of FY 18 broadband grants. • The total amount of money available for this grant round is about $7.5 million. • Applications are due by 4:00 pm on January 25, 2018. • Applications must be submitted by uploading the completed application to the PSC’s Electronic Regulatory Filing (ERF) system.
Useful tips for submitting documents using the Electronic Filing System (ERF) • First time filers will need to establish a user account before uploading a document. • Please use Internet Explorer. Chrome will not work with the ERF software. • Place the document on your desktop. Do not try to upload a document that is 5 or 6 levels deep in the file system on your computer. • The path and file name cannot exceed 255 characters. To be safe make sure that the document name, including spaces, is less than 100 characters. • There is a limit of 20Mb. ERF will prompt you to break up your filing if it is too large. • Do not log on to ERF until you are ready to file. ERF will disconnect if your session becomes inactive. • Don’t wait until the last minute. Leave time to resolve filing issues.
Who may Apply for a Broadband Grant? To be eligible, an applicant must fall within one of the following three applicant categories: • An organization operated for profit or not-for-profit, including a cooperative. • A telecommunications utility. • A city, village, town, or county that has entered into a partnership with an eligible organization or telecommunications utility.
What Geographic Areas of the State May Receive a Broadband Grant? For an area to be considered eligible for a grant, it must be considered “underserved.” • “Underserved” = Area served by fewer than 2 providers offering Broadband Service Underserved • Broadband Service = 25 Mbps Down / 3 Areas Mbps Up Grant Eligible Areas
“The Wisconsin Broadband Map is not accurate with respect to my location.” The data for the Wisconsin Broadband Map is provided by census block. A provider indicates coverage of a census block when the provider serves at least 1 customer in the block. The grant application instructions provide: • Where the State Broadband Map indicates that a proposed project area is underserved, the PSC will accept the Map as sufficient evidence that the project area is in fact underserved. • Where the Map indicates that an area is served by two or more broadband service providing 25/3 service, the applicant is permitted to provide additional information to show that the Map is not accurate with respect to the proposed project area. • This additional information can be just a statement from a customer, but more elaborate presentations will be accepted as well.
How Does the Commission Evaluate Grant Applications? The record that the Commission considers to make its grant award decision consists of the following 4 items: • Grant applications • Comments of interested persons in support or in opposition to one or more specific applications • Ranking of the grant applications prepared by a preliminary evaluation committee • Discussion memo prepared by Commission staff The Commission meets in an open session to discuss the record and to decide which applications should be awarded grants.
What Specific Items of Information Must be Discussed in the Grant Application? The statute that authorizes the Broadband Grant Program requires that the Commission give priority to applications that include any of seven factors listed in the statute: • Matching funds • Existing broadband services • Public/private partnerships • Scalability • Project impact • Will not delay broadband service in • Economic impact adjacent areas To date, the Broadband Grant program has been quite competitive. The Commission has received many more applications than it can fund. The discussion of priority factors has been the key element of the application that the Commission has used to decide which apps to fund.
Matching Funds • An application will receive higher priority based on the amount and type of matching funds the applicant proposes to invest in its project. • Matching funds can in include in-kind contributions. The Commission may give less weight to some in-kind contributions as circumstances demand. • Matching funds may include customer premises equipment. • There is no minimum amount of matching funds required. • Applicants may wish to look at past applications to see what successful grant applicants offered to contribute as matching funds.
Public-Private Partnerships • An application that includes a city, village, town, or county as a participating partner, in partnership with a telecommunication provider or other private organization, will receive priority. • To receive priority credit, the grant application must offer more than a simple letter of support from a town or village. • A public applicant must engage the active participation of at least one private partner. The Commission has decided that contracting for a service by itself is not sufficient. There must be some indication in the application that a private partner has agreed to participate in the application.
No Existing Broadband Service • This priority factor was amended by Act 59. • An application proposing to serve an unserved area will still receive priority, but the definition of an unserved area has changed. • An unserved area is an area of the state that is not served by a fixed wireless of wireline broadband service provider offering a service with a speed of at least 5 mbps down and 600 kbps up.
Scalability • An application that demonstrates a commitment to increase the size or scope of its broadband network in the future shall receive priority. • An application that discusses possible growth potential, but declines to make a specific commitment regarding future growth of the broadband network, shall receive a lesser priority. • The application instructions on this point permit a variety of answers. Applicants are invited to provide a sensible description of the potential for continued future development of customer base and service options not captured specifically by the description of the project proposal itself.
Economic Development • An application that demonstrates the potential to promote job growth or retention, expand the property tax base or improve the overall economic vitality of the municipality or region shall receive priority. • Some grant proposals target business customers, and the economic impact the application hopes to accomplish is evident on its face. • Other impacts can be a bit indirect, but no less important. For example, a fixed wireless service in a rural county could impact the decisions of tourists and seasonal residents to use the facilities or extend their stay in the area.
Affect upon broadband service to adjacent areas • A grant application that would impair the ability of a broadband service provider or competing broadband service provider to extend broadband service to areas adjacent to the proposed project area shall receive a reduction in priority.
