Legislature(2021 - 2022)ADAMS 519

02/01/2022 01:30 PM House FINANCE

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01:37:13 PM Start
01:39:02 PM Presentation: Governor's Task Force on Broadband: Overview and Recommendations by Alaska Telcom
03:18:00 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Presentation: Governor's Task-force on Broadband, TELECONFERENCED
Overview and Recommendations by Christine
O'Connor, Executive Director, Alaska Telecom
Association
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                     February 1, 2022                                                                                           
                         1:37 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:37:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster called the House Finance Committee meeting                                                                      
to order at 1:37 p.m.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Neal Foster, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Kelly Merrick, Co-Chair (via teleconference)                                                                     
Representative Dan Ortiz, Vice-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Ben Carpenter (via teleconference)                                                                               
Representative Bryce Edgmon                                                                                                     
Representative DeLena Johnson                                                                                                   
Representative Andy Josephson                                                                                                   
Representative Bart LeBon (via teleconference)                                                                                  
Representative Sara Rasmussen (via teleconference)                                                                              
Representative Steve Thompson                                                                                                   
Representative Adam Wool                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
None                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Christine O'Connor, Executive Director, Alaska Telcom;                                                                          
Hallie Bissett, Executive Director, Alaska Native Village                                                                       
Corporation Association.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION: GOVERNOR'S TASK FORCE ON BROADBAND: OVERVIEW                                                                      
AND RECOMMENDATIONS BY ALASKA TELCOM                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster reviewed the meeting agenda.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION: GOVERNOR'S TASK FORCE ON BROADBAND: OVERVIEW                                                                   
AND RECOMMENDATIONS BY ALASKA TELCOM                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:39:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHRISTINE  O'CONNOR,   EXECUTIVE  DIRECTOR,   ALASKA  TELCOM,                                                                   
introduced herself  and noted she  had been the chair  of the                                                                   
technical   subgroup   of   the   Governor's   Taskforce   on                                                                   
Broadband.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
HALLIE  BISSETT, EXECUTIVE  DIRECTOR,  ALASKA NATIVE  VILLAGE                                                                   
CORPORATION  ASSOCIATION,  shared   that  the  Alaska  Native                                                                   
Village  Corporation  Association   (ANVCA)  represented  177                                                                   
village  corporations  created  under  Alaska  Native  Claims                                                                   
Settlement Act  (ANCSA). She relayed  she had been  the chair                                                                   
of the full  taskforce and the policy chair  of the Taskforce                                                                   
on Broadband.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett   provided  a  PowerPoint   Presentation  titled                                                                   
"Governor's   Task   Force   on   Broadband:   Overview   and                                                                   
Recommendation"  dated February 1,  2022 (copy on  file). She                                                                   
began on slide  2 and discussed the final  report, which came                                                                   
out  of  Administrative  Order  322. She  detailed  that  the                                                                   
governor  had  created  the special  taskforce  on  broadband                                                                   
comprised  of 11  voting members  and 2  ex officio  members.                                                                   
The  taskforce  had  two subgroups  and  was  assigned  eight                                                                   
tasks.  The taskforce  held  32 public  meetings  in a  short                                                                   
amount  of time.  She  noted the  full  report was  available                                                                   
online at  gov.alaska.gov/broadband.  She listed the  members                                                                   
on  the taskforce  on  slide 3  and  thanked  them for  their                                                                   
service.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:42:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor  noted the other  half of the participants  were                                                                   
in the  policy subgroup and would  be discussed later  in the                                                                   
presentation. She  highlighted that three of  the taskforce's                                                                   
tasks  had been  assigned to  the  technical subgroup  (slide                                                                   
4):                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
   1. Identify and complete a needs assessment of the gaps                                                                    
     in the current broadband network deployment. Identify                                                                      
     communities most in need of upgraded or new                                                                                
     infrastructure.                                                                                                            
   2. Evaluate all technologies that are used to provision                                                                    
     broadband, identify and assess the pros and cons of                                                                        
     each as they pertain to connecting all Alaskans with                                                                       
     high speed connectivity.                                                                                                   
   3. Assess the hurdles to broadband investment and                                                                          
     deployment. Make recommendations on how the state can                                                                      
     play a role to eliminate them.                                                                                             
Ms.  O'Connor  elaborated that  Alaska's  broadband  networks                                                                   
were likely  composed of all  the existing technologies  used                                                                   
to deliver  broadband. She  turned to  slide 5 and  discussed                                                                   
defining  gaps. First  it was  necessary to  define what  the                                                                   
specific gap  was. Broadly, a  gap was defined by  what speed                                                                   
was   or   was   not   there,   middle-mile   infrastructure,                                                                   
affordability,    workforce    development,   and    evolving                                                                   
capability.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor turned  to slide  6 and  relayed the  taskforce                                                                   
set  a target  of  100/20Mbps  minimum speed.  The  taskforce                                                                   
determined that  locations with  service below 25/3Mbps  were                                                                   
classified  as unserved  and should  be  given top  priority.                                                                   
Locations   with  speeds   below   the   minimum  target   of                                                                   
100/120Mbps  were considered  underserved  and  had the  next                                                                   
level  of  priority.  She stated  it  was  important  because                                                                   
there was a lack  of broadband in rural areas  in addition to                                                                   
areas  adjacent to  larger areas.  She  stated that  adopting                                                                   
the metric of  defining a gap by speed enabled  the capturing                                                                   
of all of the  various areas. She highlighted  that the speed                                                                   
target  aligned with  the  federal infrastructure  bill.  The                                                                   
taskforce  had adopted  a  latency target  of  less than  100                                                                   
milliseconds.  She explained  that  a lag-time  of under  100                                                                   
milliseconds   made  service   sufficient  for  live   video,                                                                   
allowing  access to  telehealth,  remote  education, and  any                                                                   
other things sensitive to delay.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor continued  to address  slide  6. The  taskforce                                                                   
had looked  at data  usage. She  explained  that a very  fast                                                                   
connection  that only  allowed a  small amount  of usage  was                                                                   
not  very  helpful.  The  target   was  usage  comparable  to                                                                   
Anchorage  or Fairbanks.  She highlighted  the importance  of                                                                   
reliability   with   minimal   downtime.  She   stated   that                                                                   
broadband  had become  almost  as essential  as electric  and                                                                   
water utilities.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Rasmussen   thanked  the   presenters.   She                                                                   
referenced   the    100   megabit   goal    for   underserved                                                                   
communities.  She  asked  if the  state  could  lose  federal                                                                   
funding  match if  districts  were brought  up  to a  certain                                                                   
level.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor  referenced BAG  [Broadband  Assistance  Grant]                                                                   
regulations  and  reported  there   would  need  to  be  some                                                                   
adjustments to avoid  losing the federal matching  funds. She                                                                   
stated the bar  was currently 25/3Mbps. She  believed that if                                                                   
a  community   was  brought   up  to   100/20Mbps,  the   BAG                                                                   
regulations  (possibly statute)  would need  to be  adjusted.                                                                   
She would have to review the requirements to be certain.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett added  that technology moved at  a lightning fast                                                                   
speed in  terms of capacity  and capability. She  pointed out                                                                   
that by  the time  the state deployed  100/20Mpbs  the metric                                                                   
would already be underserved again.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:47:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor  turned to  slide  7  and addressed  the  first                                                                   
taskforce    recommendation     to    identify    middle-mile                                                                   
infrastructure  needs.  She explained  that  middle-mile  was                                                                   
often  a constraining  element  where there  may  be a  fiber                                                                   
cable to  a home network in  a small community but  without a                                                                   
middle-mile pipe  connecting the  community to the  internet,                                                                   
it  would be  very limited.  Included  in the  recommendation                                                                   
was the  need to recognize  that standards were  evolving and                                                                   
to implement  infrastructure  that was  "future proof"  (that                                                                   
did not become outdated in 5 to 20 years).                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor moved  to the next recommendation on  slide 8 to                                                                   
identify  where to  install  a robust  fiber-optic  backbone.                                                                   
She  elaborated   that  every  hub  in  Alaska   and  smaller                                                                   
communities  needed  a  fiber  backbone.  She  noted  service                                                                   
could be  pushed farther out  to very small  communities with                                                                   
microwave and satellite.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon thanked  the  presenters. He  remarked                                                                   
on  the once  in a  lifetime opportunity  with federal  money                                                                   
coming in to  make meaningful and significant  change related                                                                   
to middle-mile  and  final-mile opportunities  in Alaska.  He                                                                   
asked for a summary of the detail.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett  answered  that the  sheer  amount  of  incoming                                                                   
federal  money had  never  been seen  before  in Alaska.  She                                                                   
detailed that the  taskforce was focused on  the $1.5 billion                                                                   
the state  would receive  to deploy  broadband. She  informed                                                                   
the  committee  that money  was  also  set aside  for  tribal                                                                   
entities.  The first  round of  funding was  $1 billion,  and                                                                   
the second round was $2.5 billion.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:50:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor  shared  that in  2010  federal  policy  makers                                                                   
tried  to reform  their  mechanisms supporting  broadband  in                                                                   
