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Groups Urge NTIA to Prioritize 'Consumers' Needs' Over Industry 'Desires'

More than 30 consumer advocacy organizations asked NTIA and the Biden administration to prioritize "consumers’ needs over the desires of industry" in its broadband programs funded through the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, in a letter Thursday. "Universal equitable connectivity could be imperiled if the NTIA fails to use its congressional authority," the letter said, and NTIA should "set minimum standards, prescribe best practices, exercise oversight over the states’ proposals, and determine who can access a low-cost broadband plan." Public Knowledge, the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society, Consumer Reports, Electronic Frontier Foundation, MediaJustice and the Marconi Society were among the signers. NTIA should "require states to prioritize scalable, symmetrical projects," and "impart its expertise" as states plan for the various programs, the groups said. The agency should also ensure providers receiving broadband, equity, access, and deployment program support offer a low-cost plan separate from the FCC's affordable connectivity program because it could "leave customers in the lurch after just a few years when the ACP [affordable connectivity program] runs out of funding."