Full Measure: FCC Chair on Rural America Getting High Speed Internet via Co-ops AND Holding Telecoms Accountable

By B.N. Frank

All Americans would benefit from having access to high-speed internet. However, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is supposed to protect the public by regulating the telecom industry. Unfortunately, they were a corrupt agency before Trump was elected and have become even scarier since he took office (see 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. 7, 8, 9, 10). This has led to lawsuits being filed against them for NOT protecting Americans from unsafe levels of radiation as well as 5G on Earth (see 1, 2, 3, 4, 5) and in space.

Earlier this year, Full Measure’s Sharyl Attkisson interviewed FCC chairman, Ajit Pai who said the FCC is “not heavy handed” when regulating the industry. No duh. Earlier this month, Pai was exposed for providing inaccurate information about broadband deployment data even after being warned to NOT do so. In this Full Measure interview, he says the agency plans to hold the telecom industry accountable. So will anyone be holding the FCC accountable too?

From Full Measure:


The Internet Divide

By Full Measure Staff Sunday, September 20th 2020

In the age of coronavirus, the internet has become more crucial than ever for working families, but many of our communities can’t get high speed internet at all. Next month the FCC begins phase one of a $16 Billion dollar plan to wire up more rural areas but today we find out what happened to the billions of tax dollars already spent for that purpose.

Sharyl: Life in the Virginia countryside comes with beauty, serenity and for some, a big drawback. No high-speed internet.

Kim Manion: I don’t have any internet at my house at all because my house unfortunately is a spot that is a dead zone for cell phones.

Sharyl: Kim Manion is a fourth-grade teacher at Millboro Elementary in Bath County, Central Virginia. To do any work online, she has to go to school or hotspots in parking lots. Same for about a quarter of her students.

Manion: They are still missing out because the bottom line is the other kids are learning how to be familiar with technological devices.

Sharyl: It has to do with the bottom line, how far they have to lay a line and how much it would cost to reach just one house.

There are more than 18 million Americans without high-speed internet. Companies like AT&T, Comcast and Verizon won’t spend the money it takes to lay the cable or fiber optic lines to relatively few customers.

That’s where customer-owned co-ops are entering the picture. Here in Virginia it’s the Bath, Alleghany, and Rockbridge Counties Electric Cooperativeor BARC.

BARC installer Dustin Wallace says a lot of houses out this way have only satellite internet, if anything; slow and expensive.

Sharyl: You’re too young to remember, but in the old days we had like dial up on a modem.

Dustin Wallace: I remember at my Grandpa’s house.

Sharyl: Wait for the connection to clear.

Wallace: Yeah. I remember it perfectly clear at my Grandpa’s house.

Sharyl: So some people aren’t too far past that.

Wallace: No, it’s actually, yeah, it’s pretty similar.

Sharyl: Today, he’s bringing a better connection to Bob Williams.

Sharyl: What is the new service going to allow you to do?

Bob Williams: Overall, it’s going to save a lot of money in monthly fees, but in, in this process, we’re going to get a faster, more reliable internet service than we’ve had.

Sharyl: A few miles up the road is Keith Swisher’s beef cattle and grain farm.

Keith Swisher: I started out with dial up. And then we went from dial up to, I believe we went next to the satellite. And it was all so frustratingly slow that I almost gave up on using the internet.

Sharyl: What types of things would happen if you tried to do something?

Keith Swisher: Well, if you tried to open a newspaper, a lot of times it would time out and just cut off before it would ever load. And it’s so frustrating to try to look up something, you know, for parts or information, it just took forever.

Sharyl: The fact is, to some, access to the internet is becoming as vital as electric power.

News reel announcer: The poles went up. The wires were strung.

Sharyl: The federal government helped bring power to the rural south in the 1930s.

Newsreel announcer: And there was light. Yes, there was light. But more than just the light of illumination.

Mike Keyser: Anybody living outside of the towns of the cities that didn’t have power, so co-ops were formed to bring power to those areas.

Mike Keyser is CEO of BARC Electric Cooperative.

Keyser: 70, 80 years later here, we are basically doing the exact same thing with broadband, getting loans from the federal government to bring, and grants, to bring broadband out to people that are unserved, because it’s not profitable for, for-profit companies to do that.

Sharyl: So do you know anything about how when the electric came in and how that worked?

Swisher: Oh, I’ve heard my father speak of it often. It was put in in 1938 and they were very welcoming to have electricity finally, in this area.

Sharyl: Did you say you think your grandfather or some of the other farmers around here helped with that?

Swisher: Yes.

Sharyl: Tell me about that.

Swisher: When the construction of the lines came through and when it passed individual’s property, they would go out and help the people put the poles in and string the wire. They were that eager to have electricity out here.