extremely high  cost rural areas  like Alaska.  She explained                                                                   
the reforms  that  had been adopted  did not  fit Alaska  and                                                                   
broadband  buildout had  been  delayed for  about six  years.                                                                   
She relayed  the issue  had been fixed  in 2017  through work                                                                   
with  the  state's congressional  delegation.  She  furthered                                                                   
there  had been  a real  acceleration  of broadband  already,                                                                   
but  the infrastructure  bill  had informed  the  taskforce's                                                                   
thinking  when it had  considered what  networks were  needed                                                                   
to  serve  the  state  for  the next  20  to  50  years.  She                                                                   
explained  the   consideration  played  into   the  taskforce                                                                   
recommendations   for   a  fiber-optic   backbone   and   the                                                                   
inclusion of  all Alaskans. The  taskforce had not  held back                                                                   
from the  goals because  of the  opportunity afforded  by the                                                                   
infrastructure bill.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Edgmon  appreciated   the  explanation.   He                                                                   
stated the  situation was  significant beyond  comprehension.                                                                   
He  was excited  about the  opportunity and  the ability  for                                                                   
the legislature  and executive  branch  to play a  meaningful                                                                   
role.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Rasmussen  referenced   the  need  for  fiber                                                                   
across the  state. She asked  if permitting for  laying fiber                                                                   
and other infrastructure  would be challenging.  She asked if                                                                   
any of the land was federal.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor answered  it would  be a  hurdle. She  detailed                                                                   
that for permitting  a project the best case  scenario was 12                                                                   
months  and  was  often much  longer.  She  elaborated  there                                                                   
would be  a combination of  state, federal land,  tribal, and                                                                   
Native corporation  land to cross. The  taskforce recommended                                                                   
that  anything  the  legislature  and Congress  could  to  do                                                                   
streamline the processes would be very helpful.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Rasmussen asked  if it  seemed like  a tribal                                                                   
compact  with  the  state and  federal  government  would  be                                                                   
beneficial  when it came  to navigating  permitting  and land                                                                   
use  issues. She  believed  there  was broad  consensus  that                                                                   
committee  members  were excited  about  expanding  broadband                                                                   
and maximizing the opportunity.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  answered there  were certain  things the  tribal                                                                   
monies  allowed  in  terms  of   expediting  permitting.  She                                                                   
believed  exploring  partnerships  would  be in  the  state's                                                                   
best interest  in order to ensure  funding went to  places it                                                                   
was  most   needed.  She  pointed   out  that   25/3Mbps  was                                                                   
considered  unserved  and  there were  over  200  communities                                                                   
that   fell  within   the   category.   She  emphasized   the                                                                   
importance of states and tribes working together.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:54:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Wool  saw   the  need   for  a   fiber-optic                                                                   
backbone. He asked  if there could be a scenario  where there                                                                   
was   a  satellite   environment   making  fiber-optic   less                                                                   
necessary.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor replied  that the fiber-optic backbone  would be                                                                   
needed for a  couple of reasons. The first  was capacity. She                                                                   
explained there  was new satellite technology  coming, but it                                                                   
had very  small capacity  compared to  fiber. Second,  fiber-                                                                   
optic   had   almost  unlimited   upgrade   capability.   She                                                                   
explained it merely involved changing boxes. Third, fiber-                                                                      
optic  had a  relatively much  lower  operating expense.  She                                                                   
explained  that once  the cable  was  put in  place it  would                                                                   
run. She noted  that satellite would be complimentary,  but a                                                                   
fiber-optic backbone was needed.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett expounded that the taskforce recognized fiber-                                                                      
optic  was  the  preferable technology  due  to  the  reasons                                                                   
mentioned  by Ms. O'Connor;  however, it  would take  five to                                                                   
ten  years  to  deploy  the needed  fiber.  In  the  interim,                                                                   
satellite would  play an important  role in filling  the gap.                                                                   
She  relayed  the taskforce  had  talked  a lot  about  being                                                                   
technology  neutral.  The  taskforce was  excited  about  LEO                                                                   
[low Earth  orbit] satellites and  was keeping an eye  on how                                                                   
they were  working. She  stated that  hopefully both  options                                                                   
[fiber-optic  and satellite]  could thrive  and move  forward                                                                   
as the state determined how to deploy the broadband.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Rasmussen asked if  there was any  difference                                                                   
between a phone line and fiber for internet.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor answered  that it  depended.  For example,  she                                                                   
personally  received   internet  via  a   traditional  copper                                                                   
phoneline resulting  in good speed. She explained  that homes                                                                   
could  also  have   a  fiber  line  if  the   area  had  been                                                                   
modernized up  to fiber.  She stated that  either way  it was                                                                   
about what  kind of  service a home  was getting  and whether                                                                   
it  was  getting  the  speed,  latency,  and  needed  service                                                                   
characteristics.  She  stated if  the technology  worked,  it                                                                   
was not necessary to worry about it.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:57:57 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Ortiz  asked if the existing provider  network was                                                                   
a hurdle. He had  heard there was a lack of  competition over                                                                   
the past several  years. He asked if it would  be a continued                                                                   
issue as  the state  worked to make  the best economical  use                                                                   
of the incoming federal funds.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor responded  that the existing providers  had been                                                                   
plowing hundreds  of millions  of dollars into  the networks.                                                                   
She  elaborated   that  since  the  programs   were  reformed                                                                   
correctly  in  2017,   there  had  been  over   $172  million                                                                   
invested  in  capital  expenditures  by  existing  providers.                                                                   
Examples included  providing fiber  to the home  and building                                                                   
middle-mile  connections. She  relayed that  $100 million  in                                                                   
reconnect grants had  been awarded in the past  two years for                                                                   
things  like  middle-mile  projects. She  expounded  that  in                                                                   
many ways the  work was providing the baseline  to accelerate                                                                   
forward on  the infrastructure  bill. She addressed  provider                                                                   
competition  and relayed  there were  new providers  entering                                                                   
the  market.  There were  some  providers  providing  service                                                                   
over fixed  wireless and  everything from  small startups  to                                                                   
LEOs  entering  the  market.  She  stated  the  momentum  and                                                                   
energy in the broadband space  was incredible at the moment.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  added that  with less than  1 million  people in                                                                   
Alaska there was  only so much competition that  could be had                                                                   
to  target the  market.  The ANVCA  saw  the  situation as  a                                                                   
major opportunity  for Native  corporations and tribes  to be                                                                   
partnering with  existing and new providers that  cared about                                                                   
Alaska and had proved Alaska was home.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:00:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor  looked at  the next  recommendation on  slide 9                                                                   
focusing  efforts on  all Alaskans.  She  discussed the  need                                                                   
for  maps  defining unserved  and  underserved  areas  around                                                                   
Alaska  on  slide  10.  She reported  that  as  part  of  the                                                                   
infrastructure  bill,  the maps  were  being  created by  the                                                                   
Federal  Communications   Commission   (FCC)  and   would  be                                                                   
granular. The  maps would  identify the broadband  capability                                                                   
(or absence  thereof) in  every serviceable  location  in the                                                                   
state.  The  maps were  expected  to  be available  in  early                                                                   
2023.  Slide  11   showed  a  map  of   existing  middle-mile                                                                   
infrastructure as of 2021.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool asked for a definition of first-mile.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor answered  that last-mile was from  the broadband                                                                   
provider to a  house or business and middle-mile  was between                                                                   
communities   and  required  the   piece  connected   to  the                                                                   
internet in Seattle or Portland.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool asked about first-mile.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor  answered  there was a  first-mile concept,  but                                                                   
she tended to talk about it all as middle-mile.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:02:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  shared that the  taskforce had talked  about the                                                                   
aging  infrastructure  in  the  first  mile;  therefore,  the                                                                   
state should focus on that as well.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor  moved to  the next  recommendation on  slide 12                                                                   
on  affordability. Some  of the  costs,  especially in  rural                                                                   
Alaska, were incredibly  high. She elaborated  that creating,                                                                   
operating,  replacing,  and  maintaining   infrastructure  in                                                                   
remote Alaska was  very expensive, which drove  high rates to                                                                   
consumers. The  taskforce recommended recognition  that [lack                                                                   
of] affordability  created a gap. She turned to  slide 13 and                                                                   
identified workforce  development as  another gap.  She spoke                                                                   
to  the need  for local  technicians  and experts  operating,                                                                   
maintaining,  and   repairing  networks  in   communities  in                                                                   
remote Alaska. She  stated it should be a  priority of future                                                                   
projects.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:04:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   O'Connor  discussed   a   recommendation  on   evolving                                                                   
capability on  slide 14.  The recommendation advised  against                                                                   
letting progress  widen the digital divide. She  stated there                                                                   
had been  great rural  representation  on the taskforce.  The                                                                   
goal was  to be  very mindful  of bringing  the entire  state                                                                   
