Look up the Broadband Data Act and the FCC BDC. This will identify what individuals have service in ~6 months.
On Fri, Jun 3, 2022 at 11:41 AM Sean Donelan <s...@donelan.com> wrote: > I wish (...) that public right of way agreements included a requirement > that service providers must publish accurate service area maps, and must > provide service (or pay a substantial penalty for each inaccurate service > claim). > > In the old days (...) the "certificate of publice convenience and > necessity" came with a duty to offer service to all in the area. That was > part of the consideration to use the public right of ways. > > Now, even when you order service and obtain a confirmation, its not really > a confirmation. Or ridiculous 'install fees', which are really go away > fees. > > Look at the difficulty the FCC and state PUCs have getting accurate > service maps from carriers and service providers. Its like those wireless > maps, the carriers make jokes about in TV commercials. Their own ad > agencies know their own maps are bogus. > > > > On Thu, 2 Jun 2022, Jared Mauch wrote: > >> 50 feet across the street from me on the east side of the road is AT&T > FTTH > >> territory. My side of the street is not. F the west side apparently. > > > > This is common sadly. I had fiber 1200' from my house that was > > unused and there may be no record of it, etc.. so it's just not possible > > to happen. Same goes for areas that have long-haul fiber passing them > > but can't get service. > > > > Not everyone is that lucky, but I've seen places with 2-3 fiber > > providers that pass them and none offer service. >