Title 47 › Chapter CHAPTER 16— - BROADBAND ACCESS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - ENABLING MIDDLE MILE BROADBAND INFRASTRUCTURE › § 1741
Creates a competitive grant program to pay for building, improving, or buying “middle mile” broadband networks. The goal is to lower the cost of connecting homes and anchor institutions, and to make networks more resilient by adding alternate routes. Grants are technology-neutral, can cover up to 70% of a project’s cost, and total funding authorized is $1,000,000,000 for fiscal years 2022–2026. Applicants must show they can run the project, and priority is given to projects that reuse existing rights-of-way, plan routes to reach unserved anchor institutions (including Tribal), create carrier-neutral interconnection points, improve redundancy, or reduce permitting barriers. Other priorities include fiscal sustainability, offering non-discriminatory interconnects, naming last-mile partners who have shown written interest, adding local matching or in-kind support, and projects that help national security. Winners must prioritize connecting last-mile networks serving unserved areas, link non-contiguous trust lands, or offer wholesale carrier-neutral service. Buildout must finish within 5 years unless the Secretary grants one extra year for good cause. Fiber projects should, where feasible, support 1 gigabit per second uploads and downloads to anchor institutions and provide interconnects within 1,000 feet. The program will require transparency, milestones, and penalties for missed deadlines. Definitions in one line each: anchor institution — schools, libraries, health providers, colleges, or community support groups; Assistant Secretary — the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information; Commission — the Federal Communications Commission; eligible entity — governments, utilities, telecoms, nonprofits, Native entities, technology companies, or partnerships of these; FCC fixed broadband map — the FCC’s broadband coverage map; Indian Tribe — as defined in title 25; interconnect — physically linking two networks to exchange traffic; internet exchange facility — a place where providers swap internet traffic; middle mile infrastructure — broadband links that do not directly reach homes; middle mile grant — a grant under this program; Native entity — Tribes, Alaska Native Corporations, Native Hawaiian organizations, Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, or Office of Hawaiian Affairs; State — as defined in title 47; submarine cable landing station — a licensed place where undersea cables land; Tribal government — the recognized governing body of a Tribe; trust land — as defined in title 38; underserved — an area no larger than a census block that either is Tribally designated or lacks service of at least 100 Mbps down / 20 Mbps up (or higher Commission benchmarks set after Nov 15, 2021); unserved — an area no larger than a census block that either is Tribally designated or lacks service of at least 25 Mbps down / 3 Mbps up (or higher Commission benchmarks set after Nov 15, 2021).
Full Legal Text
Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
47 U.S.C. § 1741
Title 47 — Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73