along with funding received from the infrastructure bill.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz asked  if there were  roadblocks in  making                                                                   
it happen rural  Alaska. He asked if there was  a real chance                                                                   
the primary  gain could be  in metropolitan areas  instead of                                                                   
rural Alaska.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor  replied  that  it  would  depend  on  how  the                                                                   
infrastructure was  implemented. The infrastructure  language                                                                   
called for  each state to create  a deployment plan  to reach                                                                   
every location  within the state.  Under the guidance,  a gap                                                                   
would not  be created.  She cautioned  that the state  should                                                                   
not get pulled  away by technology, it was  necessary to look                                                                   
at the  service the  technology could  deliver. She  stressed                                                                   
the need  for creating  a backbone.  She highlighted  that if                                                                   
the backbone  could not deliver  the "future  proof" service,                                                                   
the state  would end  up with a  disparity; however,  she did                                                                   
not  expect the  situation  to  happen. She  believed  policy                                                                   
makers understood the need to create an evolving capacity.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  added there  was some  risk in  the way  many of                                                                   
the  bills were  being  written. For  example,  grants to  be                                                                   
awarded  under the  legislation required  projects to  impact                                                                   
the  most amount  of people.  She  explained the  requirement                                                                   
hurt the smaller  villages that were unserved.  She confirmed                                                                   
there were  things to  be mindful of  when drafting  state or                                                                   
federal  legislation.  She  explained  that  ANVCA  had  been                                                                   
watching  for things  that may  steer money  more into  urban                                                                   
centers.  She   relayed  that  the  taskforce   members  were                                                                   
aligned    in   prioritizing    unserved   and    underserved                                                                   
communities.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  asked if it was possible  to address a                                                                   
question to a Mr. Noonkesser online.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster noted the individual was not online.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:07:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor  moved to slide  15 and addressed  the taskforce                                                                   
recommendation   to   maximize  federal   partnerships.   She                                                                   
highlighted   that  when  the   taskforce  had   written  its                                                                   
recommendations   it   had   hoped    there   would   be   an                                                                   
infrastructure  bill, but it  had not  yet been certain.  She                                                                   
pointed  out  the recommendation  was  becoming  increasingly                                                                   
important.  She stressed  that  the Department  of  Commerce,                                                                   
Community  and  Economic  Development,  FCC, and  the  United                                                                   
States  Department   of  Agriculture  were  heavily   in  the                                                                   
broadband  space currently,  focused  on  rural America.  She                                                                   
stated it was a great opportunity for Alaska.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor  turned to  slide 16 and  discussed the  task of                                                                   
evaluating all  technologies for the technical  subgroup. One                                                                   
recommendation  was to give  preference to fiber  middle-mile                                                                   
because of its capabilities.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:08:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor  turned to evaluating  technologies on  slide 17                                                                   
and  relayed that  middle-mile  was  a great  technology  for                                                                   
areas  beyond the  current reach  of fiber.  She stated  that                                                                   
because of the  substantial infusion of resources,  the state                                                                   
would  be  able  to  build  fiber   in  locations  that  were                                                                   
previously   thought  to   be  not   possible.  She   briefly                                                                   
highlighted   LEO    and   geostationary    (GEO)   satellite                                                                   
technologies  on  slide  18.   She  moved  to  slide  19  and                                                                   
discussed last-mile  technologies. She referenced  an earlier                                                                   
question  by  Representative  Rasmussen  and relayed  it  was                                                                   
possible  to  have all  of  the  technologies listed  on  the                                                                   
slide [fiber,  DSL (copper),  coaxial cable, fixed  wireless,                                                                   
satellite  (LEO)]  delivering  service  to  a  home;  if  the                                                                   
service qualifications  were appropriate to the  user's need,                                                                   
the user was served.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:09:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor  spoke about  the need for  a balanced  focus on                                                                   
slide  20.  She  elaborated  there  were  different  deficits                                                                   
depending  on  the  location.   The  deficits  needed  to  be                                                                   
identified (i.e.,  middle-mile and/or last-mile)  and funded.                                                                   
She moved to  the hurdles section of the  technology subgroup                                                                   
on  slide  21. Capital  expenditures  included  the  resource                                                                   
needed  to build  the  systems. Operating  expenditures  were                                                                   
required  to  maintain,  repair,  and  operate  systems.  She                                                                   
moved to a recommendation  on slide 22 to  support the Alaska                                                                   
Universal   Service  Fund.   The   fund  provided   long-term                                                                   
baseline  stability   to  telecommunications   operations  in                                                                   
Alaska.  Slide 23 included  a recommendation  to establish  a                                                                   
federal  grant  matching  fund.  She relayed  that  the  USDA                                                                   
ReConnect  Grant Program  required  a 25  percent match.  She                                                                   
stated that  sometimes the size  of a project was  very large                                                                   
and  a company  wanting  to  tackle  the project  was  small,                                                                   
making the  25 percent  match prohibitive.  She noted  it was                                                                   
something to look at.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor  addressed  the  recommendation  to  streamline                                                                   
state and federal  permitting on slides 24 and  25. She noted                                                                   
the concept  had been discussed  earlier in the  meeting. She                                                                   
highlighted  the complexity  and importance  of the issue  at                                                                   
the state and federal level.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:11:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  highlighted individuals  on the policy  subgroup                                                                   
on  slide 26.  She turned  to  slide 27  and discussed  tasks                                                                   
assigned  to  the policy  subgroup.  The  first task  was  to                                                                   
provide recommendations  for a state repository  of broadband                                                                   
information  and expertise  that did not  increase the  state                                                                   
budget. She  elaborated there  were many  places to  get data                                                                   
about broadband including  how it was deployed  and how rates                                                                   
were  determined,   but  the  information  was   not  in  one                                                                   
centralized     location.    The    taskforce     recommended                                                                   
establishing  a repository  where  an average  citizen  could                                                                   
access  the data.  The  second task  assigned  to the  policy                                                                   
subgroup  was to  identify  and  lay out  recommendations  of                                                                   
policies   and   guidelines  for   state   participation   in                                                                   
broadband    infrastructure     development    and    ongoing                                                                   
operations.  She used  a PCE-type  [Power Cost  Equalization]                                                                   
fund that  would help fund  rural subsidies going  forward as                                                                   
one  possible option.  She reported  the  subgroup had  spent                                                                   
many hours  debating the issues  and she was  extremely happy                                                                   
with  the  outcome.  She  noted  the  report  issued  by  the                                                                   
taskforce built off of past reports.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:13:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   Bissett  turned   to  slide   28   and  discussed   the                                                                   
recommendation   to  prioritize   accurate  and   efficiently                                                                   
obtained data.  She elaborated  that the Office  of Broadband                                                                   
Deployment  should commit  to the utilization  of the  world-                                                                   
class  data   and  mapping  analytics.  She   referenced  Ms.                                                                   
O'Connor's  testimony  that the  FCC  was  about to  begin  a                                                                   
mapping project.  She noted that  the process would  slow the                                                                   
state  down as  it would  have to  wait until  the maps  were                                                                   
completed  in  order  to  start   deploying  the  funds.  She                                                                   
explained  that the  FCC would  create  a map  and the  state                                                                   
would have to take  an active role in challenging  any of the                                                                   
data in the maps.  For example, if the map  indicated a rural                                                                   
community had 100/20Mbps,  the state would need  to challenge                                                                   
it. She  stressed that the  state broadband office  needed to                                                                   
be laser focused on ensuring the data was accurate.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett moved  to slide  29 and  highlighted the  second                                                                   
recommendation   to   establish   an  Office   of   Broadband                                                                   
Deployment.  The  [federal]  bipartisan  infrastructure  bill                                                                   
required the  state to establish  a broadband office  in some                                                                   
way.  The taskforce  believed  it  should be  established  to                                                                   
provide leadership  and direction rather than  oversight. She                                                                   
suggested  the possibility  of an advisory  board that  would                                                                   
work  in  concert  with  the   broadband  office  to  provide                                                                   
direction   to  the   state's  efforts.   She  stressed   the                                                                   
importance  of ensuring  the  expansion  of broadband  access                                                                   
and digital equity for all Alaskans.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:15:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  addressed the third  recommendation on  slide 30                                                                   
to establish  a state  broadband advisory  board (SBAB).  The                                                                   
board  would not  have regulatory  authority,  it would  take                                                                   
input  from the  public and  would  have representation  from                                                                   
local, tribal,  education, health, business, and  the general                                                                   
public's interests.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon  observed  that the  broadband  office                                                                   
was an important  feature. He believed it was  the "linchpin"                                                                   
to much  of what could  find its way  to the legislature  and                                                                   
appropriation  process.  He remarked  that  other states  had                                                                   
their  broadband  office  located   within  a  state  agency,                                                                   
regulatory  body, or  other. He  asked if  the taskforce  had                                                                   
