Legislature(2021 - 2022)BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)

04/15/2021 03:30 PM Senate COMMUNITY & REGIONAL AFFAIRS

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Audio Topic
03:32:29 PM Start
03:32:53 PM Presentation: Assessing the Present and Looking to the Future, What Are the Broadband Gaps in Alaska?
04:59:05 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Presentation - Assessing the Present and Looking TELECONFERENCED
to the Future, What are the Broadband Gaps in
Alaska?
by: University of Alaska - Mike Brase, Executive
Director of Infrastructure & Cloud Services
Denali Commission
- Chad Stovall, Director of Programs
- Erik Obrien, Community and Economic Development
Program Manager
Alaska Telecom Association - Christine O'Connor,
Executive Director
One Web - Lesil McGuire
Pacific Dataport, Inc - Shawn Williams, Vice
President of Government Affairs & Strategy
for Pacific Dataport
SpaceX Starlink - Patricia Cooper, Vice
President, Satellite Government Affairs
**Streamed live on AKL.tv**
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
    SENATE COMMUNITY AND REGIONAL AFFAIRS STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                  
                         April 15, 2021                                                                                         
                           3:32 p.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator Shelley Hughes, Chair                                                                                                   
Senator Robert Myers, Vice Chair                                                                                                
Senator Lyman Hoffman                                                                                                           
Senator Elvi Gray-Jackson                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Senator David Wilson                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION: ASSESSING THE PRESENT AND LOOKING TO THE FUTURE,                                                                  
WHAT ARE THE BROADBAND GAPS IN ALASKA?                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
JOHN BOUCHER, Interim Chief Information Technology Officer                                                                      
Office of Information Technology                                                                                                
University of Alaska                                                                                                            
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Delivered a presentation titled "University                                                               
of Alaska Broadband Challenges and Opportunities."                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHAD STOVALL, Director of Programs                                                                                              
Denali Commission                                                                                                               
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Co-presented an Overview of Broadband in                                                                  
Alaska.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
ERIK O'BRIEN, Broadband Program Manager                                                                                         
Denali Commission                                                                                                               
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT: Co-presented  an  Overview  of Broadband  in                                                             
Alaska.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHRISTINE O'CONNOR, Executive Director                                                                                          
Alaska Telecom Association                                                                                                      
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT: Delivered  a presentation  titled "State  of                                                             
Broadband in Alaska."                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
LESIL MCGUIRE                                                                                                                   
OneWeb                                                                                                                          
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:  Provided an  update  on  OneWeb during  the                                                             
hearing on Broadband access in Alaska.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SHAWN WILLIAMS, Vice President of                                                                                               
Government Affairs and Strategy                                                                                                 
Pacific Dataport, Inc.                                                                                                          
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Delivered a  presentation on Pacific Dataport                                                             
broadband projects in rural Alaska.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
PATRICIA COOPER, Vice President of Satellite Government Affairs                                                                 
Space Exploration Technology Corporation (SpaceX)                                                                               
Hawthorne, California                                                                                                           
POSITION  STATEMENT: Delivered  a  presentation  on the  Starlink                                                             
Program.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:32:29 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  SHELLEY HUGHES  called the  Senate Community  and Regional                                                             
Affairs Standing Committee meeting to  order at 3:32 p.m. Present                                                               
at  the  call  to  order   were  Senators  Gray-Jackson,  Meyers,                                                               
Hoffman, and Chair Hughes.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION: Assessing  the Present and Looking  to the Future,                                                               
What are the Broadband Gaps in Alaska?                                                                                          
 PRESENTATION: Assessing the Present and Looking to the Future,                                                             
             What are the Broadband Gaps in Alaska?                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:32:53 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR HUGHES  announced the business  before the  committee would                                                               
be presentations  relating to assessing broadband  gaps in Alaska                                                               
now  and  into  the  future.  She said  broadband  access  is  an                                                               
important topic  because it affects  almost every aspect  of life                                                               
in Alaska from  the economy to health care to  education to where                                                               
people can  live and work  in the state.  Access is very  good in                                                               
some areas and not so good in  others and it is important for the                                                               
legislature  to understand  that.  She listed  the  order of  the                                                               
presentations.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:35:40 PM                                                                                                                    
JOHN  BOUCHER,  Interim  Chief  Information  Technology  Officer,                                                               
Office   of  Information   Technology,   University  of   Alaska,                                                               
Anchorage, Alaska,  presented a PowerPoint titled  "University of                                                               
Alaska Broadband Challenges and Opportunities."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. BOUCHER reviewed the agenda on slide 2 that read as follows:                                                                
                                                                                                                                
        • Overview of the Office of Information Technology                                                                      
          (OIT) role at the University of Alaska in regards                                                                     
          to broadband                                                                                                          
        • UA's service footprint, how it can differ  by                                                                         
          location, and how that may influence the student                                                                      
          experience                                                                                                            
        • Opportunities for the improvement of UA's current                                                                     
          delivery of  bandwidth                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BOUCHER displayed  the map  on slide  3 that  delineates the                                                               
locations throughout Alaska where  OIT provides bandwidth for UA.                                                               
He  explained  that  OIT purchases  connectivity  from  available                                                               
venders  for   the  university   campuses  in   Anchorage  (UAA),                                                               
Fairbanks  (UAF),  and  Juneau (UAS)  and  additionally  provides                                                               
access for the 13 community  campuses and colleges throughout the                                                               
state.  OIT  also  helps  support  connectivity  in  some  remote                                                               
research stations and  mobile work stations such  as the floating                                                               
research vessel Sikuliaq.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
He highlighted that the UA  perspective of broadband is primarily                                                               
as a  consumer in a  variety of  settings from urban  campuses to                                                               
regional  hubs to  rural and  remote research  settings. He  said                                                               
this  important  tool  enables the  university  to  deliver  high                                                               
quality education and  research to Alaskans and the  world at the                                                               
lowest possible effective cost.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:38:55 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BOUCHER  provided some background.  He related that  in 2015,                                                               
the  FCC defined  "broadband" as  a  minimum of  25 megabits  per                                                               
second (Mbps) download and a  minimum of 3 Mbps upload, sometimes                                                               
called 25/3.  He pointed  out that  the definition  was on  a per                                                               
household  basis, not  a facility  basis that  may have  far more                                                               
individuals  using the  service  than the  average household.  He                                                               
noted that  the 25  Mbps download speed  matches the  target goal                                                               
for the Alaska School Broadband Assistance Grant (BAG) program.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BOUCHER   mentioned  that   resource  constraints   make  it                                                               
difficult to  purchase significant  connectivity speeds  in rural                                                               
locations and said it affects the students' experiences.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:41:08 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  HUGHES  asked  him to  pick  up  the  pace  so as  to  not                                                               
shortchange subsequent presenters.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:41:19 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BOUCHER paraphrased the broadband  limitations on UA campuses                                                               
listed on slide 5 that read as follows:                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
        • Current bandwidth provisioning at low  bandwidth                                                                      
          locations can translate into limitations for the                                                                      
          delivery of digital content                                                                                           
        • For example, it's  challenging to  deliver  rich                                                                      
          learning content that relies upon a substantial                                                                       
          Internet connection                                                                                                   
        • Some services are difficult  to  deliver due  to                                                                      
          limited bandwidth (live streaming, interactive                                                                        
          content)                                                                                                              
        • Limits UA ability  to fully  leverage  a  recent                                                                      
          federal grant (750K) to its fullest extent                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
He   summarized   that   low  bandwidth   capacity   limits   the                                                               
university's   available  tools,   particularly   at  its   rural                                                               
campuses.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:42:16 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BOUCHER  paraphrased the  list on slide  6 of  challenges and                                                               
costs associated with insufficient bandwidth. It read as follow:                                                                
                                                                                                                                
        • Due to cost structures in rural areas, meaningful                                                                     
          capacity is cost prohibitive                                                                                          
        • High cost creates   capacity  imbalance  between                                                                      
          rural and urban campuses                                                                                              
        • Unlike K-12, institutions of higher education are                                                                     
          not eligible for federal E-rate funding at a                                                                          
