Author: Brenda Marie Rivers|| Date Published: December 8, 2020
The Federal Communications Commission has selected 180 companies to receive $9.2B in federal subsidies to implement broadband networks in unserved areas across the U.S. and the Northern Mariana Islands as part of the agency's Rural Digital Opportunity Fund program.
Satellite companies, cable operators, telecommunications providers and electric cooperatives that won in the Phase I auction must comply with requirements for rapid periodic buildouts and reach assigned deployment locations by the end of the program's sixth year, according to the agency.
Stamford, Connecticut-based Charter Communications received the largest number of location assignments at more than 1M. SpaceX, which aims to build a constellation of internet satellites, secured $885.5M in support funds to provide connectivity service to more than 640K locations.
The agency noted it will allocate the remaining $6.8B for Phase II auction that will focus on “partially-served” areas and looks to funnel up to $11.2B for the second phase to support additional unserved locations that did not secure funding.
Phase I awards came after FCC established a potential 10-year, $9B 5G Fund for Rural America.
The Defense Health Agency awarded a combined $8.07 billion in contracts to Humana Government Business, Evernorth Federal Services and Ipsos Public Affairs…
The Naval Information Warfare Center Pacific is soliciting proposals for the development and fielding of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance systems…
The Department of War is accelerating its push into unmanned systems, moving beyond experimentation toward large-scale production, streamlined acquisition and…