discussed where the broadband office may be best placed.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  answered that  the topic  had been discussed  in                                                                   
great  detail.   She  highlighted   that  a  couple   of  the                                                                   
locations   the  taskforce   had   considered  included   the                                                                   
governor's office  and the Department of  Commerce, Community                                                                   
and  Economic Development.  She  relayed  that the  taskforce                                                                   
had not landed  on a solid recommendation.  The taskforce had                                                                   
agreed that the  office should sunset in five  years when the                                                                   
[federal]  money  was  deployed.  She  explained  the  sunset                                                                   
would avoid  setting up another  agency the state  would have                                                                   
to fund in perpetuity.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon   had  listened  to  the   last  three                                                                   
taskforce  meetings  when  the  report had  been  issued.  He                                                                   
recalled  hearing   the  taskforce   discuss  the   need  for                                                                   
employees  for the  broadband office.  He remembered  hearing                                                                   
the taskforce  did not want to  make it too  prescriptive and                                                                   
wanted  to  give latitude  to  build  the  office up  as  the                                                                   
situation  called  for. He  asked  for additional  detail  on                                                                   
staffing and cost.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:17:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett answered  that the state was allowed  to use part                                                                   
of  the   $1.5  billion   for  the   use  of   administrative                                                                   
functions.  She  deferred  to  Ms.  O'Connor  for  additional                                                                   
detail.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor  expounded  that  the task  force  had  assumed                                                                   
there  would be  an  office with  an  executive director  who                                                                   
would  implement  the taskforce  suggestions.  The  taskforce                                                                   
was  not sure  where  the office  would  land. The  taskforce                                                                   
knew the office  would be funded by the  infrastructure bill,                                                                   
which allowed the  state to pull down planning  money and had                                                                   
to  be applied  for  with  a letter  of  intent  in May.  The                                                                   
National  Telecommunications and  Information  Administration                                                                   
(NTIA) was  currently writing the  rules for the  program and                                                                   
would  work  closely  with  states  in  reviewing  deployment                                                                   
plans and to  begin dispersing the bulk of  the money largely                                                                   
for  deployment  grants.  She  noted there  were  some  other                                                                   
available uses.  The taskforce language recommended  a sunset                                                                   
in five  years or  a sunset review  if the  work had  not yet                                                                   
been completed.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon thought  it  would be  fair to  assume                                                                   
that  the  office  would  likely not  come  together  in  the                                                                   
current  session. He  considered it  would take  time to  get                                                                   
the  maps in  place. He  thought  the state  would likely  be                                                                   
waiting  for  federal  guidelines.  He  referenced  the  $111                                                                   
million  in  American  Rescue  Plan Act  (ARPA)  funding  the                                                                   
legislature had  appropriated the previous year.  He asked if                                                                   
the  funds   would  flow  through  the   broadband  taskforce                                                                   
mechanism.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor answered  that  the taskforce  discussions  did                                                                   
not  address  ARPA  funding  and  had  been  focused  on  the                                                                   
infrastructure  funding. She  believed Representative  Edgmon                                                                   
was  correct that  the  infrastructure  funding would  likely                                                                   
not flow during  the current session. The state  was required                                                                   
to  submit a  letter  of interest  by May  14  to begin  with                                                                   
administrative funding.  The bulk of the funding  was between                                                                   
$1 billion and  $1.5 billion. The precise number  was not yet                                                                   
known because  it was dependent  on the maps.  She elaborated                                                                   
that the  infrastructure bill  specified that funding  had to                                                                   
wait  on   the  FCC's   Broadband  Data   Act.  The   federal                                                                   
government  had   selected  a   contractor  to   conduct  the                                                                   
mapping,  but there  had been  a challenge  to the  contract.                                                                   
She   explained   the  challenge   pushed   the   deliverable                                                                   
timeframe  out to  early  2023.  She reiterated  the  precise                                                                   
funding amount  would not be  determined until the  maps were                                                                   
complete.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:21:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  referenced the Renewable  Energy Grant                                                                   
Fund with  $15 million  to $16  million per  year. He  stated                                                                   
the support  mechanism providing  a list of beneficiaries  to                                                                   
be funded  took several months.  He considered  the broadband                                                                   
funds  were possibly  100 times  the  amount. He  underscored                                                                   
the  process  would  take  time   prior  to  getting  to  the                                                                   
legislature.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  referenced the  ARPA funding  and how it  may be                                                                   
used.  She remarked  that the  state  would need  to take  an                                                                   
active role  in the map making.  She suggested the  state may                                                                   
consider  being  proactive  about   verifying  the  level  of                                                                   
service available  in communities.  The information  would be                                                                   
a very  valuable thing  to have ready  to go. She  emphasized                                                                   
that the maps were  needed to deploy the money  and the state                                                                   
needed to be pushing back and forth on the data.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   O'Connor   added   that   the   legislation   for   the                                                                   
infrastructure  bill  was  specific   about  the  FCC's  maps                                                                   
governing. She explained  it was the reason  for the language                                                                   
in the  taskforce report about  not duplicating  efforts. She                                                                   
had  heard suggestions  that  the  state should  conduct  the                                                                   
mapping at  present in order  to accelerate the  process. She                                                                   
countered  it would not  accelerate the  process because  the                                                                   
federal  statute   was  specific  to  the  FCC's   maps.  She                                                                   
explained that the  state could be preparing  to work through                                                                   
the  FCC's challenge  process,  but it  would  not speed  the                                                                   
process  up  for  the  state to  create  its  own  maps.  She                                                                   
stressed  the expensive  nature of  such a  project. She  was                                                                   
cautious  about diverting  resources that  could be  used for                                                                   
deployment. The  providers would  be providing their  data as                                                                   
soon  as the  FCC furnished  its  format. She  noted the  FCC                                                                   
would give  the state  a 60-day window  to gather  and format                                                                   
it. The  state was currently  waiting on the  FCC's technical                                                                   
request.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  stated the FCC  mapping would establish  whether                                                                   
an area was  unserved or underserved. She believed  there was                                                                   
a  way   for  tribes   to  self-determine   that  they   were                                                                   
underserved. She  suggested it may  be worth looking  into to                                                                   
make  deployment happen  more  quickly.  She believed  tribal                                                                   
governments  were   able  to  self-certify  that   they  were                                                                   
unserved.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:24:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Edgmon  stated   that   the  taskforce   had                                                                   
finished  its work  and submitted  its report.  He asked  for                                                                   
verification  that the  actual  work on  the issue  currently                                                                   
resided in the governor's office.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett agreed.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon  asked what  would  happen during  the                                                                   
[legislative]  interim  while   the  state  was  waiting  for                                                                   
everything to happen to get the money out to the state.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett answered that she did not know.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor  replied that she  had remained in  contact with                                                                   
the  taskforce facilitator,  Tyler  Sachtleben. She  reported                                                                   
he had done  a phenomenal job and was currently  tracking all                                                                   
of the deadlines  for the infrastructure funding  to keep the                                                                   
state on  track. She did not  know if there was  planning for                                                                   
staffing  or  what it  looked  like.  She was  confident  the                                                                   
administration was  on track to  keep the state in  play with                                                                   
the infrastructure funding.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett shared  that she, Ms. O'Connor,  and Gerad [Gerad                                                                   
Godfrey,  President,  Alutiiq   Professional  Consulting  and                                                                   
Director,  FirstNet  Tribal]  had  met with  the  governor  a                                                                   
couple  of weeks  back. At  the time,  the governor's  office                                                                   
had  still  been working  to  determine  where to  house  the                                                                   
[broadband]  office.  She explained  the  administration  was                                                                   
actively moving the effort along.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Edgmon    thought   the    committee   could                                                                   
potentially  see  a  budget  amendment  from  the  governor's                                                                   
office  related to  the  broadband office.  He  spoke to  the                                                                   
importance of the endeavor.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:26:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair   Ortiz   asked   for    verification   that   the                                                                   
administration   would   determine   the  location   of   the                                                                   
broadband office.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett  thought  the  location   could  happen  through                                                                   
executive   order    or   through   legislation    from   the                                                                   
legislature.  She  did  not  believe  anyone  had  determined                                                                   
which method was better.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz referenced  the five-year  window in  which                                                                   
to expend  the [federal]  funds. He  asked if the  presenters                                                                   
saw the  timeframe as problematic  based on the  situation in                                                                   
Alaska.  He  asked if  the  timeline  would be  difficult  to                                                                   
meet.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor  answered  in  the  affirmative;  however,  the                                                                   
statute  provided   flexibility.  She  explained   that  NTIA                                                                   
(working in  an oversight  role with  the state) would  allow                                                                   
extensions of  the deadline. She  highlighted that  the first                                                                   
deadline  was four  years.  She  remarked on  Alaska's  short                                                                   
