Title 47 › Chapter 5— WIRE OR RADIO COMMUNICATION › Subchapter VII— BROADBAND DATA › § 642
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) must make rules (due within 180 days after March 23, 2020) so it can collect detailed broadband data twice a year and publish public maps showing where internet service is and is not available. The FCC must build a common, geocoded list of every place in the U.S. where fixed broadband can be installed (called the Broadband Serviceable Location Fabric). That Fabric must work with common mapping software, be updated at least every 6 months, and the FCC must give special attention to rural and island areas. The Secretary of Commerce must give counts of housing units by census block to add to the Fabric. The FCC can hire a GIS contractor under normal federal contracting rules, with open bidding, contracts no longer than 5 years, and rules that stop the contractor from selling personally identifiable information. Providers must report where they have built networks and where they could install service, speeds and latency at FCC-set levels, and mapping data that matches the Fabric. Fixed wireless, fixed, satellite, and mobile providers will report in formats the FCC requires; mobile providers must give propagation maps showing current 4G LTE coverage that account for clutter and meet speed and loading standards (download at least 5 Mbps, upload at least 1 Mbps, cell edge probability at least 90%, and cell loading not less than 50%). Providers must include a corporate officer’s certification that their data is true. The FCC must set up ways to check and protect submitted data, accept verified data from states, local and Tribal governments, third parties, and other federal agencies, and update reporting rules as technology changes. The FCC must create three public maps: an overall Broadband Map, a fixed-broadband map, and a mobile-broadband map, and use them to decide where service is missing and to guide broadband funding. The maps and underlying data must be updated at least twice a year and be publicly available and shareable with other federal agencies. The FCC must set up a simple online challenge process so consumers, governments, and others can point out errors, let providers respond, verify challenge data, and resolve challenges quickly (the FCC must decide a challenge within 90 days after a provider’s final response). Within 180 days after the new rules take effect the FCC must reform its Form 477 process and keep reporting subscription data collected as of July 1, 2019. The FCC must also report to Congress between 1 year and 18 months after the rules take effect about how the challenge process is working. Any rule about service quality cannot take effect earlier than 180 days after that rule is issued.
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 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60