Our monthly telephone bills include a variety of fees,
surcharges and taxes. In fact, those add-on charges make up
more than 20 percent of our personal monthly land-line
telephone bill. One of those charges is particularly
important to those of us who live in the more rural areas of
Oregon.
The Universal Service Fund (USF) surcharge appears on both
land-line and hand held mobile telephone bills regardless of
location. The fee was established by Congress in 1996 and is
collected from all telephone connections. The $8 billion in
annual USF revenue collected is used to help build and
maintain telecommunications infrastructure in America’s
rural and underserved areas. Wireless phone customers
contribute nearly half of that total amount.
More than 290 million Americans now have one or more hand
held mobile telephone connections. Eleven different carriers
provide mobile service to 3.3 million Oregonians. About 63
percent of Oregon families have access to rapid broadband
wireless services. In fact, nearly 25 percent of all
American households are currently served exclusively by
mobile hand held telephone devices. The types of hand held
telephones and their applications are expanding virtually
every day. Our mobile telephones have become wireless
telecommunication devices capable of instant communication
through a variety of media.
Nearly 90 percent of American homes have the choice of at
least five mobile telephone service providers. Most American
families enjoy multiple accesses to cutting edge high speed
broadband wireless. Unfortunately, this is not the case in
many rural areas of the state and nation.
Telecommunication companies simply cannot afford to build
expensive mobile service networks to serve sparsely
populated areas. They know that there is no way that they
can charge those potential customers enough to pay for the
capital expenditure required to build the system. Congress
recognized this reality and enacted the USF to help pay for
that more rural infrastructure.
The USF appears to be patterned after the Rural
Electrification Administration established by Congress in
1935. At that time, 90 percent of urban dwellers enjoyed
electricity services but only 10% of those who lived in
rural areas had access to electricity. Private utilities
simply could not afford the capital expenditure required to
provide that service. In fact, most of rural Oregon
originally acquired access to electricity through rural
electric cooperatives partially funded by the REA.
USF funds are widely used by telecommunications companies to
help build and maintain high quality wireless networks in
rural areas. These networks provide better communication,
improved public safety, enhance business opportunity and
boost economic development. Like the REA did for rural
electrification, the USF is helping to keep rural families
connected to information systems that are so critical to
modern business success.
I was recently nominated by our Senate President to attend
the Wireless University Communications Policy Seminar to be
held this October in San Diego. I look forward to three days
of intensive discussions on cutting edge telecommunications
technology.
The rapid deployment of that technology can only help our
rural economies.
Please remember, if we do not stand up for rural Oregon… no
one will.
Best Regards,
Doug |