construction  season.  She reported  there  was currently  an                                                                   
extreme shortage  of telecommunication  supplies.  She shared                                                                   
that  companies  trying  to  order   fiber-optic  cable  were                                                                   
getting  quoted  lead times  of  as  long  as 77  weeks.  She                                                                   
informed committee  members that manufacturers  were spooling                                                                   
up their  supplies. She expected  things would catch  up, but                                                                   
if that was  not the case, there was flexibility  allowed [in                                                                   
the federal legislation].                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett stated  that  the task  force  had talked  about                                                                   
that  a five-year  timeframe was  too  short. She  elaborated                                                                   
there was no way  the state would be able to  deploy fiber or                                                                   
satellite in  a five-year timeframe.  She estimated  the time                                                                   
was more  like ten  years. The  state would  keep a  watch on                                                                   
the situation  and would  work through  the regulations  when                                                                   
possible to increase the timeline.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Ortiz  asked if the task force  addressed that the                                                                   
federal  funding  amount was  finite.  He surmised  that  100                                                                   
percent of  the needs in  Alaska would  not be met.  He asked                                                                   
if  there  had   been  discussion  about   priorities  (e.g.,                                                                   
education needs, industry needs, or other).                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:29:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor replied  that the task force had  restricted its                                                                   
prioritizing  to location  and had  not considered  education                                                                   
versus healthcare  versus consumers. She stated  that because                                                                   
broadband was  needed by everyone,  it almost did  not matter                                                                   
what  endeavor   a  person  was  doing.  The   taskforce  had                                                                   
determined  that  locations  without 25/3Mbps  were  the  top                                                                   
priority  and  locations  with  100/20Mbps  were  the  second                                                                   
priority.  She highlighted that  one-time funding  eventually                                                                   
ran out regardless  of its size. She explained  that parallel                                                                   
complimentary  programs  (especially  FCC  universal  service                                                                   
programs)  were  focused  on  operating  expenditures  (i.e.,                                                                   
operating,  maintenance, repair)  and the  programs would  be                                                                   
more important  than ever. She  stressed it was  not possible                                                                   
to  build the  infrastructure  and  walk away.  The  programs                                                                   
would have to be run in parallel.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett  shared  that  during  the  pandemic,  broadband                                                                   
bills  had  increased   to  $900  on  Kodiak.   She  believed                                                                   
programs  had existed  for  a long  time  that had  delivered                                                                   
needs to industry  and clinics, and the needs  were still not                                                                   
met.  She   relayed  that   for  the   Native  citizens   she                                                                   
represented  on  the  taskforce,  the  goal was  a  focus  on                                                                   
broadband  access to individual  homes.  She stated  that the                                                                   
anchor tenant model  did not help the people  it was intended                                                                   
to help.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:31:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson asked  for verification  that along                                                                   
with the  $1 billion  to $1.5  billion there  was $1  billion                                                                   
for tribes nationwide.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett answered  in the affirmative. She  detailed there                                                                   
was  $1   billion  in  the   first  program  that   the  NTIA                                                                   
specifically  set  up for  tribes.  She noted  Alaska  Native                                                                   
corporations were  also included in the ability  to apply for                                                                   
the funding.  Indian country was  currently described  as the                                                                   
entire  State of  Alaska. There  were 229  tribes in  Alaska.                                                                   
She detailed that  $2 billion more had been  appropriated for                                                                   
tribes  through  the  infrastructure bill.  She  stated  that                                                                   
AFN, ANVCA,  and the  regional association  had been  focused                                                                   
on  trying get  as  many of  their communities  connected  as                                                                   
possible.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson  referenced  a statement  that  the                                                                   
advisory board  would be  disbanded in  five years.  He asked                                                                   
for  verification it  was the  board  the federal  government                                                                   
was requiring the state to create.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor  replied that the  taskforce had  envisioned the                                                                   
broadband  office have  a sunset  review at  a minimum.   The                                                                   
structure the  taskforce put together  was the office  with a                                                                   
statewide  advisory  board and  regional  boards  underneath.                                                                   
The  taskforce indicated  the  office  should  have a  sunset                                                                   
review in  five years. She  explained that the  taskforce did                                                                   
not  want  to  recommend  standing up  a  new  department  in                                                                   
perpetuity.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson asked  who  would regulate  office.                                                                   
He  asked  if  it  would  be   considered  a  public  utility                                                                   
regulated  by the  APUC [Alaska  Public Utilities  Commission                                                                   
predecessor to  the Regulatory  Commission of Alaska  (RCA)].                                                                   
He wondered  where people  would take  complaints related  to                                                                   
service and rates.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor answered  that the broadband  office, regardless                                                                   
of where  it existed,  would likely  consist of an  executive                                                                   
director,  engineer,  and  possibly   a  finance  person.  In                                                                   
essence,  the office  would  be  administering  a very  large                                                                   
grant  program. She  elaborated  that the  rates and  service                                                                   
complaints  should be  addressed in  the rules  in the  grant                                                                   
program set up  through the office of broadband.  She did not                                                                   
believe there would be a role for the RCA.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  added that  the task  force recognized  the need                                                                   
for  public  input on  all  of  the topics  under  discussion                                                                   
during  the current  meeting.  She noted  that a  participant                                                                   
from  Fairbanks  had recommended  modeling  the  work on  the                                                                   
Department  of  Transportation  and Public  Facilities  (DOT)                                                                   
process. She looked  at slide 31 and explained  that regional                                                                   
broadband planning  committees would meet at the  local level                                                                   
with  the engagement  of  local government,  Native  leaders,                                                                   
and the  general public and would  provide the detail  to the                                                                   
broadband  office. The  goal was  to have  feedback from  the                                                                   
entire state. She  reported taskforce members  had heard that                                                                   
some people did  not like the method, but one  of the biggest                                                                   
things  the taskforce  had heard  from the  public was  there                                                                   
had been a lack of opportunity to provide comment.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:35:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor added  that  the infrastructure  bill  language                                                                   
required  a large  amount of  community  engagement from  the                                                                   
office   of   broadband.   Regardless    of   the   taskforce                                                                   
recommendation, it was required by statute.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  requested a high level summary  of available                                                                   
funding to be  provided to his office. He  referenced various                                                                   
forms of incoming federal funding.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Rasmussen asked if  there were currently  any                                                                   
apprentice   programs  or   formal   training  programs   for                                                                   
technicians  who   would  lay  fiber.  She  asked   how  long                                                                   
installation would take for each mile of fiber.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor confirmed  there  were training  programs,  but                                                                   
the state  likely needed  more and  more technicians  joining                                                                   
the  programs.   The  IBEW   [International  Brotherhood   of                                                                   
Electrical  Workers]   represented  many  of   the  companies                                                                   
providing   broadband    service   and   had    a   wonderful                                                                   
apprenticeship  program.   She  noted  that   [Department  of                                                                   
Education and  Early Development] Commissioner Johnson,  as a                                                                   
member  of   the  taskforce,   was  a  strong   advocate  for                                                                   
increasing   workforce   development.   She   mentioned   the                                                                   
University of  Alaska Anchorage  and others involved  to help                                                                   
develop more  workforce. She pointed  out that the  beauty of                                                                   
the  jobs  was  they  were  in  the  local  communities.  She                                                                   
reported  the  technical  workgroup  had  discussed  multiple                                                                   
times  that  a  benefit of  the  Alaska-based  providers  was                                                                   
employing local communities to do the work.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett added  there was significant  opportunity created                                                                   
in the infrastructure  bill and former funding  for workforce                                                                   
development.  She informed  the  committee there  would be  a                                                                   
shortage  of available  workforce.  She  elaborated that  the                                                                   
state  would need  to  be training  people.  She shared  that                                                                   
ANVCA and  the ARDORs  were currently  working together  as a                                                                   
team to  apply for a grant  of approximately $40  million for                                                                   
training  in  various  areas.   She  remarked  that  economic                                                                   
development  agencies, including  the  chamber, were  working                                                                   
together to bring  more money in. She reiterated  there would                                                                   
be a need for training.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:39:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   O'Connor   highlighted   that  Alaska   would   be   in                                                                   
competition  with  the  Lower   48.  She  did  not  know  the                                                                   
technical  details Representative  Rasmussen had asked  about                                                                   
and would follow up with the information.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Rasmussen  thought  it  would be  helpful  to                                                                   
understand  the number of  people that  would be needed.  She                                                                   
wondered  if they  should be  targeting  high school  seniors                                                                   
for the  next five  years to  try to  get graduates  into the                                                                   
training programs.  She wondered what type of  capacity there                                                                   
would be  in terms of needs  and seats for training.  She was                                                                   
