FCC chair wants universal broadband, but vague on goals

gary shapiro julius genachowskiJulius Genachowski, the Federal Communications Commission chairman appointed by President Barack Obama, talked at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas today about the agency’s ambitious national broadband plan and also answered often pointed questions about government regulation. His responses were big on vision and nuance, but when asked to boil his goals for the national plan into a single sentence, Genachowski punted.

“One of the things that we’re working on is articulating goals for the country in the plan that are both aspirational, that are inspirational, that are also pragmatic,” he said.

In other words, one of the goals in preparing the plan is to figure out the goals of the plan.

Broadly, Genachowski did note that the FCC has been ordred to look at the ways to promote universal access to broadband. That means making sure broadband infrastructure reaches everywhere in the country. But the government also needs to address the 30 percent of the populace that has access to broadband infrastructure but chooses not to use it, either due to expensiveness or other issues. This effort is important to the economy — not just according to Genachowski, but also Gary Shapiro, chief executive and president of the Consumer Electronics Association. Shapiro said, many of the demonstrators at CES are counting on growing broadband adoption to fuel demand for their products, so in a sense they’re counting on Genachowski to succeed.

The plan recently hit a speed bump, with the FCC delaying its release from February until March. Still, Genachowski said it will be out “very soon.”

And what if the FCC can actually achieve that goal of universal broadband — what effect would that have on the agency and its rules? Or as Shapiro put it, “If we achieve this vision of broadband, do we need all this regulation?”

The government has justified regulating things like radio and television with the fact that there’s only a the limited spectrum available, Shapiro noted. So if everyone is watching their TV and getting their news over the Internet, does the argument for regulation disappear?

“Universal, ubiquitous, high-speed broadband access — that changes a lot of things,” Genachowski said, and presumably the regulatory situation would have to adapt to those changes. However, Genachowski declined again to get too specific. He added, “I’m acknowledging the validity of the question.”

Genachowski also discussed the future of the wireless spectrum, particularly how to deal with the fact that there’s not enough wireless spectrum to meet the demand.

“Our data shows that there’s a looming crisis,” he said. “Not tomorrow, not next week, not next year, but at some point in the future, the system is going to be overloaded.”

To avert the crisis, more spectrum needs to be found, but the existing spectrum needs to be used more efficiently, Genachowski said. Hopefully, the private sector can come up with some solutions, but if not the FCC will get involved.

Near the end of the interview, Shapiro looked beyond specific issues and asked Genachowski how we should judge his success. Once again, Genachowski said there are some goals which he can’t talk about yet (presumably they’re part of the national broadband plan), but he said, “One of my my goals at the FCC is to help turn it into a 21st century agency.” To that end, the FCC launched a site yesterday to invite citizen participation in the process of revamping the agency.

Check out our CES 2010 coverage here.


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