Great idea. Now why not make it universal. Over at the Tribal Library E-Rate Advocacy Program (T-LEAP), one of the initiatives they've taken is to accept applications year-round. You heard that right: no filing window for applicants in the T-LEAP program. The increased flexibility has, of course, increased applicant participation.
Wouldn't it be great to increase applicant participation across the board? So why don't we allow year-round applications for all applicants? The application window was originally created because the E-Rate program always hit its cap, so not all applications could be funded. To keep the application process from turning into a race to apply, the FCC nicely set up a filing window, and said all applications filed in the window would be treated as simultaneous. Well, the program never hits its cap these days. So the filing window is unnecessary.
The T-LEAP program shows us that we'd get more participation if we had no filing window. Applicants wouldn't be forced to sign illegal contracts. PIA's workload would be more spread out. Changing service mid-year wouldn't be a nightmare.
As I pointed out 10 years ago, the rules as currently written, in fact, say that applications should be accepted after the close of the filing window if there's still money left. So USAC should be accepting applications year-round already.
You may say I'm crazy, but I'm not the only one. The American Library Association (ALA) has asked the FCC to allow rolling applications for C2. But why allow year-round applications only for C2? Let C1 apps be year-round, too.
Going one step further, why do we still have C1 and C2? The two Categories (nee Priorities) of funding were only created because the program never had enough money to fund all funding requests. Now that the program has plenty of money to cover all requests....