excited  to hear  Commissioner  Johnson was  willing to  work                                                                   
with the legislature on the education side.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett stated  there would be need for  technicians. She                                                                   
highlighted  the remote  location of the  service towers  and                                                                   
the logistics  associated with setting up  microwave systems.                                                                   
There  was a  need for  technical training  in programs  like                                                                   
Alaska  Vocational Technical  Center  (AVTEC)  and IBEW,  but                                                                   
there    was   also    a   need    for   understanding    how                                                                   
telecommunications businesses work at the corporate level.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:41:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Thompson  referenced   the  May  14  deadline                                                                   
mentioned  by the presenters.  He asked  if the deadline  was                                                                   
for applying.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor answered  it was  the  application deadline  to                                                                   
submit a letter of intent.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Thompson  asked  for verification  the  state                                                                   
did not have  to provide a breakdown. He surmised  the letter                                                                   
of  intent  served  as  notification  that  the  state  would                                                                   
apply.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor agreed.  She  clarified  that until  the  state                                                                   
received  the maps  from the FCC,  the state  would not  know                                                                   
the funding  amount. She explained  that some  planning could                                                                   
be  done ahead  of time,  but  until the  funding amount  was                                                                   
known, a full deployment plan could not be devised.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Thompson observed  that  May 14  was not  far                                                                   
off.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon referenced  an  announcement made  the                                                                   
previous  day by  the federal  Department  of Commerce  about                                                                   
$980  million for  a tribal  broadband connectivity  program.                                                                   
He  noted that  $500,000 would  go  to Clark's  Point in  his                                                                   
district and Selawik  would also receive $500,000.  He stated                                                                   
it   was  almost   another  $1   billion   to  be   dispersed                                                                   
nationwide,  hopefully with significant  emphasis  on Alaska.                                                                   
He  pointed  out   that  the  FCC  under  the   former  Trump                                                                   
administration  had  been  actively  involved  in  Alaska  in                                                                   
2016.  He  thought  the  agency   should  have  some  working                                                                   
understanding of Alaska.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor  answered it  was great  news for Clark's  Point                                                                   
and Selawik.  She confirmed  the FCC  was very familiar  with                                                                   
Alaska.  She  shared that  the  state  had worked  very  hard                                                                   
beginning in  2014 to  educate the FCC  on Alaska.  She added                                                                   
that the  FCC had a  real commitment  to people who  were not                                                                   
served at present.  The state was working close  with the FCC                                                                   
and she was very optimistic.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett added  that  she  could not  be  prouder of  the                                                                   
collective work  done by AFN on  behalf of its tribes  to get                                                                   
the applications  in for  the $500,000  minimum available  to                                                                   
every tribe. She  believed all of the tribe  applications had                                                                   
been  submitted. She  relayed  it was  a guaranteed  $500,000                                                                   
for  the tribal  government to  start deploying  some of  the                                                                   
resources.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:45:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Carpenter   asked  what  the   taskforce  had                                                                   
discussed in  terms of  how to come  to an agreement  between                                                                   
the administrators  (i.e., tribes, the state,  and others) of                                                                   
the pots of money.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett answered  that it could not be a  better time for                                                                   
the  state  to have  a  close  relationship with  tribes  and                                                                   
Native corporations  that were eligible for the  funding. She                                                                   
relayed there  were a  couple of  groups currently  trying to                                                                   
figure  out  how it  would  all  come  together in  terms  of                                                                   
pooling resources  and deploying  assets that would  be owned                                                                   
and  operated by  tribal entities.  She did  not know  enough                                                                   
about them  to report  precisely what was  going on,  but she                                                                   
knew the  conversations were  happening. Additionally,  there                                                                   
would  be numerous  local entities  that already  had a  plan                                                                   
and   knew   how  to   apply   for   the  grants   to   bring                                                                   
infrastructure to  their communities. She referred  to AFN as                                                                   
the "mother ship" and primary think tank.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor  added  there were  multiple  federal  agencies                                                                   
with   multiple  programs   happening   simultaneously.   The                                                                   
infrastructure    bill   required    federal   agencies    to                                                                   
coordinate.  She  stated  one  of the  primary  concerns  was                                                                   
duplicating  projects and  doubling  up in  some areas  where                                                                   
other  areas  were completely  unserved.  The  infrastructure                                                                   
bill  called   for  interagency  coordination.   She  relayed                                                                   
Alaska's    congressional   delegation    was   focused    on                                                                   
encouraging  the  coordination.  Additionally, the  FCC  (the                                                                   
expert agency  on Alaska) was  cited to be the  expert agency                                                                   
for  NTIA and  USDA.  She highlighted  the  USDA  had done  a                                                                   
great  job   with  its   ReConnect  Program   and  was   very                                                                   
knowledgeable about Alaska.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett  believed Representative  Carpenter  was  asking                                                                   
who  would  coordinate  the incoming  funds.  She  asked  the                                                                   
committee  to   consider  that  if  there   was  coordination                                                                   
between  Native and tribal  entities,  funding should  not go                                                                   
to  non-Native and  non-tribal  entities  to coordinate.  She                                                                   
stated  that, "We  are sick  of paternalistic  relationships,                                                                   
we  all  went  to  business  school,  and  we  are  all  very                                                                   
intelligent."  She relayed that  AFN, ANVCA, and  [inaudible]                                                                   
were  perfectly capable  of coordinating  for  the better  of                                                                   
the entire state.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor   highlighted  that   the  taskforce   included                                                                   
several participants  representing Native  entities including                                                                   
Ms. Bissett with  ANVCA. She explained that  the participants                                                                   
had  all coordinated  well together  without  intermediaries.                                                                   
She  believed the  taskforce had  envisioned  that the  state                                                                   
office  of broadband  would  continue  to deal  with  "these"                                                                   
stakeholders directly through the state advisory board.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Carpenter   remarked   that   he   and   the                                                                   
presenters  had  slightly  different   perspectives.  He  was                                                                   
thinking about the  issue along the lines of  identifying the                                                                   
authority. He  understood the legislature had  authority over                                                                   
the  federal  and  state  funds, although  it  did  not  have                                                                   
authority  over money  others  had control  of; however,  the                                                                   
parties  were  at  the  table trying  to  solve  the  picture                                                                   
together.  He asked  how  the partners  would  reach a  final                                                                   
investment decision.  He asked if it was up to  the office of                                                                   
broadband or  a state agency.  He recognized the  state could                                                                   
not  force  any  corporation  or  Native  entity  to  make  a                                                                   
decision  in  a particular  direction;  therefore,  it  would                                                                   
have  to be  an  agreement.  He highlighted  the  presenters'                                                                   
testimony it  would be a  complex process involving  multiple                                                                   
federal  agencies, tribal  entities,  and the  state. He  was                                                                   
unclear on  how the  end financial  decisions would  be made.                                                                   
He  did  not   believe  it  would  be  entirely   up  to  the                                                                   
legislature.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:50:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett  answered  the  process  for  her  had  been  as                                                                   
Representative  Carpenter  described.   She  elaborated  that                                                                   
"there  is  so  much  out  there and  so  much  to  do."  She                                                                   
referenced an  earlier question  about tribal compacting  and                                                                   
relayed  it  would   be  necessary  to  work   together  with                                                                   
everyone  at  the  table.  She   explained  that  the  Native                                                                   
community did not want to be told what it should do.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Carpenter  clarified  that  he had  not  been                                                                   
telling anyone  what to  do. He stated  he was merely  trying                                                                   
to get clarification.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  apologized if her  answer sounded that  way. She                                                                   
clarified that she  was trying to say that  tribal compacting                                                                   
was  a  good tool  to  bring  everyone  together in  the  way                                                                   
Representative  Carpenter  was  describing.  She  stated,  "I                                                                   
just  would   love  for   some  other   entity  to   call  my                                                                   
organization and  ask us  to do some  work for them  to bring                                                                   
our people to the  table without any funding has  been one of                                                                   
the  things  that's  been  really  irritating  for  us."  She                                                                   
agreed  that  everyone  needed  to  work  together,  and  she                                                                   
believed tribal compacting was a good way to get there.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor added  that the  infrastructure specified  that                                                                   
NTIA would write  the rules, the state's office  of broadband                                                                   
would  submit a  plan  according to  NTIA's  rules, and  NTIA                                                                   
would  review and  approve or  ask  for changes.  It was  her                                                                   
understanding  that that the  legislature had to  appropriate                                                                   
any funding  coming to the  state, but  she did not  know how                                                                   
it would work specifically.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:53:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett  moved to  recommendation  4.5  on slide  32  to                                                                   
create    broadband   development    planning   areas.    She                                                                   
highlighted  that everything  in the  report matched  up with                                                                   
the  infrastructure  bill  requirements   for  receiving  the                                                                   
