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NTIA Overhauls $42.5B BEAD Aiming to Accelerate Broadband Rollouts

The U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) is restructuring of the $42.45 billion Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program. A Policy Notice, issued June 6, 2025, revokes multiple provisions enacted under the previous administration and redefines the grantmaking process for broadband infrastructure, emphasizing cost-efficiency, speed, and technology neutrality. NTIA’s leadership framed the reforms as essential to ensuring that taxpayer dollars deliver broadband to unserved and underserved areas at the lowest possible cost.

The BEAD program, originally created by the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), aims to close the digital divide by enabling all states and territories to fund broadband deployment projects. However, NTIA now argues that Biden-era rules—including preferences for fiber optics, climate and labor mandates, and equity-driven scoring—resulted in zero construction starts over the last three years. Under the new rules, these “non-statutory burdens” have been eliminated. All prior Final Proposals are now void, and states must re-open the competition to allow what NTIA calls a “Benefit of the Bargain” round, requiring full consideration of all compliant broadband technologies.

States and territories have 90 days to comply. All existing subgrantee awards must be rescinded, and new proposals evaluated under revised scoring rubrics that prioritize minimal BEAD program outlay, technology performance, and deployment speed. The new framework also imposes cost discipline, particularly on high-cost projects. For example, NTIA cited Nevada’s $200,000 per-location fiber plans as unjustified, warning that any proposal with “excessive costs” could be denied. Technologies like unlicensed fixed wireless (ULFW) and low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite services are now allowed to compete on equal terms, provided they meet the required 100 Mbps download / 20 Mbps upload speed, latency below 100 ms, and a four-year build deadline.

To accelerate project approvals, NTIA will mandate use of the Environmental Screening and Permitting Tracking Tool (ESAPTT), designed to slash 3–6 months from typical permitting timelines. The agency also rescinded prior guidance on alternative technologies and replaced it with new protocols for scoring LEO and ULFW projects, including how states can verify ULFW service reliability and handle shared spectrum interference. LEO providers will use a “capacity subgrant” model that funds subscriber-ready service rather than physical infrastructure, with milestone-based reimbursements and performance monitoring over a 10-year period.

“Today we proudly announce a new direction for the BEAD program that will deliver high-speed internet access efficiently on a technology-neutral basis, and at the right price,” said U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick.

https://www.ntia.gov/other-publication/2025/bead-restructuring-policy-notice

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