          subsidized rate of 50-90%                                                                                             
        • UA would like to explore the possibility of a 25                                                                      
          megabits per second minimum - similar to what K-                                                                      
          12 has standardized on but resources are a                                                                            
          challenge                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:43:16 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BOUCHER stated that UA is  working to reduce the high cost of                                                               
connectivity in  rural locations.  He noted that  the opportunity                                                               
for federal funding  in low bandwidth areas is  growing. He noted                                                               
that  the  university recently  agreed  to  chair the  Connecting                                                               
Minority  Communities Pilot  Program  to ensure  that UA's  rural                                                               
campus  needs are  considered. UA  has also  been monitoring  and                                                               
enquiring about  new services  including satellite  delivery that                                                               
are expected  to be available  very soon in low  bandwidth areas.                                                               
He  said these  new technologies  offer the  potential for  game-                                                               
changing opportunities and UA is  willing to participate in pilot                                                               
programs as they unfold.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:45:02 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR HUGHES  suggested that members  hold their  questions until                                                               
after  the  last  presentation.   She  thanked  Mr.  Boucher  and                                                               
recognized  Mr.   Stovall  and   Mr.  O'BRIEN  with   the  Denali                                                               
Commission.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:45:55 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAD   STOVALL,   Director   of  Programs,   Denali   Commission,                                                               
Anchorage, Alaska,  stated that  the Denali  Commission currently                                                               
manages  a $1  billion portfolio  and operates  on a  $15 million                                                               
annual appropriation.  Providing some history, he  explained that                                                               
the Denali Commission was established  by Congress in 1998. It is                                                               
one  of  four regional  commissions;  it  was modeled  after  the                                                               
Appalachian  Regional Commission  that was  established in  1965.                                                               
The Denali  Commission is  overseen by  a board  of commissioners                                                               
each  of whom  have  a  vested interest  in  Alaska's growth  and                                                               
development. It  was designed to  share parity with the  State of                                                               
Alaska regarding its development goals.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
The Commission  is unique among the  regional commissions because                                                               
it  has just  one  service  area and  it  encompasses the  entire                                                               
state.  This  allows  the  commission  to  focus  exclusively  on                                                               
Alaska's  interests  as  opposed  to having  to  handle  multiple                                                               
states.  Second,  in  addition   to  the  federal  co-chair,  the                                                               
commission has a state co-chair  who represents the governor. The                                                               
relationship between the co-chairs  allows the commission to work                                                               
strategically  with the  state  government  in Alaska's  critical                                                               
development.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. STOVALL said that after  23 years the Denali Commission still                                                               
adheres to  the founding  mission to  oversee the  most efficient                                                               
and  effective  delivery  of  resources   to  rural  Alaska.  The                                                               
commission has undergone changes in  size, staff, and funding and                                                               
as  it  continues to  adapt  to  changes, the  board  continually                                                               
evaluates   and  ensures   that  the   agency  is   appropriately                                                               
celebrated.  This is  done based  on changing  needs, conditions,                                                               
and data.  Recent efforts have  been based on the  2018 strategic                                                               
plan which emphasized coordination  and the ability to complement                                                               
partners  across the  state. The  strategic plan  helped lay  the                                                               
groundwork to broaden opportunities  and make significant program                                                               
changes to the  FY2020 program budget. This was  done through the                                                               
introduction of  new funding categories  to the working  plan for                                                               
the agency.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:48:37 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.   STOVALL  related   that   the   categories  were   economic                                                               
development, workforce development,  housing, medical facilities,                                                               
and  broadband.  The  commission  has had  broadband  as  a  high                                                               
priority  on its  agenda since  2019. Through  close coordination                                                               
with multiple partners, the commission  was able to host a series                                                               
of  meetings regarding  rural electric  internet connectivity  in                                                               
August 2019.  Attending those meetings from  Washington, D.C. was                                                               
USDA rural utility  service administrator Chad Rupe.  He was able                                                               
to engage  with Alaska  stakeholders over  several days  and left                                                               
with an  appreciation of  the unique  challenges the  state faces                                                               
with respect to broadband.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
He said coordinating and opening  up these discussions with local                                                               
partners  assisted  in  removing  barriers  to  Alaska's  funding                                                               
request  that  competed  in  the   2020  USDA  rural  development                                                               
reconnect competition. From a high  level, the federal government                                                               
has been making  efforts to deliver better  broadband service and                                                               
connectivity to rural areas for  the last several years. NTIA has                                                               
accelerated that to almost a  warp speed. Unprecedented levels of                                                               
federal broadband funds are making  their way through the federal                                                               
process  and  many  federal  stakeholders  are  stepping  up  and                                                               
assisting in  directing as much  of this funding to  rural Alaska                                                               
as possible.  Since the start of  COVID, a core group  of federal                                                               
partners  has  come  together  in  an  all-hands-on-deck  effort,                                                               
likewise with the state. They  have been a tremendous resource in                                                               
assisting the commission  in broadband wins across  the state for                                                               
the last year.  The commission has been fortunate  to have strong                                                               
partners  to  help it  work  on  strategic broadband  development                                                               
around the state.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Last, he said  the tip of the spear for  the Denali Commission is                                                               
the  program  managers.  Shortly  after  the  rural  connectivity                                                               
meetings in 2019,  the commission decided to  commit further time                                                               
and  resources to  the broadband  enhancement efforts  around the                                                               
state  by  adding  an  additional  staff  member  to  manage  the                                                               
broadband portfolio.  That program  manager was Eric  O'Brien who                                                               
joined  the  commission  from   the  Southwest  Alaska  Municipal                                                               
Conference. The  commission feels  fortunate to  have him  and he                                                               
has produced a number of results  that he will talk about as part                                                               
of  the  strategic  coordinated effort  the  commission  has  had                                                               
ongoing for the last year.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:50:50 PM                                                                                                                    
ERIK  O'BRIEN,  Broadband  Program  Manager,  Denali  Commission,                                                               
Anchorage, Alaska,  stated that he  would provide an  overview of                                                               
broadband  or internet  in Alaska.  He displayed  the map  of the                                                               
state  on slide  2 to  highlight that  the internet  connects the                                                               
state.  It   is  Alaska's  critical  infrastructure,   which  the                                                               
university refers to as the  "middle mile." He explained that the                                                               
green lines represent  the fiber corridors that  have the highest                                                               
capacity. The  blue lines identify  the microwave  corridors that                                                               
have less  capacity. The  communities that  are not  connected by                                                               
either green or blue lines  have the least capacity. He clarified                                                               
that the illustration is not  comprehensive. It is a snapshot and                                                               
a place to start the discussion, he said.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:52:06 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. O'BRIEN discussed some of  the ways the Denali Commission has                                                               
engaged with Broadband.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
In 2010,  a group of  service providers, nonprofits,  elected and                                                               
public  officials  formed  the Alaska  Broadband  Taskforce  with                                                               
support  of the  quasi-governmental body  to connect  Alaska. The                                                               
National   Telecommunications   and  Information   Administration                                                               
(NTIA) provided the funding and  had the stated goal of providing                                                               
100 megabytes  (MB) of  service to every  household in  Alaska by                                                               
2020. While this ambitious goal  was not achieved, the effort was                                                               
successful in shining an important light on broadband.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
The   2014  Alaska   Broadband  Plan   provided  recommendations,                                                               
infrastructure needs, cost estimates, and case studies.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
In 2019,  the Denali  Commission funded an  update to  the Alaska                                                               
Broadband  Plan with  the narrow  focus of  ensuring that  Alaska                                                               
applicants  were eligible  for all  possible points  in the  USDA                                                               
reconnect   program.   After   successfully   commissioning   and                                                               
completing the update and working  with the governor's office and                                                               
service  providers in  time for  the December  2019 Reconnect  II                                                               
grant  announcement for  $600 million,  the  commission can  look                                                               
back  on  the  success  of that  endeavor  with  eight  submitted                                                               
applications, six successful projects,  a seventh pending review,                                                               
and total federal investment of more than $80 million in Alaska.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. O'BRIEN  said the commission's updated  broadband plan showed                                                               
the  value  of the  public  private  partnerships to  meet  these                                                               
critical infrastructure needs.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:53:40 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. O'BRIEN  pointed to the  infrastructure map to  highlight the                                                               
challenges  of serving  Alaska's  vast geography  with its  small                                                               
population.  He  pointed  out  that  the  service  providers  are                                                               
