New map is crucial to pinpoint where lack of service must be addressed in rural parts of the state
Washington, DC – U.S. Senator Ron Wyden said today that top federal officials responsible for more than $42 billion in high-speed internet funding are proving responsive to concerns about ensuring that a new broadband map is accurate so rural Oregonians get the funding they need to expand internet access.
Wyden spoke last week by phone with both Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo and Assistant Commerce Secretary Alan Davidson, Administrator for the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA).
“I came away from our recent conversations reassured that Oregon would be allowed to continue to submit challenges to the map, if needed, and still be counted in time for every community to get its fair share of the federal broadband investment that this map will determine,” Wyden said. “It’s up to all Oregonians to call out any incorrect information so rural Oregon doesn’t fall through the cracks when it comes to closing the digital divide for schoolchildren, small business owners, health care providers and more.”
Last month, Wyden and federal broadband officials co-hosted a virtual discussion for Oregonians to provide their input on the design of a new broadband map that accurately captures where lack of service must be addressed.
The new National Broadband Map will replace the FCC’s old, inaccurate maps, which overstated how many Oregonians had access to high-quality internet service. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law directs NTIA to use this new map to determine each state’s budget for federal high-speed infrastructure funding based on a state’s share of the total unserved locations in the country.
“You can’t have big league infrastructure with little league broadband,” Wyden said. “And an accurate broadband map is key to achieve that big-league infrastructure and bridge the digital divide throughout our state.”