money. She  stated the  broadband development planning  areas                                                                   
were  defined by  the Office  of  Broadband Development.  She                                                                   
pointed  out that  the  NTIA telling  the  state whether  its                                                                   
plan  was good  was a  paternalistic  relationship, which  no                                                                   
one  liked.  She  stated  it was  the  reason  the  taskforce                                                                   
outlined  that the office  of broadband  "wouldn't have  this                                                                   
government  thing  over it."  The  point  was to  deploy  the                                                                   
money  and  infrastructure  and  not  spend  a  lot  of  time                                                                   
talking about it  and writing reports to put on  a shelf. The                                                                   
idea  was to  collaboratively  address the  gaps together  as                                                                   
one  people in  Alaska  to  ensure equitable  development  in                                                                   
terms of  prices and availability  at a minimum  of 25/3Mbps.                                                                   
She  stated   that  many  communities   in  Alaska   did  not                                                                   
currently have any service.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  moved to slide  34 and discussed  recommendation                                                                   
4.7: write a  digital equity plan. She detailed  the endeavor                                                                   
would be  led by the  broadband office  and would  be focused                                                                   
on  speed  test  comparisons,   pricing  data,  and  physical                                                                   
network   gap   details   broken  down   by   location.   The                                                                   
recommendation specified  the plan should  indicate locations                                                                   
and methods  to improve  broadband equity.  She explained  it                                                                   
meant bringing  everyone  up to the  100/20 level  identified                                                                   
by the government as good service.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon shared  that when  he had listened  to                                                                   
some of the  taskforce meetings, he had  detected competition                                                                   
between  satellites  and  other providers.  There  were  many                                                                   
outside investors  that wanted  to come to  Alaska to  get at                                                                   
the funding.  He thought the  state's broadband  office would                                                                   
need to  have technical  expertise in-house  to sort  through                                                                   
business plans and proposals.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:57:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  replied that the  taskforce recognized  the need                                                                   
for  technical expertise  and  knowledge.  She highlighted  a                                                                   
couple  of individuals  on the  taskforce  with knowledge  of                                                                   
telecommunications.  She remarked that  she personally  had a                                                                   
little  experience but  did not  know  about everything  that                                                                   
was   involved.   She   relayed  that   the   taskforce   had                                                                   
recommended   a  subcommittee  to   the  advisory   board  on                                                                   
broadband  development  to  be comprised  of  subject  matter                                                                   
experts that  could play  an advisory  role. She stated  that                                                                   
people like  herself were  not writing  the regulations,  not                                                                   
knowing about how everything involved worked.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   O'Connor  added   that  the   technical  subgroup   had                                                                   
witnessed  there was  a lot  of  competition. She  elaborated                                                                   
that the  large amount of  funding involved was  perceived to                                                                   
be   up  for   grabs.   She   stressed  the   importance   of                                                                   
establishing  "good rules  of  the road"  looking at  whether                                                                   
participants  would to be  good players with  sustainability.                                                                   
She highlighted  that fiber could  exist for 50  years, which                                                                   
needed  to be  factored into  the  rules established  through                                                                   
the  office  of  broadband (as  specified  in  statute).  She                                                                   
relayed  that the  technical  subgroup  had gotten  a  little                                                                   
wrapped  up in  the competition.  The  subgroup had  resolved                                                                   
the  issue  by  looking  at the  service  the  end  user  was                                                                   
getting.  She   considered  a  user  in   Dillingham  needing                                                                   
100Mbps service as  an example. She explained  that the focus                                                                   
should  be  on  whether  the  technology  would  be  able  to                                                                   
provide  the service. She  elaborated  that there should  not                                                                   
be  a given  amount [of  funding]  for satellite,  microwave,                                                                   
and other. She  explained the money should go  to the service                                                                   
level.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett added  that it had not been difficult  to pick up                                                                   
on the  competition between the  two technologies.  She spoke                                                                   
to  the importance  of neutrality.  She  remarked that  fiber                                                                   
would take  substantial time to  deploy. She agreed  with Ms.                                                                   
O'Connor  and the  rest of the  taskforce  that fiber  had to                                                                   
take priority  as the tried  and true tested  technology with                                                                   
the  most  capacity.  She  highlighted  there  were  villages                                                                   
currently  suffering and  perhaps  LEO  satellite could  help                                                                   
them  get   to  the  needed   speed;  however,  it   was  new                                                                   
technology.  She expounded  it was nice  providers wanted  to                                                                   
test  the  technology   in  Alaska's  communities,   but  she                                                                   
wondered what would  happen if it failed. She  supported that                                                                   
whatever could bring  needed broadband to a  community should                                                                   
be the focus. She  stated it was not the job  of the advisory                                                                   
board  to tell  communities  what  that technology  was;  the                                                                   
regional councils would communicate what they needed.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms. O'Connor communicated  that taskforce members  from rural                                                                   
Alaska  had   urged  against   relegating  rural   Alaska  to                                                                   
technology  that  could  not   deliver  in  five  years.  She                                                                   
believed  the term "second  rate" technology  had been  used.                                                                   
She explained  that rural communities  had the  experience in                                                                   
the  past  where someone  had  told  them they  were  getting                                                                   
great connectivity  that would last, but in  five years' time                                                                   
it became obsolete.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:01:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett advanced  to slides  35  and 36.  Recommendation                                                                   
4.8 addressed community  level engagement that  would feed up                                                                   
to the  broadband office  and advisory board.  Recommendation                                                                   
5.1 was  to establish  a vision  for state broadband  policy.                                                                   
She  stated  that   every  Alaskan  needed  to   be  able  to                                                                   
participate and  be competitive in the global  community. The                                                                   
taskforce  recommended  opportunity  for everyone,  not  only                                                                   
private  entities.  She  moved  to  slide  37  and  addressed                                                                   
recommendation  5.2 to  set  long-term  goals. The  immediate                                                                   
goal was  the need  for Alaska homes  and businesses  to have                                                                   
access  speeds  of  at least  25/3Mbps.  Within  five  years,                                                                   
Alaska  homes and  businesses should  all have  speeds of  at                                                                   
least  100Mbps. She  highlighted  the need  to consider  that                                                                   
the   rates  for   the  broadband   service   needed  to   be                                                                   
transparent,  offset,   and  otherwise  adjusted   to  ensure                                                                   
equitable  affordability.  She  noted  that  once  the  state                                                                   
deployed all of  the broadband infrastructure  it would still                                                                   
not  pen economically  for  companies  managing the  service.                                                                   
She explained  it meant the state  would still be  looking at                                                                   
going to  the federal government  to explain the  dynamics of                                                                   
Alaska and the expense it required to operate.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett  addressed  recommendation  5.3 to  establish  a                                                                   
broadband  parity adjustment  on slide  38. She explained  it                                                                   
took  a   huge  amount  of   investment  to   bring  adequate                                                                   
broadband  infrastructure  to   every  community  and  house.                                                                   
Broadband  parity  adjustment supported  equitable  broadband                                                                   
cost across  Alaska's high  rate areas.  She stated  it meant                                                                   
supporting  the Alaska  Power Cost  Equalization program  and                                                                   
the FCC's  Emergency Broadband  Benefit Program.  She pointed                                                                   
to the need for the programs going forward.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett moved  to slide 39 and the recommendation  5.4 to                                                                   
enhance  public safety  and  cybersecurity.  She relayed  the                                                                   
taskforce  had discussed  the concept  numerous times  and it                                                                   
had  been  important  to  taskforce  member  Senator  Shelley                                                                   
Hughes. The  recommendation specified  the state  should work                                                                   
to  enhance  broadband  services  for  first  responders  and                                                                   
coordinate  with the  FirstNet Network  Authority. She  noted                                                                   
the  concept was  not exactly  broadband, but  it fit  within                                                                   
the space. Recommendation  5.5 was to improve  infrastructure                                                                   
processes  on  slide  40. The  recommendation  addressed  the                                                                   
importance  of streamlining  the  permitting process,  making                                                                   
smart  policies  like  "dig  once"  and  the  designation  of                                                                   
rights  of  way  as  public  assets,  and  partnerships  with                                                                   
Canadian  telecom  networks.  She  cited a  project  MTA  was                                                                   
doing  as an  example.  She noted  the  items would  expedite                                                                   
deployment.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:04:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett turned  to  recommendation 5.6  on  slide 41  to                                                                   
strengthen  Alaska's broadband  capacity and competency.  The                                                                   
recommendation  addressed  the  creation or  augmentation  of                                                                   
existing  training program  to  build workforce  development.                                                                   
She addressed tasks  assigned to the full taskforce  on slide                                                                   
42. The  first was to  recommend program-based  guidelines or                                                                   
rules  for  equitable  use  of  state  funding  in  broadband                                                                   
infrastructure development.  The second item on  slide 42 was                                                                   
to  provide recommendations  for  a  buildout  plan to  close                                                                   
remaining  gaps   and  bring  high-speed  broadband   to  all                                                                   
Alaskans.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  turned to slide  43 and addressed  the taskforce                                                                   
recommendations  based on  the two directives  listed  on the                                                                   