companies that  have made substantial  investments in  Alaska. He                                                               
commended  them  and  said  the   value  of  the  public  private                                                               
partnership  is well  understood. The  central programs  are from                                                               
the  FCC, the  USDA Reconnect,  USDA Community  Connect, Distance                                                               
Learning &  Telemedicine, the NTIA  Tribal Broadband  grants, and                                                               
other Stimulus and Infrastructure projects.  He said the point he                                                               
was  highlighting  was to  identify  the  roles and  partnerships                                                               
required to  meet the challenges  around broadband in  Alaska. HE                                                               
SAID YOU  KNOW THAT  BETTER THAN  MOST BUT HE  WANTED TO  LAY THE                                                               
GROUNDWORK.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:54:31 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. O'BRIEN reported that the  NTIA currently is preparing a $1.6                                                               
billion grant to  fund tribal broadband projects  in Alaska under                                                               
three  programs. These  are 1)  serving minority  communities for                                                               
workforce development and training  ($285mm); 2) tribal broadband                                                               
to  connect  tribal communities  ($1B);  and  3) state  broadband                                                               
infrastructure ($300mm). He noted that  the tribal focus of these                                                               
programs  may  be  especially  valuable to  Alaska  with  it  229                                                               
tribes. This is  about 40 percent of the tribes  nationwide but a                                                               
lessor percentage of the  population nationwide. Nevertheless, he                                                               
said  that  Alaska  tribes represent  a  substantial  underserved                                                               
population  given  the challenges  outlined  here.  He said  $1.6                                                               
billion is a  large number but not compared to  the national need                                                               
for tribal  broadband funding.  Alaska has  some of  the greatest                                                               
need  for broadband  in the  country  and it  is imperative  that                                                               
Alaska tribes  beginning planning now to  maximize their eligible                                                               
allocation.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. O'BRIEN said  the NTIA grants have not been  announced but he                                                               
believes that  the Denali  Commission's accomplishments  over the                                                               
last 18 months demonstrate how  it could provide critical support                                                               
in helping Alaska's tribes.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:55:46 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.   O'BRIEN   recounted   the   following   Denali   Commission                                                               
accomplishments:  First,  through  close  coordination  with  the                                                               
USDA,  the commission  identified  the potential  problem of  not                                                               
having a  broadband plan and  the negative implications  that had                                                               
for the Reconnect  Funding. With prompt action,  the revised plan                                                               
was released within  three months and a  partnership with service                                                               
providers and  the governor's office.  He reminded  the committee                                                               
that this  resulted in  over $80  million in  federal investments                                                               
across  eight application  for important  infrastructure projects                                                               
across Alaska.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Second,  through  close coordination  with  the  FCC, the  Denali                                                               
Commission identified important opportunity  for Alaska tribes to                                                               
receive a dedicated license to  access valuable wireless spectrum                                                               
capable   of  providing   cellular,  fixed   wireless,  emergency                                                               
response, and other services that  have yet to be identified. The                                                               
commission  started  strong  with  this  program  with  workshops                                                               
scheduled  throughout the  state,  the first  of  which was  with                                                               
tribes in  the Tlingit/Haida region  of Southeast Alaska.  All 17                                                               
tribes, private companies, and leadership  from the FCC attended.                                                               
The  onset of  the coronavirus  stopped additional  workshops but                                                               
the commission continued to reach  out and stayed in contact with                                                               
the FCC.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:56:55 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. O'BRIEN related that with  the July deadline looming, only 12                                                               
tribes had  applied for their  license. With an 11th  hour award,                                                               
the commission  funded a dedicated  outreach program  that helped                                                               
10 tribes  receive their license in  the last week of  July. That                                                               
is almost as  much as all the  tribes that had been  signed up in                                                               
the  first  six  months  of  the  program.  The  day  before  the                                                               
deadline,  the FCC  bureau chief  extended the  national deadline                                                               
one month and Alaska took advantage  signing up 180 tribes of the                                                               
229 and 95  percent of the eligible  land. Essentially everything                                                               
outside of the urban centers.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:57:35 PM                                                                                                                    
Third, through close coordination  with federal partners at USDA,                                                               
the  commission   worked  with  Alaska  communities   to  provide                                                               
technical  assistance for  the Community  Connect Program,  which                                                               
doubled  the  previous record  of  Alaska  applications for  this                                                               
particular grant.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. O'BRIEN  concluded the presentation  stating that  the Denali                                                               
Commission  would   maintain  its   commitment  and   mission  to                                                               
facilitate  services   of  the  federal  government   to  deliver                                                               
infrastructure and economic opportunity for all of rural Alaska.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  HUGHES thanked  the  presenters  and recognized  Christine                                                               
O'Connor with the Alaska Telecom Association.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:58:53 PM                                                                                                                    
CHRISTINE   O'CONNOR,   Executive    Director,   Alaska   Telecom                                                               
Association, Anchorage, Alaska, stated  her overview of the state                                                               
of broadband  in Alaska would  look at statewide networks  with a                                                               
focus on the  middle mile - how various technologies  fit in that                                                               
landscape,  and the  opportunities to  expand and  accelerate the                                                               
expansion of broadband.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
She directed attention  to the names and logos on  slide 2 of the                                                               
Alaska-based  companies   that  provide  landline   and  wireless                                                               
broadband  service throughout  Alaska. She  related that  ATA has                                                               
been  supporting  its  member companies  in  connecting  Alaskans                                                               
since it was formed in 1949.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. O'CONNOR  advised that she looks  at broadband infrastructure                                                               
as last  mile and middle mile.  Last mile is the  connection from                                                               
the internet  service provider  to a home  or business.  Over the                                                               
last several  years, nearly 50,000  locations have  been upgraded                                                               
or have newly  deployed broadband. A small sample  of recent last                                                               
mile projects include:                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
        • Alaska Communications brought high speed internet to                                                                  
          16,000 rural Alaska residents with plans to double                                                                    
          that in the next couple of years.                                                                                     
        • Alaska Power and Telephone completed high speed                                                                       
          deployment in Tok and Southeast.                                                                                      
        • Copper Valley Telecom completed a 25/3 broadband Fiber                                                                
          to the Home Project in the Native village of Tatitlek.                                                                
        • GCI has increased wireless speeds in Dillingham and                                                                   
          nearby communities the last several years, including                                                                  
          construction of towers.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:59:28 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. O'CONNOR explained that the  middle mile is what connects the                                                               
last mile to the internet  service provider. Alaska's middle mile                                                               
is a  combination of technologies.  There are thousands  of miles                                                               
of fiber  middle mile. It  is the  gold standard. It  allows huge                                                               
capacity and very  fast speeds. Fiber is the best  option when it                                                               
is  available. Alaska  also has  microwave  networks that  extend                                                               
hundreds of  miles and  allow delivery  of high  speed broadband.                                                               
This  has been  transformational  in huge  parts  of Alaska.  The                                                               
middle mile  also includes satellite connection.  Today there are                                                               
multiple geosynchronous  satellite providers serving  Alaska. She                                                               
noted that  more satellite  capacity is  expected over  Alaska in                                                               
the coming year.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:02:09 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. O'CONNER emphasized that the  middle mile in Alaska is unique                                                               
compared to  the Lower 48.  She said counterparts  outside rarely                                                               
need to  consider how they will  get a middle mile  connection or                                                               
how much  it will  cost. Access to  fiber backbone  connection is                                                               
nearly ubiquitous. It  is a non-issue in most  places down south,                                                               
but in  Alaska there are  large gaps  where the only  middle mile                                                               
connection  is satellite,  which  are more  limited in  capacity,                                                               
often have latency issues, and  can suffer from interference. She                                                               
directed  attention  to the  middle  mile  infrastructure map  of                                                               
Alaska in  2010 with  undersea cables connected  to the  Lower 48                                                               
and a  limited amount of  microwave capacity. By  comparison, the                                                               
broadband  and  satellite  middle  mile  infrastructure  in  2020                                                               
reflects  the massive  investment in  middle mile  over the  last                                                               
decade.  There  is new  connectivity  along  the northern  coast,                                                               
expanded  microwave  networks  in  the  southwest  northwest  and                                                               
southeast,  new fiber  running  up the  Dalton  Highway, and  the                                                               
first terrestrial subsea links into Canada.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. O'CONNOR described the following new middle mile projects:                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
        • Alaska Power and Telephone laid an undersea cable                                                                     
          between Juneau, Haines, and Skagway and they doubled                                                                  