Sharyl: It’s not easy or cheap. Here BARC crews are rolling out fiber optic cables along the existing telephone poles. This part of the labor alone would cost the equivalent of $5,000 per household. But since the BARC co-op is a not for profit and customers are the owners, BARC pays the upfront costs and gets paid back by the monthly customer payments over many years.

With so many millions still disconnected, the Federal Communications Commission is spending $20.4 billion over the next ten years to help bring fast internet to more unserved areas. Phase One of the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund in October makes $16 billion available. A lot of the money will go to co-ops— like BARC.

Sharyl: So, is it fair to say you think there should be more accountability of this federal money that’s going out the door to companies that are supposedly serving more people with internet?

Ajit Pai, FCC Chairman: Absolutely.

Ajit Pai is chairman of the Federal Communications Commission. He says under the 2009 stimulus bill, billions of dollars went to giant internet providers to connect rural residents, but today we don’t know how many people actually got the benefit.

Sharyl: Is there a way to quantify how much money these big companies have gotten and how many people they really have served or how much internet has been brought to rural areas?

Pai: Unfortunately, we know that billions went out the door, but there was not accountability on the back end. These companies didn’t have to report how they were using these subsidies to deploy broadband infrastructure. So under my administration, what we’ve done is to create an online database where these carriers that receive subsidies going forward, have to register the exact Geo-coded locations where they’re providing service. If they miss these metrics that we’ve provided for them over the course of the years, they have to pay some of the money back potentially and be subject to enforcement action.

Sharyl: Do you expect that these organizations called co-ops will play larger role maybe than they have in the past and receiving these funds and wiring up rural areas?

Pai: Absolutely. If you’re willing to do the job, then you’re eligible for this funding. So I hope that co-ops will play a big part in this.

Sharyl: BARC is getting $5.2 million dollars in federal money over ten years to help with the cost off connecting more than 2,500 homes.

Keyser: In our case, we’re passing every single electric member when we’re done. So that’s 13,000 there. Right now, I mean, we can’t build it fast enough. Everybody wants it every direction that we’re going; inside and outside our territory.

Sharyl: Now, Swisher has fast internet thanks to BARC, he can look up prices, order parts, check the news.

Kim Manion, the teacher, is on the waiting list.

Along with more than 18 million others, still living a peaceful but largely disconnected life in the American countryside.

Sharyl (on camera): And since our visit we checked in, Teacher Kim Manion is off the waiting list and now has broadband service at home.


High-speed internet CAN be obtained without 5G and even without wireless. And according to Pai – and a LAWSUIT filed against the FCC – Americans have actually paid to have this already.

There is so much controversy over 5G that it’s been featured in Dilbert comic strips. American opposition is not limited to biological and environmental risks (see 1, 2). Federal agencies and other experts have warned it can threaten national security, public safety, and weather forecasting accuracy (see 1, 2, 3). Municipal governments have passed resolutions to ban deployment until studies prove it’s safe (see 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) and ordinances to limit and/or control installation. State representatives in Hawaii and Illinois have introduced 5G bills to protect constituents. Congress members have also confronted the FCC about safety. Despite research proving harm from exposure, the agency refuses to update 24-year-old federal RF radiation guidelines.

In 2019, telecom executives gave U.S. congressional testimony that they had NO scientific evidence that 5G is safe. The majority of scientists worldwide oppose deployment until studies show that it’s safe. Despite all of this – Trump is still advocating a nationalized 5G plan (see 1, 2) even though Americans DON’T NEED 5G to have high-speed internet.

Since 2018 there have been reports of people and animals suffering from symptoms and illnesses after 5G was installed (see 1, 2, 3, 4). Of course exposure to other sources of wireless radiation can cause this too. In fact, last year the World Health Organization warned that high levels of Electromagnetic Fields (aka “Electrosmog”) including wireless radiation – could lead to health issues in 30% of the population.

Since high-speed internet can be had without 5G or wireless AND Americans have already paid for this – what’s the hold-up?

Activist Post reports regularly about unsafe technology. For more information visit our archives and the following websites.

Become a Patron!

Subscribe to Activist Post for truth, peace, and freedom news. Send resources to the front lines of peace and freedom HERE! Follow us on SoMee, HIVE, Parler, Flote, Minds, and Twitter.

Provide, Protect and Profit from what’s coming! Get a free issue of Counter Markets today.


Activist Post Daily Newsletter

Subscription is FREE and CONFIDENTIAL
Free Report: How To Survive The Job Automation Apocalypse with subscription

Be the first to comment on "Full Measure: FCC Chair on Rural America Getting High Speed Internet via Co-ops AND Holding Telecoms Accountable"

Leave a comment