GLRBI December 2011 Clipbook - Round 2

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Remarks of Assistant Secretary Strickling at the Practising Law Institute's ...

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Home » New sroom » Speeches/Testimony » 2011

Remarks of Assistant Secretary Strickling at the Practising Law Institute's 29th Annual Telecommunications Policy & Regulation Conference

Digital Literacy

Broadband USA

Topics/Subtopics: Broadband Te chnology Opportunitie s Program Broadband M ap

Spe ctrum M anage ment

Adoption Re source s

Broadband

State Broadband Initiativ e

Inte rne t Policy

Domain Name Syste m

National

Internet Policy Task Force

Grants

Printe r-frie ndly v e rsion

Wireless Broadband: 500MHz National Broadband Map

December 08, 2011 Remarks by Law rence E. Strickling Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information PLI/FCBA Telecommunications Policy & Regulation Institute Washington, DC

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December 8, 2011 —As prepared for delivery— I am pleased to return to this conference as a speaker. I realize I am the last speaker before the Chairman’s dinner, so I am under a lot of pressure to be brief, and maybe even interesting. But I do want to take this opportunity to review our accomplishments of the last year and preview our priorities for the coming year. And what a year it has been. We all remember the prediction of the talk show evangelist Harold Camping that the world was going to end this year. The conventional wisdom is that Camping was wrong. But there are many, including probably some of you, who predicted that the world would end before the FCC would ever reform universal service so perhaps Camping actually was onto something. Of course, I am not here to talk about the FCC but rather my agency, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, and while none of our work will either require or lead to the end of the world, we are working on a host of compelling issues that will help shape the telecommunications and Internet landscape for years to come. Our work focuses on three principal areas—spectrum, Internet policy and broadband. I’ll talk about each in turn. Spectrum First: spectrum. One of NTIA’s core missions is to manage the use of spectrum by Federal agencies. Our work in this area is more important now than ever before as spectrum is fast becoming a pillar of America's digital infrastructure. Spectrum has enabled the mobile broadband revolution, changing the way that Americans communicate and do business. But while demand for America's spectrum resources is increasing at rapid rates—the amount of information flowing over some wireless networks is growing at over 250 percent per year—there has not been a corresponding increase in supply. If we do not meet America’s growing spectrum needs, we not only threaten our economic growth but also our role as the world leader in wireless innovation. Last year, President Obama committed to make available 500 megahertz of Federal and nonfederal spectrum for wireless broadband over the next 10 years. The initiative – to nearly double the amount of commercial spectrum over the next decade – will spur investment, economic growth, and job creation while

12/9/2011 3:41 PM


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