          the capacity of the microwave network between Juneau                                                                  
          and Ketchikan.                                                                                                        
        • Cordova Telecom expanded its microwave network in                                                                     
          Prince William Sound.                                                                                                 
        • GCI completed a multiyear equipment upgrade and added                                                                 
          capacity at 24 microwave sites in Western Alaska.                                                                     
        • KPU Telecom completed the first undersea cable to                                                                     
          Canada connecting to their fiber to the home network.                                                                 
        • Matanuska Telephone Association constructed the AlCan                                                                 
          ONE project, which was the first terrestrial fiber                                                                    
          connection from Alaska in to Canada.                                                                                  
        • Nushagak Cooperative completed a major expansion of                                                                   
          their microwave network.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
She  highlighted that  both  the  MTA and  the  KPU projects  are                                                               
providing new  routes from Alaska  to the Lower 48.  This expands                                                               
the  capacity  of  networks in  Alaska  and  provides  geographic                                                               
diversity in the event of disaster or accident.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:04:38 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  O'CONNOR gave  a shout  out to  the USDA  for the  ReConnect                                                               
Program  that makes  major  infrastructure  projects viable.  She                                                               
directed  attention to  the  list of  communities  that will  all                                                               
receive broadband  service over  the next couple  of construction                                                               
seasons.  The communities  listed  were  Akutan, Brevig  Mission,                                                               
Caswell,  Chignik, Coffman  Cove,  Kaktovik,  Kasaan, King  Cove,                                                               
Larsen  Bay,   Prince  of  Wales  Island,   Sand  Point,  Teller,                                                               
Unalaska,  and Yakutat.  She noted  that nearby  communities will                                                               
also  be connected  thanks  to the  ReConnect  Program. She  said                                                               
these grants  require significant investment from  the applicants                                                               
and significant  community support so being  awarded these grants                                                               
is really a testament to  both the support from these communities                                                               
and  the  company's  commitment  to  invest  in  the  application                                                               
without knowing they would get the award.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:06:15 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. O'CONNOR  said that despite  tremendous progress  in building                                                               
broadband networks,  the work  is not  finished. The  question is                                                               
how to  accomplish ubiquitous and sustainable  broadband networks                                                               
for  all  Alaska.  They  not  only have  to  be  built  but  also                                                               
maintained. The  question is how  to put the pieces  together for                                                               
the investment  to serve the  most remote  communities, including                                                               
those with the  smallest populations. It is a  complex puzzle but                                                               
the  pieces  are  working  together   now  with  investment  from                                                               
Alaska's  telecom community.  In  just the  last  four years,  18                                                               
member companies have invested over  $1.2 billion in CapEx alone.                                                               
It  is  the   investment  in  the  last  mile   and  middle  mile                                                               
infrastructure  that  allows  about  85 percent  of  Alaskans  to                                                               
receive the FCC standard of 25/3  service and 80 percent are able                                                               
access 100 megabit  service or faster. Second, it  is critical to                                                               
have stable, predictable federal  programs. Without this support,                                                               
broadband expansion does not happen.  When federal programs adopt                                                               
stable  rules paired  with the  requirements to  deploy broadband                                                               
that is what  participants in those programs do. The  state has a                                                               
role  too. Administrative  order 310  directed the  Department of                                                               
Transportation  and  Public  Facilities  and  the  Department  of                                                               
Natural Resources  to streamline their respective  permitting for                                                               
broadband  facilities  deployment  projects.  This  is  important                                                               
because fee structures can either  accelerate or impede broadband                                                               
deployment.  Congress also  has a  large role.  President Biden's                                                               
infrastructure proposal  allocates $100 billion for  broadband to                                                               
build  future-proof  networks,  which   means  fiber.  It  is  an                                                               
ambitious  goal  and  ATA  is  eager  for  the  details  on  this                                                               
opportunity  to   dramatically  expand  broadband   networks  and                                                               
connect all Alaskans.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:08:52 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR HUGHES  thanked Ms. O'Connor and  recognized former Senator                                                               
Lesil McGuire with OneWeb.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:09:20 PM                                                                                                                    
LESIL MCGUIRE,  OneWeb, Anchorage, Alaska, provided  an update on                                                               
OneWeb  during the  hearing on  Broadband access  in Alaska.  She                                                               
stated that we are here today  because rural Alaska has been left                                                               
behind. The digital revolution that  has swept the earth has been                                                               
slow to  reach Alaska, particularly rural  Alaska. She emphasized                                                               
that participation  in the global  economy is  impossible without                                                               
high speed  broadband. Because of  rural Alaska's  low population                                                               
and  distance from  telecommunication infrastructure,  high speed                                                               
broad has  for the most  part remained  out of reach  for private                                                               
and public sector investment.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
She  said  exciting new  technologies  are  bridging the  digital                                                               
divide. OneWeb  is helping to  be one  part of the  solution. She                                                               
explained  that   OneWeb  is  the  first   licensed  LEO  spatial                                                               
constellation in  existence. It was  licensed by the FCC  in 2017                                                               
and  by the  ITU in  2016.  OneWeb is  next generation  satellite                                                               
technology that  has launched 146  satellites to date  putting in                                                               
place a global network that  will complete coverage of Alaska and                                                               
the Arctic within the next two months.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MCGUIRE highlighted  that  WebOne is  the  only LEO  spatial                                                               
satellite company  that has committed to  all of Alaska. It  is a                                                               
top  focus. The  goal is  to bring  connectivity to  communities,                                                               
businesses,  and governments.  They are  focusing on  coverage in                                                               
Alaska  first before  moving to  the rest  of the  globe. Service                                                               
will be available to Alaska beginning in late 2021.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:11:35 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. MCGUIRE  said that the  satellites that OneWeb  developed are                                                               
now  the size  of washing  machines as  opposed to  school buses.                                                               
Placing them together in a  constellation with seamless handshake                                                               
movement over the state provides the user a 5G like experience.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. MCGUIRE restated that OneWeb  has launched 146 satellites and                                                               
will launch again April 25 and by  the end of May expects to over                                                               
the   entire   state.   Demonstration  speeds   have   shown   40                                                               
milliseconds  of  latency up  to  400  megabytes. There  will  be                                                               
demonstrations in Alaska in 2021 and  her hope is to bring one to                                                               
Juneau next year.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MCGUIRE  turned   to  slide  5  and   explained  how  OneWeb                                                               
connectivity works. The satellites  are launched into polar orbit                                                               
and circumnavigate  the earth in  a continual  handshake pattern.                                                               
They  connect with  gateways,  one  of which  has  been built  in                                                               
Talkeetna in partnership with Pacific Dataport.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. MCGUIRE  discussed OneWeb's commitment to  sustainable growth                                                               
across  Alaska. She  stated that  as the  least connected  state,                                                               
Alaska is physically and digitally  separated from the contiguous                                                               
U.S.  states.  This  means that  internet  technologies  are  not                                                               
equally available in  Alaska. Despite being the  largest state in                                                               
the  country,   Alaska  has  the   lowest  amount   of  broadband                                                               
infrastructure.  She  described OneWeb  as  a  lifeline that  can                                                               
deliver broadband  in rural communities,  overcoming geographical                                                               
barriers,  helping   to  connect  communities,   government,  and                                                               
businesses. She  said OneWeb  will deliver up  to 200  times more                                                               
capacity to rural Alaska and  the Arctic. Alaskans will enjoy the                                                               
benefits  of freedom  from less  reliable options,  faster speeds                                                               
enjoyed by  many in the  U.S., totally seamless web  browsing and                                                               
video  conferencing, connectivity  at home  like people  enjoy in                                                               
Anchorage,  a  feeling like  you  are  finally connected  to  the                                                               
world.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:16:15 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. MCGUIRE displayed a picture  of the Talkeetna Gateway Station                                                               
and restated OneWeb's  commitment to Alaska first.  She turned to                                                               
slide 9 that depicts services  for fixed and mobility markets and                                                               
clarified that OneWeb  is a wholesaler that  works in conjunction                                                               
with existing local telecommunication  companies who then sell to                                                               
the  consumer. She  recounted that  OneWeb  sells to  enterprise,                                                               
maritime, aviation, education, cellular backhaul and government.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MCGUIRE  concluded  the presentation  summarizing  that  the                                                               
OneWeb  experience offers  freedom  from  less reliable  options,                                                               
faster speeds, and seamless web browsing and video conferencing.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:18:06 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR HUGHES  thanked Ms. McGuire  and recognized  Shawn Williams                                                               
with Pacific Dataport.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:18:36 PM                                                                                                                    
SHAWN  WILLIAMS,   Vice  President  of  Government   Affairs  and                                                               
Strategy,  Pacific Dataport,  Inc.,  Anchorage, Alaska,  reviewed                                                               
