President Joe Biden proposed to set a minimum 15% corporate tax rate to help pay for an infrastructure spending package as an informal counteroffer to Senate Republicans, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Thursday. Biden made the counterproposal during a Wednesday meeting (see 2106020078) with Senate Public Works Committee ranking member Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, who's leading GOP negotiators. Biden also asked Republicans to back $1 trillion in new spending. Republicans propose $65 billion for broadband (see 2105270072), a figure the White House is offering to back. Capito’s office confirmed she plans to meet with Biden again Friday. Capito “is encouraged that negotiations have continued,” a spokesperson emailed. Vice President Kamala Harris said Thursday she and Biden “are determined to get to 100%” broadband coverage via an infrastructure package. She helped announce NTIA’s plan to make nearly $1 billion available for tribal broadband (see 2106030065). Lawmakers “worked together” to fund broadband programs via the FY 2021 appropriations and COVID-19 aid packages (see 2012210055) and now “Congress must work together again to bring high-speed Internet to every American,” she said. Other officials emphasized they want talks with Republicans on infrastructure to be completed by when the Senate returns Monday (see 2106010068).
NTIA is making nearly $1 billion available through the tribal broadband connectivity program, said Vice President Kamala Harris, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland during a White House event. It's part of FY 2021 appropriations (see 2012210055). Tribal governments, tribal colleges and universities, the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, tribal organizations and Alaska Native corporations are eligible for funding for broadband deployment, said a notice of funding opportunity. Funds can also be used to support digital inclusion, workforce development, telehealth and distance learning. Applications are due Sept. 1. The funds are a "down payment on the work we must do," Harris said, and "we must keep going until we connect every American household." Acting Administrator Evelyn Remaley said NTIA will "leverage its deep experience with funding broadband programs to ensure that we make significant progress in eliminating the digital divide on Tribal land.” NTIA has webinars June 16 and 17. Thursday's announcement was "a meaningful step forward," said Free Press Policy Manager Dana Floberg. BroadLand co-Chair Mignon Clyburn said "every penny spent on broadband is a down payment on a better future, and we support the White House efforts."
President Joe Biden proposed to set a minimum 15% corporate tax rate to help pay for an infrastructure spending package as an informal counteroffer to Senate Republicans, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Thursday. Biden made the counterproposal during a Wednesday meeting (see 2106020078) with Senate Public Works Committee ranking member Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, who's leading GOP negotiators. Biden also asked Republicans to back $1 trillion in new spending. Republicans propose $65 billion for broadband (see 2105270072), a figure the White House is offering to back. Capito’s office confirmed she plans to meet with Biden again Friday. Capito “is encouraged that negotiations have continued,” a spokesperson emailed. Vice President Kamala Harris said Thursday she and Biden “are determined to get to 100%” broadband coverage via an infrastructure package. She helped announce NTIA’s plan to make nearly $1 billion available for tribal broadband (see 2106030065). Lawmakers “worked together” to fund broadband programs via the FY 2021 appropriations and COVID-19 aid packages (see 2012210055) and now “Congress must work together again to bring high-speed Internet to every American,” she said. Other officials emphasized they want talks with Republicans on infrastructure to be completed by when the Senate returns Monday (see 2106010068).
NTIA is making nearly $1 billion available through the tribal broadband connectivity program, said Vice President Kamala Harris, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland during a White House event. It's part of FY 2021 appropriations (see 2012210055). Tribal governments, tribal colleges and universities, the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, tribal organizations and Alaska Native corporations are eligible for funding for broadband deployment, said a notice of funding opportunity. Funds can also be used to support digital inclusion, workforce development, telehealth and distance learning. Applications are due Sept. 1. The funds are a "down payment on the work we must do," Harris said, and "we must keep going until we connect every American household." Acting Administrator Evelyn Remaley said NTIA will "leverage its deep experience with funding broadband programs to ensure that we make significant progress in eliminating the digital divide on Tribal land.” NTIA has webinars June 16 and 17. Thursday's announcement was "a meaningful step forward," said Free Press Policy Manager Dana Floberg. BroadLand co-Chair Mignon Clyburn said "every penny spent on broadband is a down payment on a better future, and we support the White House efforts."
AT&T expects to meet a deadline of March 2023 for FirstNet completion, and many of the remaining sites will be difficult, President-Public Sector and FirstNet Jason Porter told a Cowen investor conference Tuesday. They are often “remote rural areas, tribal lands, national parks and areas like that,” he said: “We’re building ahead of schedule right now, but we are down to the challenging sites that might be really hard to get access to.” While AT&T is building a 5G core for FirstNet, subscribers are largely using a 4G network, Porter said. AT&T had 2.2 million FirstNet connections as of March 31, he noted: Most connections today are phones, and AT&T expects a growing number of other devices.
A bipartisan bill in the Senate called the "Safeguard Tribal Objects of Patrimony Act of 2021" will be the topic of a legislative hearing in the Senate Indian Affairs Committee May 26. If passed, it would explicitly prohibit the export of Native American cultural items or archeological finds covered by previous laws, and establish an export licensing system for Native American goods to make sure those exports are prevented. The same bill passed the Senate in December, lead sponsor Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., said when the bill was reintroduced. The bipartisan Senate bill also has a bipartisan House equivalent, sponsored by Reps. Teresa Leger Fernández, D-N.M.; Don Young, R-Alaska; Tom Cole, R-Okla.; and Rep. Sharice Davids, D-Kan.
Ossia wireless power firm taps Jim Cottrell, ex-HP, to lead regulatory efforts as senior director-regulatory compliance ... Comcast adds Toni Beck, ex-NextDecade, as vice president-external affairs, Houston Region ... Liberty Global and Digital Colony creating AtlasEdge Data Centres in transaction they expect to close in Q3, with industry executive Josh Joshi to be AtlasEdge executive chairman ... Hearst Television promotes Andrew Vrees to president-general manager, WMUR-TV Manchester, New Hampshire, succeeding Jeff Bartlett, retiring this summer.
Ossia wireless power firm taps Jim Cottrell, ex-HP, to lead regulatory efforts as senior director-regulatory compliance ... Comcast adds Toni Beck, ex-NextDecade, as vice president-external affairs, Houston Region ... Liberty Global and Digital Colony creating AtlasEdge Data Centres in transaction they expect to close in Q3, with industry executive Josh Joshi to be AtlasEdge executive chairman ... Hearst Television promotes Andrew Vrees to president-general manager, WMUR-TV Manchester, New Hampshire, succeeding Jeff Bartlett, retiring this summer.
Geoffrey Starks was the FCC member the National Tribal Telecommunications Association lobbied (see 2105190067).
Citing the impact of COVID-19 on incarcerated people and their families, FCC commissioners unanimously approved an order and Further NPRM Thursday to cut interstate rates for inmate calling services (see 2105120031). It’s “not the last action we will take because there is more that needs to be done,” said acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel during Thursday’s meeting.