Medium

What is BEAD? 

The Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program, provides $42.45 billion to expand high-speed internet access by funding planning, infrastructure deployment and adoption programs in all 50 states, Washington D.C., Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. BEAD provides funding for broadband planning, deployment, mapping, and adoption activities, with the primary purpose of expanding high-speed internet access. 

 

BEAD Eligible Activities

  • Deploy broadband service to unserved locations and underserved locations
  • Ensure deployment of gigabit connections to community anchor institutions (e.g., schools, hospitals, libraries)
  • Remaining funds can support access, adoption, and equity-related uses

 

Medium

Where we are today....

Many Americans lack access to affordable, reliable, high - speed Internet America runs on high-speed internet. A strong internet connection powers our economy and supports education. It fosters better public health and it connects loved ones and strengthens social ties. But not everyone is connected. Too many Americans are cut off from the opportunities that high-speed internet makes possible. That’s why we’re working to bring high-speed internet to all Americans

....and where we're going

The BEAD Program includes $42B for high-speed Internet access Funded by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, BEAD is a federal grant program that aims to get all Americans online by funding partnerships between states or territories, communities, and stakeholders to build infrastructure where we need it to and increase adoption of high-speed internet. BEAD prioritizes unserved locations that have no internet access or that only have access under 25/3 Mbps and underserved locations only have access under 100/20 Mbps.

North Dakota is a leader in broadband and is steadfast in its goal to provide internet to all unserved and underserved locations. The state plans to use its federal BEAD fund allocation of $130M to help connect remaining North Dakotans.

Medium
BEAD program process flow

Bead Program Process Overview

 

For more information about this program please visit broadbandusa.gov

Medium

Challenge Process Overview

The Challenge Process was a procedure set up by each state or territory participating in the BEAD Program. It enabled eligible organizations and government units to challenge the determinations in a state's Initial Proposal concerning the eligibility of specific locations or community anchor institutions for grant funds. During the challenge process, the State Broadband Program Office only allowed challenges from nonprofit organizations, units of local and tribal governments, and broadband service providers. While NTIA guidelines state that residents cannot submit challenges directly, they were encouraged to work with local governments and non-profit entities to provide speed test data to support challenges.

  • Unserved locations are defined as Broadband Serviceable Locations (BSLs) that lack access to Reliable Broadband Service at speeds of at least 25 Mbps downstream and 3 Mbps upstream and latency levels low enough to support real-time, interactive applications.
  • Underserved locations are defined as BSLs that lack access to Reliable Broadband Service at speeds of at least 100 Mbps downstream and 20 Mbps upstream and latency levels low enough to support real-time, interactive applications.

The Challenge Process is a requirement of North Dakota’s BEAD Initial Proposal Volume 1 and will help finalize the list of locations that need broadband service through the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. North Dakota used the Federal Communication Commission’s (FCC) National Broadband Map to create the initial list of unserved and underserved locations and then modified that data based on the process outlined in the State’s Initial Proposal Volume 1. The formal challenge process began mid-April and activities concluded in mid-July.

Completed BEAD Challenge Process Timeline

Completed BEAD Challenge Process Timeline

 


Resources

Use the following resources to better understand the Challenge Process. More resources will be added as needed.


For more information, email us at broadband@nd.gov