the agenda for the presentation  starting with rural broadband in                                                               
Alaska today,  followed by Pacific Dataport's  projects, and then                                                               
a discussion of challenges and solutions.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. WILLIAMS described  the three areas of  funding for broadband                                                               
in rural Alaska today.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
        • Middle mile infrastructure (CapEx) - satellite,                                                                       
          fiber or microwave                                                                                                    
        • Last mile infrastructure (CapEx) - wireless                                                                           
          broadband, coax cable or fiber                                                                                        
        • Last mile (user) subsidies (OpEx)                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
He explained that  Alaska telecoms receive about  $380 million in                                                               
telecom and broadband subsidies that  can be used for middle mile                                                               
and last mile  infrastructure. In addition to  that federal money                                                               
are the ReConnect  Grants that vary from year to  year. He agreed                                                               
with the  ATA assessment that  the problem is the  missing middle                                                               
mile,  but noted  that  the other  problem is  that  there is  no                                                               
funding coming to Alaska dedicated only to middle mile.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:20:22 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  WILLIAMS  turned  to  slide  3 that  outlines  the  cost  of                                                               
broadband in  rural Alaska today.  He said  the cost to  build is                                                               
very expensive  and he  broke it  out per mile  for each  kind of                                                               
middle mile  connection. It costs  about five times more  than in                                                               
the Lower 48 to put in  terrestrial fiber and microwave. Only PDI                                                               
will  be  able  to  deploy middle  mile  infrastructure  that  is                                                               
economical  and   results  in  affordable   broadband  statewide.                                                               
Telecoms  and tribal  entities  can also  use  PDI's middle  mile                                                               
sources  (both  the rural  project  and  the OneWeb  project)  to                                                               
deliver  affordable broadband  anywhere  in  Alaska. He  directed                                                               
attention to  the chart of  the projected cost per  household for                                                               
the different networks. It shows  that federal funding is helping                                                               
to pay for these very expensive  projects. He noted that even the                                                               
Yakutat  network  breaks out  to  $92,592  for  each of  the  270                                                               
households.  The  calculation  for  each network  is  total  cost                                                               
divided by the number of households served.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  WILLIAMS explained  that when  the middle  mile buildout  is                                                               
expensive, both the backhaul and  consumer pricing are expensive.                                                               
He  pointed to  the  charts on  slide 4  that  confirm this.  For                                                               
example, the  Aurora project  brings the cost  down to  less than                                                               
$500 megabit per  second (Mbps), which is  considerably less than                                                               
the  cost of  other middle  mile options.  Furthermore, fiber  or                                                               
microwave is limited to the areas served by those options.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. WILLIAMS cited several facts  about broadband in rural Alaska                                                               
today.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
        • According to the 2021 FCC Broadband Report, 36.3                                                                      
          percent of rural Alaskans have no access to wired                                                                     
          broadband.                                                                                                            
        • No organization of authority is following the existing                                                                
          2014 and 2019 Alaska Broadband Plans or monitoring the                                                                
          benchmarks.                                                                                                           
        • Nobody has the silver bullet to provide reliable and                                                                  
          cost   effective  broadband   to   rural  Alaska   (not                                                               
          Starlink,  OneWeb, ATA,  or PDI).  To get  broadband to                                                               
          the villages will take  concerted effort from different                                                               
          organizations working together.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:22:33 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  WILLIAMS turned  to the  maps on  slide 5  that compare  the                                                               
Alaska middle  mile infrastructure in  2010 to the  Alaska middle                                                               
mile  infrastructure  in 2021.  He  noted  that while  fiber  and                                                               
microwave  have grown,  there is  a question  about the  capacity                                                               
this  has  actually  added.  Continuing to  add  to  an  existing                                                               
network does not  add capacity. He drew a parallel  between a pie                                                               
cut  in 6  pieces compared  to  a pie  shared among  50. He  also                                                               
pointed  out that  the  fiber  in 2  of  the  4 submarine  cables                                                               
running  down  the   coast  is  about  22  years   old  which  is                                                               
approaching the  end of  its 20-30 year  expected life.  He noted                                                               
that  the  Q  fiber  that  runs  along  the  northern  coast  was                                                               
privately financed. No federal funds were used.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:25:08 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. WILLIAMS described Dataport's  efforts to expand the capacity                                                               
for broadband in rural Alaska.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
        • The Aurora Project plans for two satellites the first                                                                 
          of which will be  launched in December. Fundraising for                                                               
          the second  much larger satellite  in underway  and the                                                               
          plan  is for  it  to launch  the  following year.  This                                                               
          network will add  about 100 gigabits per  second of new                                                               
          middle   mile   infrastructure   that   is   deployable                                                               
          anywhere.  The goal  of this  project is  to lower  the                                                               
          retail price of  25/3 broadband in rural  Alaska to $99                                                               
          or less. He  noted that these estimates  to not include                                                               
          federal subsidies.                                                                                                    
        • PDI has been working to bring OneWeb technology to                                                                    
          Alaska. He  confirmed Ms. McGuire's description  of the                                                               
          worldwide effort that will start in Alaska.                                                                           
        • PDI built the Talkeetna Alaska Teleport for OneWeb and                                                                
          any other  LEO or  GEO HTS  middle mile  providers that                                                               
          can be connected to the internet.                                                                                     
        • PDI started the Alaska Broadband Association to notify                                                                
          rural   Alaskans   when   broadband  comes   to   their                                                               
          community.                                                                                                            
        • Pacific Dataport and Microcom are also working with                                                                   
          tribes  to  deploy  their  last  mile  2.5  GHz  tribal                                                               
          spectrum  wireless  internet  service  provider  (WISP)                                                               
          systems. He agreed with Mr.  O'Brien that the challenge                                                               
          for tribes to  get broadband in communities  is to fill                                                               
          the gap  of the  missing middle mile.  Communities that                                                               
          do not have  fiber or microwave are  locked out without                                                               
          satellite.  He pointed  out that  both  OneWeb and  the                                                               
          Aurora  networks can  be used  in a  hybrid of  low and                                                               
          high capacity that goes into a modem.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:27:53 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. WILLIAMS  directed attention  to the images  and descriptions                                                               
of  the OneWeb  and  the  phase 1  and  phase  2 Aurora  networks                                                               
depicted on slide  8. He highlighted that the  OneWeb network has                                                               
648 LEO satellites  and the Aurora network consists  of the Phase                                                               
I Aurora 4A GEO HTS satellite and  the Phase 2 Aurora IV GEO VHTS                                                               
satellite, each of which covers all  of Alaska. He noted that the                                                               
second satellite is the new  technology that is replacing the old                                                               
C-band satellite technology.  The capacity of each  of the Aurora                                                               
satellites has considerably larger capacity.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:28:56 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. WILLIAMS  briefly showed an  image of the  Talkeetna teleport                                                               
where  the  middle  mile  connects   to  the  internet  and  then                                                               
paraphrased the  highpoints of the broadband  challenges bulleted                                                               
on slide 11. The slide read as follows:                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
        • No State broadband organization to help develop                                                                       
          state and Federal policy.  To date, federal policy                                                                    
          is   predominately   being   made   by   a   trade                                                                    
          association that  controls the  vast preponderance                                                                    
          of federal  subsidies, grants, or loans  coming to                                                                    
          state  for  broadband.  Alaska residents  are  not                                                                    
          represented in this process.                                                                                          
        • 90%     of       federal       funding       for                                                                      
          telecommunication/broadband comes  in the  form of                                                                    
          subsidies, not infrastructure.                                                                                        
        • Building out fiber and microwave middle mile                                                                          
          infrastructure  in Alaska  is  expensive and  time                                                                    
          consuming due to permitting.                                                                                          
        • The USDA and FCC loan and grant programs specify                                                                      
          engineering  outcomes  (not  functional  outcomes)                                                                    
          and focus exclusively on last mile.                                                                                   
        • The State of Alaska and its residents have no say                                                                     
          in where Federal broadband funding goes.                                                                              
        • The current FCC Alaska Plan legacy funding                                                                            
          program   discourages    competition,   eliminates                                                                    
          market entry and  disincentivizes expansion to new                                                                    
          areas.                                                                                                                
        • One major telecom receives more than 50%  of all                                                                      
          telecom and broadband  subsidies coming to Alaska,                                                                    
