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Monday, January 26, 2026

T-LEAPing into the future

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....

Cybersecurity Pilot update

I'm listening to the quarterly meeting of the USAC Schools & Libraries Committee of the USAC Board, and I learned some new things about the Cybersecurity Pilot Program (CSPP). 

First, USAC expects to open invoicing by March. Also, they're running an invoicing webinar tomorrow. 

Second, all CSPP applications should get FCDLs by the end of June. For those who didn't know, 172 FCDLs were issued on December 17th. Another wave should be coming out soon. But knowing when the last FCDL will be issued is good news for those of us who have applications languishing in "Certified" status.

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

GAO: USAC FTW

It's a clean bill of health for the E-Rate! The GAO (Governement Accountability Office) evaluted five programs for their adherence to "nine requirements and leading practices to oversee and prevent fraud, waste, and abuse in awards...." Alone among the five programs, the E-Rate had procedures for all nine.

The GAO has taken a dimmer view of the E-Rate program in 2005, 2009, 2010 and 2017. So it's a nice change to see the program getting a clean bill of health.

Saturday, January 17, 2026

A step in the right direction

 Time for the annual table to see if the FCC stuck to their rule of 60 days between the release of the ESL and the opening of the window and if the window length stayed at 70 days, the recent standard.

 As is typical since 2019, the FCC missed the 60-day mark, giving us only 35 days, but the government-wide shutdown gives them a good excuse. 

And they pushed the window back a week to give us more time with the ESL before we have to file. Of course, that makes me happy, since I think the window should close in May

FY ESL release Window open 60 days? Window close Window days
2026 12/17/2025 1/21/2026 35 4/1/2026 70
2025 10/25/2024 1/15/2025 82 3/26/2025 70
2024 12/18/2023 1/17/2024 30 3/27/2024 70
2023 12/14/2022 1/18/2023 35 3/28/2023 69
2022 12/17/2021 1/12/2022 26 3/22/2022 69
2021 11/30/2020 1/15/2021 46 3/25/2021 69
2020 12/9/2019 1/15/2020 37 3/25/2020 70
2019 11/15/2018 1/16/2019 62 3/27/2019 70
2018 10/5/2017 1/11/2018 98 3/22/2018 70
2017 9/12/2016 2/27/2017 168 5/11/2017 73
2016 9/11/2015 2/3/2016 145 4/29/2016 86
2015 10/28/2014 1/14/2015 78 3/26/2015 71
2014 10/22/2013 1/9/2014 79 3/26/2014 76
2013 9/27/2012 12/12/2012 76 3/14/2013 92
2012 9/28/2011 1/9/2012 103 3/20/2012 71
2011 12/6/2010 1/11/2011 36 3/24/2011 72
2010 12/2/2009 12/3/2009 1 2/11/2010 70
2009 11/21/2008 12/2/2008 11 2/12/2009 72
2008 10/19/2007 11/7/2007 19 2/7/2008 92
2007 10/19/2006 11/14/2006 26 2/7/2007 85
2006 11/22/2005 12/6/2005 14 2/16/2006 72
2005 10/14/2004 12/14/2004 61 2/17/2005 65


E-Rate, baby!

 The E-Rate got mentioned several times in a Senate hearing at which there seemed to be universal agreement that student screen time should be limited. That can't be good.

Not surprisingly, the first mention came from Sen. Cruz, chair of the subcommittee, who decried that "the Biden FCC sought to bankroll kids unsupervised internet access and undermine parental rights by expanding the E-Rate program to install Wi-Fi hotspots off-campus, including in school buses and students homes" and touted the legislation he created to revoke the eligibility of home hotspots. (20:08)

Senator Cantwell countered that "rather focusing on threatening E-Rate, connectivity for school, I think we should be passing meaningful protections for kids online privacy regardless of whether they're accessing the internet from home or school." (24:31)

Senator Luhan also came to the defense of the E-Rate, pointing out that Internet access facilitated by the E-Rate must be filtered under CIPA and cannot be unsupervised. He also asked a witness to discuss the harm if the E-Rate ended. (1:48:19)

Finally, Senator Markey talked up the E-Rate, repeating that CIPA rules prevented unsupervised access, and saying that, "The E-Rate hotspots program was a responsible, carefully crafted effort to ensure that low-income students had the same opportunities as their wealthier classmates." (1:57:18)

So not bad, one criticism and three senators in support. Typically, it fell along party lines.

Still, as I look on the horizon for threats to the E-Rate, this one looks like the most threatening currently (though it has a lot of growing to do before it's a realistic threat). In the '90s and '00s, the pendulum swung fully to the "technology good" end of the spectrum, and it's now swinging to "technology bad." Currently, the agreement is "social media bad," with a growing "cell phone bad" sentiment. So far no one's saying "E-Rate bad," but I'm afraid the E-Rate could be the baby thrown out with the social media bathwater. It's already happened to home hotspot and bus WiFi.

Friday, January 16, 2026

E-Rate sneaks in around the Kimmelspeak

Unlike the recent Senate hearing, this week's House FCC oversight session did mention the E-Rate. It felt like the Senate version back in December was all about the Fairness Doctrine and Jimmy Kimmel. The House hearing didn't neglect Jimmy K, but they found time to mention the E-Rate twice.

Commissioner Gomez led us off (timestamp 39:55) with a mention in her opening remarks about how the removal of WiFi hotspots and bus WiFi "removed one of the most effective tools we had to help people participate in the digital economy and to avoid being left behind."

Representative Cantor brought up hotspots and buses again (2:27:45). Basically, she just asked Commissioner Gomez to confirm that stripping them out of the program was bad. Representative Tonko brought them up (3:23:23) one more time, and again Commissioner Gomez said their removal was bad.

So E-Rate was only mentioned to complain about buses and hotspots getting the boot from the program.

Actually, Chairman Carr took a swipe at hotspots (50:01) without actually saying "E-Rate" or "hotspot" by saying "we're ending any unlawful expenditures that were taking place."

Everyone made nice noises about the Universal Service Fund and how important it is, but when given the chance to tell Congress how to improve the program (50:44), Chairmain Carr pretty much punted, with some vague promises to work with Congress. 

Still, a hearing where the E-Rate only gets one swipe is good hearing.