Project Impact • An application that proposes to serve a larger geographic area or a larger number of customers or communities in an area shall receive higher priority than one that serves a comparatively smaller geographic area or a fewer number of potential customers or communities in an area.
Other Relevant Information In its review and decision, the Commission is free to give more weight to one or two of the priority factors, or give weight to other information provided in the application. Some items of additional Information that the Commission could take into account include: • The total number of persons served by a given application when compared to applications of equal priority • Duplication of existing broadband infrastructure • Access to health care service from home • Access to educational materials from home • Certification as a Broadband Forward! Community. However, applicant should note that the Commission has not made any determination that such certification is specifically or necessarily applicable to grants for broadband facilities under Wis. Stat. § 196.504. • The download and upload transmission speeds the application proposes to provide. • Any one or more of the factors in Wis. Stat. § 196.03(6) that the applicant believes its project would specifically and materially advance for benefit of the public interest with respect to communications facilities. However, applicant should note that the Commission has not made any determination that the criteria in Wis. Stat. § 196.03(6) respecting telecommunications services
Public Comments • The Commission will provide a public comment period after the grant applications have been filed – January 26 to February 15, 2018. • The Commission will only accept public comments. Criticism of applications based upon non-public service data will not be given weight. • Staff provides the Commission a list of the comments received, and those comments are available to that Commission as part of the record of the docket. • Staff will also discuss in the briefing memorandum specific public comments that raise issues of importance in evaluating the relative merits of individual applications.
Recommendations for Successful Applications • The PSC does not choose broadband providers or impose a broadband technology on applicants. The grant applicants choose the broadband service provider for the project and the broadband technology that will be used. • Grant projects that have been approved in three counties offer successful alternative approaches for this program: • Langlade County • Oneida County • Vilas County • All of the projects in these counties addressed areas that were currently unserved at the 25/3 level of service.
Langlade County • In Langlade County, the organizing entity for the projects is Wittenberg Wireless. • Wittenberg Wireless identified prospective service areas, reached out to potential customers, and engaged the cooperation and participation of the Langlade County Board of Supervisors and local town and village leaders. • Wittenberg chose the fiber to the home service technology for its projects. • The Wittenberg grant applications stand out in several respects: • Significant matching funds • Public-private partnerships with the duties of each party agreed to in writing • Letters of support from potential business customers identifying the internet applications each business would employ • Specific plans for future growth beyond the immediate customer base in the project area
Oneida County • In Oneida County, the organizing entity for the projects is the Oneida County Economic Development Corp. • OCEDC pulled together a diverse group of businesses, residents and local governments to decide how to best provide broadband service in rural areas of the county. The planning group identified the fixed wireless service offered by Northwoods Connect as the preferred option. • The Oneida County EDC grant applications stand out in several respects: • Significant matching funds, including funds offered by potential customers • Extensive public-private partnership with Oneida County and many of the townships in the service area • Letters of support from a number of prospective business and residential customers • A showpiece for fixed wireless internet service in rural areas
Vilas County • Organizing entities for the projects are enterprising start-up broadband providers and local governments that identify broadband as essential to the community experience. • ChoiceTel is providing fiber service in Eagle River and north of the city up to Land O’Lakes. • Both Eagle River and Land O’Lakes have contributed significant matching funds to the projects • ChoiceTel has installed spare capacity to expand to additional customers in the future • SonicNet provides a fixed wireless service in areas that cannot be service economically with a wireline facility. • CenturyLink provided a DSL service near Trout Lake with state grant funds, and is building out a DSL service in Manitowish Waters and Presque Isle with federal CAF II funds.
Conclusion After four years, it is possible to identify specific benefits that the Broadband Grant program has brought to underserved areas of the state. • Added value to existing homes and expanded construction locations for new homes. • Improved internet access for businesses that depend upon the internet for sales and product development, or communication with other company locations. • Allows seasonal residents to spend more time in their summer homes and campgrounds. • Permits clinics and hospitals to use telemedicine devices, including home health monitoring units, to better assess the health status of chronic patients without having to travel to a clinic. • Provides high school students with the internet access they need to complete assignments, and contact teachers and fellow students by e-mail and social media.
Mapping Resources All WBO Maps: https://psc.wi.gov/Pages/Programs/BroadbandMaps.aspx Wisconsin Broadband Map • httsp://maps.psc.wi.gov/WisconsinBroadbandMap/ View and Print Internet Coverage PDF Maps (County, Assembly, Senate, U.S. Congress) • https://psc.wi.gov/Pages/BroadbandMaps.aspx Wisconsin CAF-II Funded Areas • https://maps.psc.wi.gov/apps/SimpleCaf/ Wisconsin Broadband Expansion Grant Recipients • https://maps.psc.wi.gov/ExpansionGrantAwardees/
Contact Information Questions related to the administration of the broadband grant program may be addressed to the following staff: Director, State Broadband Office Angie Dickison Angie.Dickison@wisconsin.gov (608) 267-9138 Broadband Expansion Grant Program Manager Dennis Klaila Dennis.Klaila@wisconsin.gov (608) 267-9780 Broadband Mapping Jaron McCallum Jaron.McCallum@Wisconsin.gov (608) 267-2160
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