Title 47 › Chapter 16— BROADBAND ACCESS › Subchapter III— ENABLING MIDDLE MILE BROADBAND INFRASTRUCTURE › § 1741
Creates a competitive grant program run by the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information to pay for building, improving, or buying middle mile broadband infrastructure. Key terms briefly: anchor institution = schools, libraries, health providers, colleges, or community support groups; Assistant Secretary = the named Commerce official; Commission = the FCC; eligible entity = states, tribal governments, tech companies, electric utilities and co-ops, public utility districts, telecom companies and co-ops, nonprofits, regional planning councils, Native entities, economic development authorities, or partnerships of two or more of these; FCC fixed broadband map = the FCC map; interconnect = a physical link between two networks; internet exchange facility = a place where networks swap traffic; middle mile infrastructure = network links that do not go directly to homes but move traffic between networks (examples include leased dark fiber, backhaul, carrier-neutral exchange points, submarine cable landing stations, undersea cables, data center links, special access, and wired or private wireless parts like towers and microwave); middle mile grant = the grant under this program; Native entity, Tribal government, State, submarine cable landing station, and trust land = as defined in other laws; unserved and underserved = areas no larger than a census block that lack at least 25/3 Mbps (unserved) or 100/20 Mbps (underserved), unless the FCC set higher speeds after November 15, 2021, or are designated Tribally underserved under the Tribal process. Grants must be technology-neutral, competitive, and may pay up to 70% of project costs. Priority is given to projects that use existing rights-of-way, plan routes to reach unserved anchor institutions, build carrier‑neutral interconnection, or improve resiliency and reduce permitting barriers. Applicants must show they can complete the project, describe nondiscriminatory interconnect plans, and, when possible, show written interest from last‑mile providers. Recipients must prioritize connecting last‑mile networks serving unserved homes, linking non‑contiguous trust lands, or offering wholesale carrier‑neutral service. Fiber projects should, when feasible, support 1 gigabit per second up and down to anchor institutions and provide direct interconnect within 1,000 feet. Buildout must finish within 5 years, with a possible one‑year extension. The Assistant Secretary will set milestone requirements, reporting, oversight, and penalties for missed deadlines. Grant recipients must share infrastructure locations in a uniform format with the Assistant Secretary, FCC, the relevant Tribal government, and the State broadband office for program use only, with legal protections for disclosure. The Assistant Secretary may waive or change rules to help Tribal governments or projects on trust land. Up to $1,000,000,000 is authorized for fiscal years 2022–2026.
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 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60