
Document Type
Article
Abstract
As part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), signed by President Joe Biden in November 2021, Congress provided $42.5 billion for broadband deployment, mapping, and adoption projects through the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program, with the stated goal of directing the funds to close the so-called “digital divide.” But actions by pole owners—such as refusing to allow broadband companies to attach their lines on reasonable and nondiscriminatory terms—threaten to slow broadband deployment significantly.
Section 224 of the Communications Act exempts municipal and electric-cooperative (co-op) pole owners, such as the LPCs, from oversight by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). At the same time, the TVA’s authority over pole attachments is not subject to oversight by state governments. This loophole means that it is the TVA, not the FCC, that sets the rates for pole attachments. The TVA’s rates are significantly higher than those of the FCC, and the TVA’s LPCs often can avoid the access requirements typically required by states and the FCC. The TVA and the government-owned LPCs also may not be subject to antitrust law. The TVA and its LPCs hold a resource critical for broadband deployment, while it is essentially impossible for private providers to build competing pole infrastructure. In situations like this, government entities that participate as firms in the marketplace—known in the literature as “state-owned enterprises” (SOEs)—should be subject to antitrust law in order to ensure access by private competitors.
The DOJ should examine the practices of the TVA and its LPCs under antitrust law. Antitrust clearly applies to those LPCs that are private co-ops, which have no immunities. But Congress should clarify that the TVA and government-owned LPCs are likewise subject to antitrust law when they act according to their “commercial functions” or as “market participants.” Congress should also consider bringing the TVA and all of its LPCs under the purview of the FCC’s Section 224 authority over pole attachments.
Recommended Citation
Sperry, Ben; Manne, Geoffrey A.; and Stout, Kristian
(2025)
"The Role of Antitrust and Pole-Attachment Oversight in TVA Broadband Deployment,"
Journal of Technology Law & Policy: Vol. 29:
Iss.
1, Article 3.
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.ufl.edu/jtlp/vol29/iss1/3