          resulting   in    a   government-sponsored   near-                                                                    
          monopoly.                                                                                                             
        • Alaska's two largest telecoms are  now owned  by                                                                      
          Outside investing firms.  Guaranteed subsidies and                                                                    
          hundreds  of millions  per  year  in profit  makes                                                                    
          them valuable as an investment.                                                                                       
        • Alaska must stop hoping someone from outside the                                                                      
          state will provide a  broadband "silver bullet" or                                                                    
          expect  Federal  agencies   to  organize  multiple                                                                    
          federal funding programs.                                                                                             
        • There is not one single idea or concept that will                                                                     
          solve  the Alaska  Problem. The  solution must  be                                                                    
          multi-faceted and organized at state level.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:29:43 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. WILLIAMS paraphrased the highpoints of the broadband                                                                        
solutions bulleted on slides 12 and 13. The slide read as                                                                       
follows:                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
        • Support the   only  HYBRID   satellite   project                                                                      
          currently   developing   affordable  middle   mile                                                                    
          infrastructure   that    will   deliver   reliable                                                                    
          broadband to rural Alaska for  $99 or less (Aurora                                                                    
          Project)                                                                                                              
        • Use GEO HTS satellite middle  mile to  "fill the                                                                      
          gaps"  as 2014  and  2019  Alaska Broadband  Plans                                                                    
          suggest                                                                                                               
        • Require 20% of ALL Federal broadband funds coming                                                                     
         to Alaska go to new middle mile infrastructure                                                                         
        • Allow up to three middle mile providers access to                                                                     
          Federal funds  to encourage competition  ? Require                                                                    
          these  agency heads  to visit  Alaska and  see how                                                                    
          remote communities                                                                                                    
        • Require 25X3 deployment to 100% of Alaska BEFORE                                                                      
          requiring any faster broadband                                                                                        
        • Use satellite as a redundant source  (or backup)                                                                      
          where fiber is currently  deployed as the 2014 and                                                                    
          2019 Alaska Broadband Plans suggest                                                                                   
        • Remove ALL barriers that may prevent market entry                                                                     
          or favor terrestrial technology (FCC, USDA, NTIA)                                                                     
        • Allow broadband providers access to  ALL Federal                                                                      
          funds (regardless of ETC status)                                                                                      
        • Require federal broadband funding  given to  the                                                                      
          State to  provide grants or  loans to  middle mile                                                                    
          programs   meet  all   four   of  these   economic                                                                    
          criteria:                                                                                                             
             • Provides the   greatest   breadth   of                                                                           
               coverage of Alaska                                                                                               
             • Provides middle mile capacity  at  the                                                                           
               lowest cost per unit                                                                                             
             • Can be available within 2-3 years                                                                                
             • Has a    long-term   plan    that   is                                                                           
               sustainable and plans for growth                                                                                 
        • Use FCC, USDA, NTIA broadband funds to deploy 2.5                                                                     
          GHz  Tribal spectrum  last  mile  WISP systems  in                                                                    
          rural Alaska                                                                                                          
        • ? Establish an  official,  authoritative  Alaska                                                                      
          Broadband Office:                                                                                                     
             • Housed in   the  SOA   Department   of                                                                           
              Commerce, DCRA or Denali Commission                                                                               
             • Must be  a  politically   neutral  and                                                                           
               independent office, without exposure to                                                                          
               undue influence                                                                                                  
             • Require broadband provider reporting to                                                                          
               The Office                                                                                                       
        • Establish "build once" policy along all new roads                                                                     
          and public  right of ways: Allow  providers access                                                                    
          to lay their own fiber.                                                                                               
        • Stop accepting  a   lower   benchmark  for   the                                                                      
          definition of broadband in  Alaska. This should be                                                                    
          25X3 or what  the FCC defines as  broadband in the                                                                    
          Lower 48.                                                                                                             
        • Utilize satellite middle mile to implement hybrid                                                                     
          systems  and  lower  telecom  middle  mile  costs,                                                                    
          therefore   making    middle   mile    much   more                                                                    
          affordable. The  Aurora GEO HTS and  OneWeb LEO is                                                                    
          the perfect example of this new method.                                                                               
        • Change statute to give  AIDEA  the ability  fund                                                                      
          satellite broadband infrastructure projects.                                                                          
             • Definition of  "project"  and  project                                                                           
               location limitations restrict AIDEA's                                                                            
               ability to support this kind of project                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     SUGGESTED   FCC   ALASKA   PLAN   MODIFICATIONS   (Write   a                                                               
     declaration to the Alaska Delegation and the FCC):                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
        • Immediately allow new members to join and access                                                                      
          Alaska Plan funds, regardless of non-ETC or                                                                           
          broadband-only provider status                                                                                        
        • Provide funding for middle mile infrastructure to                                                                     
         meet the needs of Alaskans and Alaska telecoms                                                                         
        • Establish middle mile pricing benchmarks as the                                                                       
          Alaska Plan requires                                                                                                  
        • Require all members to access new sources of                                                                          
          lower-cost middle mile, regardless of latency as                                                                      
          the Alaska Plan requires                                                                                              
        • Provide a comprehensive report on what the first                                                                      
          $750M delivered: new infrastructure, pricing,                                                                         
          speeds and number of new broadband customers as                                                                       
          the Alaska Plan requires                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:32:08 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  WILLIAMS reviewed  the Starlink  System  Arctic coverage  on                                                               
slide 14.  He explained that  the image is  a recent shot  from a                                                               
website  that tracks  satellite deployment  and location  in real                                                               
time.  He  pointed  out  that  Starlink's  investment  in  Alaska                                                               
consists  of 10  experimental  satellites in  polar  orbit and  a                                                               
small trailer  mounted gateway in  Prudhoe Bay. He noted  that it                                                               
is  still navigating  issues such  as orbital  debris and  12 GHz                                                               
spectrum sharing challenges.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  WILLIAMS  directed  attention  to the  quotes  from  leaders                                                               
voicing  concern  about  the limitations  or  lack  of  broadband                                                               
service in rural Alaska on slide 15. They read as follows:                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     "A  cash economy  and high-speed  internet has  changed                                                                    
     the way we live, work,  and socialize. While many rural                                                                    
     Alaskans enjoy  the advantages of  urban living,  it is                                                                    
     easy to see in an  emergency, like the one we currently                                                                    
     and  collectively  face,  those  privileges,  sometimes                                                                    
     life-saving,   do  not   benefit  Alaskans   and  rural                                                                    
     Americans  equitably?.  The   cost  of  6Mbps  download                                                                    
     residential  service with  a 40GB  monthly data  cap in                                                                    
     Bethel  is $165/month  and in  Kotzebue $150/month.  In                                                                    
     Dillingham the  cost is  $165/month for  6Mbps download                                                                    
     and 100GB data cap.  This makes it cost-prohibitive for                                                                    
     the average  family in rural  Alaska to  purchase high-                                                                    
     speed Internet.  That can leave  82 percent  of Alaskan                                                                    
     communities  without an  affordable  option to  provide                                                                    
     distance  education  to  children   or  the  option  to                                                                    
     telework."   Robert   Beans,   Chair      Andrew   Guy,                                                                    
     President/CEO at Calista Corporation  March 20, 2020                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     "SWAMC  recognizes the  great value  of a  project like                                                                    
     PDI's, given  the strong need  for broadband  access is                                                                    
     critical  to enhance  economic development  and support                                                                    
     ongoing educational  efforts as well as  other business                                                                    
     opportunities in  our region.  Much of our  region will                                                                    
     not see  this occur  without the  Aurora HTS  system as                                                                    
     they  are not,  nor will  they  be, served  by the  GCI                                                                    
     undersea cable  project that will  connect 7 of  our 55                                                                    