previous slide.  She stated that  areas without speeds  of at                                                                   
least  25/3Mbps  were  unserved.   Areas  with  speeds  under                                                                   
100/20Mbps were  underserved. Recommendation 6.2  on slide 44                                                                   
was  to  balance   middle-  and  last-mile   investment.  She                                                                   
elaborated  that  broadband  investment  should  be  balanced                                                                   
between  establishing a  robust fiber  backbone to serve  all                                                                   
parts   of  Alaska   and  the   utilization  of   appropriate                                                                   
technologies   (e.g.,   satellite   and   wireless   internet                                                                   
provider systems) for improved last-mile service delivery.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  advanced to recommendation  6.3 on slide  45 for                                                                   
the  state to  develop a  cohesive  investment strategy.  She                                                                   
specified  the  Office  of Broadband  Deployment,  the  State                                                                   
Broadband   Advisory  Board,   and  the  Regional   Broadband                                                                   
Planning   Committees  should   carefully  and   methodically                                                                   
consider  eligibility  rules   and  limitations  for  federal                                                                   
broadband funding  programs to  ensure that adequate  funding                                                                   
was  directed  appropriately   toward  both  middle-mile  and                                                                   
last-mile  infrastructure  needs.  She highlighted  the  need                                                                   
for  a  focused,  strategic  approach   to  ensure  the  most                                                                   
effective use of the funds.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett addressed  recommendation  6.4  on  slide 46  to                                                                   
prioritize  public-private  partnerships.  She detailed  that                                                                   
grant  programs  and  state  broadband  processes  should  be                                                                   
structured  to   incentivize  providers  to   invest  private                                                                   
capital  and to  establish ways  in  which public  investment                                                                   
could  be leveraged  alongside private  sector activity  with                                                                   
outcomes  that   were  in  the  public  interest.   From  the                                                                   
perspective  of a private  Native corporation  that may  have                                                                   
land  and other  equity positions  in one  of the  companies,                                                                   
the corporation liked  the concept because it  was a utility-                                                                   
grade  durable  asset  that  lasted  for  a  long  time  with                                                                   
guaranteed revenue.  She suggested that state  investment and                                                                   
participation may make some sense.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:08:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon  addressed  private capital  that  was                                                                   
North American  or European generated.  He thought  there was                                                                   
a current  effort with  Korea to  get fiber-optic  cable into                                                                   
Alaska.  He stated  it  could  be fairly  broad  in scope  in                                                                   
terms  of Alaska's  location on  the map and  the ability  to                                                                   
have  fiber-optic   cables  connecting   to  diverse   places                                                                   
leading into Alaska.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett replied  it was  an  excellent observation.  She                                                                   
reasoned that  Alaska was  likely not  the target  market for                                                                   
the  infrastructure. She  spoke  to the  importance of  being                                                                   
vigilant  on  the  entire  business  opportunity  instead  of                                                                   
focusing only on the small village the state served.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett addressed  recommendation  6.5  on  slide 47  to                                                                   
create  a  fair  grant  application   process  for  broadband                                                                   
service  providers and  other eligible  entities. She  stated                                                                   
that  the taskforce  walked through  how  the grant  programs                                                                   
could  be set  up, but  it would  require  public input.  The                                                                   
point  was  a fair  grant  application  that  was  technology                                                                   
neutral   and    provided   opportunities    for   satellite,                                                                   
microwave,  fiber, and other  technology. Recommendation  6.6                                                                   
on  slide 48  was to  ensure ongoing  funding. The  taskforce                                                                   
had been asked  to look at a  program similar to PCE  for the                                                                   
office of broadband  operations. She noted there  was funding                                                                   
set  aside in  the infrastructure  bill;  therefore, she  did                                                                   
not believe the  state would need to appropriate  funding for                                                                   
the  office.  The  taskforce   recommended  using  the  grant                                                                   
funding  to establish  the  broadband  office  and holding  a                                                                   
sunset review when the funds had been extinguished.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:10:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor elaborated  that  the infrastructure  bill  had                                                                   
not passed  until November  [2021]. She  stated it  was clear                                                                   
the infrastructure bill would  fund the office of broadband.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett turned  to  recommendation 6.7  on  slide 49  to                                                                   
engage  Alaskans. The  taskforce  had received  comment  from                                                                   
the  industry and  public  that  it was  setting  up a  large                                                                   
bureaucratic  system of public  input. She  thought it  was a                                                                   
positive thing.  She highlighted that the process  worked for                                                                   
DOT. She  stated it was not  possible to do projects  of this                                                                   
nature without  public input  or the  public would  shut down                                                                   
the  projects.  She  spoke  to  the  importance  of  pursuing                                                                   
viable  projects.  Additionally,   a  website  needed  to  be                                                                   
established for  access to incoming  input. The  state needed                                                                   
to be actively  seeking input and communicating  the progress                                                                   
transparently  toward   the  goal  of  achieving   universal,                                                                   
affordable access across Alaska.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Bissett concluded  the  presentation  on  slide 50.  She                                                                   
detailed  that in the  short-term, the  buildout plan  needed                                                                   
to   address   closing  the   gaps,   technology   solutions,                                                                   
overcoming  hurdles,   Alaska  broadband   policy,  equitable                                                                   
funding strategy, and office of broadband deployment.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:11:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster thanked  the  presenters for  coming in.  He                                                                   
could  see a substantial  amount  of work  had gone into  the                                                                   
process. He  stated a  lot of resources  would be  put toward                                                                   
broadband  and there  was significant  interest in-state  and                                                                   
out-of-state  in different  groups  (e.g., industry,  tribal,                                                                   
community, and other).  He noted there was  substantial need,                                                                   
and the  work would take  much coordination. He  believed the                                                                   
work  was  a  very good  start.  He  found  the  presentation                                                                   
educational and observed  there was a lot that  would have to                                                                   
go into  the process  that he had  not been previously  aware                                                                   
of.                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:13:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative LeBon  thanked the presenters. He  stated that                                                                   
during  the  911-dispatch  consolidation   working  group  in                                                                   
2020, rural telecom  providers had stated one  of the reasons                                                                   
they could  not deploy enhanced  911 and pushed  back against                                                                   
consolidation  for   dispatch-911  was  due  to   a  lack  of                                                                   
bandwidth  and  insufficient   broadband  infrastructure.  He                                                                   
asked  if  the   expectation  of  the  distribution   of  the                                                                   
millions  of   infrastructure  dollars  would   finally  work                                                                   
toward overcoming  the obstacle  and improve 911  service for                                                                   
rural Alaska.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  O'Connor replied  in the  affirmative.  She stated  that                                                                   
the  talk surrounding  911  issues and  work  was about  next                                                                   
generation  based on  broadband  networks.  She relayed  that                                                                   
the   systems    required   robust,   ubiquitous    broadband                                                                   
connectivity.  She informed the  committee that  building out                                                                   
broadband would bring a leap forward in 911 capability.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Ortiz  highlighted specific  needs in  rural areas                                                                   
related  to reliable,  affordable  energy. He  shared that  a                                                                   
community  in his  district had  been  looking for  a way  to                                                                   
create a  fiber-optic network  to deliver improved  broadband                                                                   
service  and more  reliable, affordable  power.  He asked  if                                                                   
the  incoming   money  would   preclude  a  combined   effort                                                                   
approach  to serving  both of  the  needs. Alternatively,  he                                                                   
wondered  if  the  money  could   only  go  toward  broadband                                                                   
development.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Bissett  answered that  she had  been asked the  question                                                                   
when  presenting to  the Department  of  Energy the  previous                                                                   
week.  She  replied  that  the  state's  biggest  hurdle  was                                                                   
logistics. She  elaborated that 80  percent of the  state was                                                                   
inaccessible by road  and it was difficult  to get economical                                                                   
energy  projects  without  road  access.  She  had  told  the                                                                   
department  that there  was a  once in a  decade or  100-year                                                                   
opportunity  to  combine  the  two things.  She  agreed  that                                                                   
where fiber  was laid  there may be  opportunities to  put in                                                                   
other  infrastructure to  bring  down cost  in other  places.                                                                   
She clarified  she was not  advocating for roads  everywhere.                                                                   
She stated  that community  input was  important, and  it was                                                                   
one the number one issue.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Edgmon  thanked   the  presenters   for  the                                                                   
presentation.  He spoke to  the importance  of the  topic and                                                                   
high speed  internet would change  everything in  rural areas                                                                   
in Alaska  including  the quality  of education,  healthcare,                                                                   
job opportunities,  the ability to recruit and  retain people                                                                   
who wanted  to keep in touch  with loved ones, and  other. He                                                                   
was  very excited  about the  opportunity. He  hoped the  two                                                                   
presenters would continue to be involved in the process.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster  reviewed  the schedule  for  the  following                                                                   
day.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:18:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 3:18 p.m.                                                                                          

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
Governor's Task Force on Broadband H FIN 02-01-2022.pdf HFIN 2/1/2022 1:30:00 PM