Title 47 › Chapter CHAPTER 5— - WIRE OR RADIO COMMUNICATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VII— - BROADBAND DATA › § 642
The FCC must, no later than 180 days after March 23, 2020, write final rules to collect and publish detailed broadband data twice a year and to make public, up-to-date maps showing where fixed, fixed wireless, satellite, and mobile internet service is available. The FCC must build a common, geocoded dataset of every location where fixed broadband can be installed (called the Fabric), update that Fabric at least every 6 months, and give rural and insular areas priority. The FCC may hire a GIS contractor by transparent competitive bidding for up to 5 years, but the contractor cannot sell or rent personally identifiable information. The Commerce Department must give the FCC a count of housing units per census block for the Fabric. Internet providers must report location-linked data about where they can and do offer service, speeds and latency, and technical propagation maps or address lists that match the Fabric. Mobile providers must report current 4G LTE coverage and meet minimum coverage and loading standards (download at least 5 Mbps, upload at least 1 Mbps, cell edge probability ≥ 90%, and cell loading ≥ 50%). Providers must certify their reports are true, and the FCC will check them. The FCC must set up an easy online challenge system for consumers, governments, and others to dispute map data, let providers respond, and resolve challenges within 90 days after a provider’s final response. Not earlier than 1 year and not later than 18 months after the rules take effect, the FCC must report to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation and the House Committee on Energy and Commerce about the challenge process. Within 180 days after the rules take effect the FCC must reform its Form 477 collection to match these rules while keeping earlier subscription data (as of July 1, 2019). The FCC must share the data with other federal agencies including NTIA, create three public maps (overall broadband, fixed, and mobile), update the maps at least twice a year, and post the maps and underlying data online at a useful level of detail. Any rule about service quality cannot take effect sooner than 180 days after the FCC issues that rule.
Full Legal Text
Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
47 U.S.C. § 642
Title 47 — Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73