     communities to the critically  needed service. There is                                                                    
     no  one size  fits all  solution to  Alaska's broadband                                                                    
     needs, and  the PDI  project is  clearly the  answer to                                                                    
     much of  our region and the  State." Shirley Marquardt,                                                                    
     Executive Director at SWAMC  January 10, 2021                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     "We're looking for solutions to  deal with the needs of                                                                    
     the  customers we  have  today and  we  really feel  an                                                                    
     urgency to  get to solutions, because  they can't wait.                                                                    
     And  we can't  wait  because  C-Band infrastructure  is                                                                    
     going to  dissolve." Greg  Chapados, President  and COO                                                                    
     at GCI  Liberty (2020 AFN Annual  Convention)   October                                                                    
     16, 2020                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. WILLIAMS offered  to send the committee copies  of letters on                                                               
this  topic   from  former  Governor  Murkowski,   Alaska  Tribal                                                               
Broadband, OptimERA, SWAMC,  Alaska Village Initiatives Northwest                                                               
Arctic  Borough, and  Nome  Public Schools.  He  advised that  he                                                               
would  also  send   his  recommendations  on  SJR   13  to  bring                                                               
stakeholders in the  state to the table to talk  about what to do                                                               
with broadband funding.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:33:56 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR HUGHES thanked Mr. Williams  and recognized Ms. Cooper with                                                               
Space Exploration Technology Corporation.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:34:26 PM                                                                                                                    
PATRICIA  COOPER, Vice  President, Satellite  Government Affairs,                                                               
Space  Exploration Technology  Corporation (SpaceX),  delivered a                                                               
presentation  on the  Starlink Satellite  Broadband Project.  She                                                               
stated  that  SpaceX  is  pleased to  share  information  on  how                                                               
Starlink can  contribute to the  effort to connect  Alaskans. She                                                               
related that  SpaceX was founded  in 2002  and is well  known for                                                               
designing,  manufacturing,  and  launching advanced  rockets  and                                                               
spacecraft.  About  six  years  ago  SpaceX  started  working  on                                                               
Starlink,  which  is a  constellation  of  satellites to  deliver                                                               
universal  broadband access  around  the world  where access  had                                                               
been  unreliable,  too   expensive,  or  completely  unavailable.                                                               
SpaceX  launched the  first  test satellites  in  2018 and  1,400                                                               
Starlink satellites since  then. At the same time  they have been                                                               
building a network of gateway  ground stations that link Starlink                                                               
users to the fiber internet  background. She noted that the image                                                               
on slide  2 is a stack  of 16 Starlink satellites  that were just                                                               
launched  into space  on one  of their  reusable Falcon  9 launch                                                               
vehicles  and  just  prior  to  the  satellites'  separation  and                                                               
deployment into low earth orbit.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS.  COOPER reported  that the  company is  making good  progress                                                               
towards its  network buildout  goals and was  able to  offer beta                                                               
services  to  consumers  in  the  northern  Continental  U.S.  in                                                               
October 2020. In  November 2020 service was  extended to southern                                                               
Canada and today,  more than 10,000 beta users are  served in six                                                               
countries around  the world. In  summer 2021, the  expectation is                                                               
to have  sufficient satellites on  orbit to serve  customers from                                                               
53 north and 53 degrees south  latitude. At that time SpaceX will                                                               
turn to a  campaign to deploy Starlink satellites  to Polar orbit                                                               
in a  way that  will provide  full coverage  over Alaska  and the                                                               
Arctic.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:36:53 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. COOPER  reported that Starlink's  top priority is  to deliver                                                               
high quality  broadband service directly  to consumers.   Serving                                                               
consumers directly  from a satellite is  a considerable challenge                                                               
but   we  believe   Starlink  technology   will  open   economic,                                                               
education,  and healthcare  opportunities for  people all  around                                                               
the world. It  will also in support solutions  for government and                                                               
the enterprise  customers. Starlink uses thousands  of satellites                                                               
to deliver broadband  speeds that range between about  50 and 150                                                               
megabits  per second  with ongoing  improvements that  will allow                                                               
our  customers to  reach 300  megabits per  second over  the next                                                               
year and  gigabit speeds in  the future. Starlink  beta customers                                                               
currently on the network are  consistently seeing speeds over 100                                                               
megabits per  second down and  45 megabits  per second up.   Also                                                               
because of  our satellite are over  60 times closer to  the earth                                                               
than  traditional  satellites,   Starlink  delivers  low  latency                                                               
broadband. This is the time it  takes to send data from one point                                                               
to the next.  Lower latency is vital to the  online services that                                                               
are  in  demand  today.  Video  calls like  we  are  on  now,  or                                                               
streaming  video  across  multiple   devices  in  the  home  like                                                               
everyone  does,   or  even  online  gaming.     Because  Starlink                                                               
satellites fly  close to the  earth, our Starlink beta  users are                                                               
regularly seeing latencies between  20 and 40 milliseconds, which                                                               
can support those kinds of service.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS.  COOPER said  it is  part  of SpaceX's  essential culture  to                                                               
continuously  iterate  and Starlink  is  no  exception. She  said                                                               
SpaceX recently  made several major upgrades  that delivered even                                                               
more  reliability   and  significantly  improved   throughput  to                                                               
customers.  Now, for  most beta  customers if  communication with                                                               
their  assigned satellite  is interrupted  for any  reason, their                                                               
Starlink  dish will  seamlessly shift  to an  alternate satellite                                                               
resulting  in  far  fewer network  disruptions.  The  ability  to                                                               
switch between satellites  to the best signal is  enabled both by                                                               
cutting edge  software and  antennae technology  in space  and on                                                               
the  ground,  and  also  by   the  constellation  of  their  many                                                               
satellites. The Starlink software  team also rolled out something                                                               
called  the  Dynamic  Frame  Allocation. It  is  a  feature  that                                                               
dynamically  allocates additional  bandwidth  to  users based  on                                                               
their  real time  usage.  That allows  better  balancing of  load                                                               
across  the  network and  ultimately  delivers  higher speeds  to                                                               
individual users.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
4:39:24 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. COOPER said  Starlink is designed to be easy  to use and fast                                                               
to deploy.  All that is needed  to connect to the  service is the                                                               
kit  depicted on  slide 4  and a  power source.  To get  started,                                                               
customers sign up  for service at starlink.com and  pay a onetime                                                               
$499 fee for the dish  and Wi-Fi router. The subscription service                                                               
cost is  $99 per  month. She  said SpaceX likes  to say  that the                                                               
Starlink  user antennae  has more  advanced technology  than most                                                               
fighter jets. It is lightweight,  durable, and simple to operate.                                                               
Once it is  powered up, the antennae automatically  points in the                                                               
right  direction.  The phased  array  antennas  start to  connect                                                               
immediately to the Starlink satellites above.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
She reported that SpaceX has been  offsetting the cost of the kit                                                               
to make it  more affordable to consumers during  the early stages                                                               
of  development.  They have  made  a  considerable focus  on  the                                                               
design  and production  of the  Starlink kit  and are  on a  good                                                               
trajectory to continue to drive  down manufacturing costs. Just a                                                               
few months  ago, the original  kit cost  over $3,000 per  unit to                                                               
produce and today  it costs about half that.  A further iteration                                                               
is expected  to cut another $200  per unit. She said  this is all                                                               
part of the drive toward affordability.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:40:51 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. COOPER  reported that deployment  in Alaska has been  part of                                                               
the SpaceX plan from the  beginning. The plan will be implemented                                                               
this coming  summer with a  polar orbiting launch  campaign. This                                                               
deployment  drive will  bring  full polar  coverage  and by  2022                                                               
allow  the first  service  for Alaska  homes  and businesses.  In                                                               
addition to consumer and enterprise  services, SpaceX is actively                                                               
working with the  U.S. Department of Defense  to provide military                                                               
communication  services   in  the  Arctic  and   across  northern                                                               
latitudes.   SpaceX  launched   its  first   10  polar   orbiting                                                               
satellites in January 2021 with  the Transporter I mission. These                                                               
satellites were  equipped with SpaceX designed  optical satellite                                                               
links  or space  lasers that  are being  tested to  transfer data                                                               
between Starlink  satellites in  space. They  rely on  a tracking                                                               
telemetry  and  control  ground  station  installed  in  northern                                                               
Alaska  to  support  these ongoing  testing  operations  and  are                                                               
developing  three additional  sites in  Alaska to  support future                                                               
polar orbiting operations and services.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. COOPER  emphasized that the  space lasers being tested  are a                                                               
key enabling technology  for full connectivity in  Alaska and the                                                               
poles.  They  reduce  or  eliminate  dependency  on  ground-based                                                               
gateways to  connect Starlink  traffic to  the internet.  This is                                                               
particularly  important in  polar areas  where fiber  options are                                                               
limited  and gateways  are difficult  or  impossible to  install.                                                               
This means Starlink  would be able to connect in  the most remote                                                               
regions  on  earth  that  are  far  from  ground  infrastructure.                                                               
Beginning  with   satellites  launched  into  the   polar  orbit,                                                               
Starlink will start incorporating  space lasers on all satellites                                                               
going forward.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:42:42 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. COOPER turned to slide 7  that depicts the large satellite in                                                               
the  Pikangikum  First Nation  village  in  Ontario, Canada.  She                                                               
explained that  this last winter  Starlink's data rollout  in the                                                               
northern  U.S.  states  and   southern  Canadian  provinces  gave                                                               
terrific  opportunities to  test  operations  in extreme  weather                                                               
conditions. From  direct testing and customer  feedback, Starlink                                                               
demonstrated that  it is  reliable and hardy  in snow  storms and                                                               
very  low temperatures.  The  company was  also  pleased to  form                                                               
strong community partnerships that  showcased how Starlink can be                                                               
rapidly  deployed  to  unserved  home  and  also  provide  remote                                                               
learning,  government services,  and  high quality  connectivity.                                                               
She specifically  mentioned the  partnership with  the Pikangikum                                                               
First Nation  reservation, an indigenous  community located  in a                                                               
beautiful but  very remote area  of Ontario about  300 kilometers                                                               
northeast of Winnipeg.  There are about 400  households or 3,000-                                                               
4,000 people. SpaceX  delivered Starlink to the  community in the                                                               
dead of winter bringing their  available speeds from single digit                                                               
connectivity to reliably over 100  megabits per second. SpaceX is                                                               
building  similar partnerships  across  the U.S.  and Canada  and                                                               
sees   similar  opportunity   for   collaboration  with   Alaskan                                                               
communities.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:44:05 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. COOPER  summarized that Starlink  deploying rapidly  and they                                                               
are  growing  their constellation  and  coverage  area with  each                                                               
additional  launch. They  are building  about 120  satellites per                                                               
month  and aiming  to launch  monthly  on the  reusable Falcon  9                                                               
rockets,  deploying about  60 satellites  each mission.  To date,                                                               
the launch  total is  1,445 satellites.  In March  they conducted                                                               
four launches  and deployed  240 satellites  to orbit.  With this                                                               
cadence they expect  to have continuous coverage  for large parts                                                               
of the world with just a  few more launches. They will turn their                                                               
attention  and  considerable  efforts  to  polar  campaigns  this                                                               
summer and look forward to supporting Alaskans by early 2022.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:45:23 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR HUGHES  thanked Ms.  Cooper and asked  the members  if they                                                               
had questions for any of the presenters.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:45:43 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR GRAY-JACKSON asked how Starlink speeds compare to GCI.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. COOPER  explained that  when they do  beta testing  they tell                                                               
customers  to  expect between  50  and  150 megabits  per  second                                                               
(mps). Tests  of the  recent upgrades  show speeds  of up  to 300                                                               
mps.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:46:46 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  HUGHES  asked Mr.  Boucher  how  much money  is  available                                                               
through  the Connecting  Minorities Pilot  Program and  if it  is                                                               
refunded annually.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:47:10 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  BOUCHER replied  the program  is  still in  the rule  making                                                               
stage,   but   the   expectation   is   that   minority   serving                                                               
institutions,  which UA  is among,  would be  eligible for  about                                                               
$265 million.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HUGHES asked Mr. O'Brien if  the $1.6 billion from the NTIA                                                               
for tribal broadband projects in  Alaska had been appropriated or                                                               
if  it was  through  the infrastructure  bill  that Congress  was                                                               
considering now. She asked what the acronym stands for.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:47:52 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.    O'BRIEN   answered    that    NTIA    is   the    National                                                               
Telecommunications  and Information  Administration. He  said the                                                               
three  programs  were  supposed  to be  released  60  days  after                                                               
December 27  but NTIA  negotiated the timeline  for later  in the                                                               
summer.  The  three programs  are  1)  $285 million  for  serving                                                               
minority communities  for workforce development and  training; 2)                                                               
$1 billion  for tribal broadband  to connect  tribal communities;                                                               
and  3) $300  million for  state broadband  infrastructure. State                                                               
and private  sector partners are  required for the  $300 million.                                                               
These are nationwide.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  HUGHES asked  Ms. McGuire  where the  OneWeb launches  are                                                               
taking place.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:49:14 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. MCGUIRE  answered that  the OneWeb  launches were  funded and                                                               
prepaid by Kazakhstan as part  of the original business plan, but                                                               
live launch viewings  have been coordinated in  schools and local                                                               
businesses.  She added  that locations  in Alaska  have not  been                                                               
ruled out for future OneWeb launches.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HUGHES referred  to slide 6 of the  OneWeb presentation and                                                               
asked  if the  map  showing  broadband access  in  the state  was                                                               
current  to   2021  because  it  only   covers  Southcentral  and                                                               
Southeast.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:50:26 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. MCGUIRE answered yes.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HUGHES  asked Mr. Williams  for a brief explanation  of the                                                               
difference  between  low  earth orbit  (LEO)  and  geosynchronous                                                               
earth orbit (GEO) and GEO HTS and GEO VHTS.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
4:51:50 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. WILLIAMS  answered that the  difference is the  distance from                                                               
the  surface of  the earth.  LEOs are  close to  earth, MEOs  are                                                               
farther  out,  and the  GEOs  are  the  farthest from  earth.  He                                                               
explained that once a GEO  reach its "address" along the equator,                                                               
it travels  in a belt at  the same rate as  the earth's rotation.                                                               
Once PDI's two satellites are  launched, they will be about 18-20                                                               
degrees off  the horizon.  In answer to  the second  question, he                                                               
said HTS  stands for high  throughput satellite and VHTS  is very                                                               
high  throughput   satellite.  The   VHTS  has  the   ability  to                                                               
communicate with moving  targets such as a plane  or cruise ship.                                                               
It also has onboard data processing.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:53:10 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR HUGHES asked  if the Alaska Broadband  Association might be                                                               
an  entity  that  could  help  with coordination  or  if  he  was                                                               
suggesting  that the  state might  have  an entity  to bring  all                                                               
stakeholders to the table.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:53:52 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  WILLIAMS  said  the  latter.  It would  not  be  the  Alaska                                                               
Broadband  Association to  hold that  role. There  needs to  be a                                                               
neutral organization  to help bring  all the stakeholders  to the                                                               
table  including the  providers that  only provide  broadband and                                                               
middle mile providers. These people  currently do not have a seat                                                               
at the table. The organization  that represents the telecoms does                                                               
a  great  job  representing  them. Their  time  and  efforts  are                                                               
valuable,  but organizations  like PDI  and the  Alaska residents                                                               
are  not represented  and  they should  be.  Especially with  the                                                               
money that is coming to Alaska.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HUGHES shared that the  genesis of the hearing stemmed from                                                               
her concern  about equal  access for students  who live  in rural                                                               
Alaska because  she lived  there herself. She  would like  to see                                                               
access  statewide  robust  enough   that  all  students  who  are                                                               
interested could participate  in a two way  live video conference                                                               
class in  Anchorage. The pandemic made  it clear that there  is a                                                               
need  to be  able  to work  from home.  Internet  access is  also                                                               
important for  commerce, and  telemedicine. She  said we  are now                                                               
realizing that the information highway  is a very important piece                                                               
of  infrastructure. She  noted that  she  recently asked  Senator                                                               
Lisa Murkowski  about the  prospects for  funding this  summer or                                                               
fall and she said  a concern is that what works  for the Lower 48                                                               
may  not work  for  Alaska.  With that  in  mind,  she asked  the                                                               
presenters to  share any suggestions, language,  or concern about                                                               
SJR 13.  The resolution is sending  a message to Congress  to ask                                                               
for flexibility with  the forthcoming funding to  meet the unique                                                               
needs and challenges of Alaska.  She cited money dedicated to the                                                               
middle mile as an example.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:59:05 PM                                                                                                                    
There being  no further  business to  come before  the committee,                                                               
Chair Hughes adjourned the Senate  Community and Regional Affairs                                                               
Standing Committee meeting at 4:59 p.m.                                                                                         

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
A Blueprint for Alaska’s Broadband Future 12.11.19.pdf SCRA 4/15/2021 3:30:00 PM
ATA State of Broadband 4.15.21.pdf SCRA 4/15/2021 3:30:00 PM
University of Alaska Broadband Challenges and Opportunities Presentation 4.15.21.pdf SCRA 4/15/2021 3:30:00 PM
Denali Commission Presentation 4.15.21.pdf SCRA 4/15/2021 3:30:00 PM
Updated OneWeb SCRA hearing 4.15.21.pdf SCRA 4/15/2021 3:30:00 PM
PDI - AK SENATE 4.15.21.pdf SCRA 4/15/2021 3:30:00 PM
Starlink Overview 4.15.2021.pdf SCRA 4/15/2021 3:30:00 PM