Federal Communications Commission fcc 13-100 Before the Federal Communications Commission


A.Identifying Rural Schools and Libraries



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A.Identifying Rural Schools and Libraries


279.We propose to modernize our definition of “rural area” to make it more relevant and useable for schools and libraries seeking to get the benefit of the additional discounts for rural schools and libraries. In 1997, the Commission adopted for the E-rate program the definition of “rural area” used by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Service’s Office of Rural Health Care Policy (ORHP).1 Under ORHP’s definition, an area is rural if it is not located in a county within a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) as defined by OMB, or if it is specifically identified as “rural” in the Goldsmith Modification to Census data.2

280.The Commission explained in the 2003 Schools and Libraries Third Report and Order and again in the E-rate Broadband NPRM and the that a new definition was necessary because the U.S. Department of Health and Human Service’s Office of Rural Health Care Policy (ORHP) no longer uses the definition adopted by the Commission and therefore has not updated the Goldsmith Modification to the 2000 Census data.1 In the E-rate Broadband NPRM, we proposed that any school or library that is within a territory that is classified as “town-distant,” “town-remote,” “rural-distant,” or “rural-remote” by the U.S. Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) urban-centric locale code be considered rural for purposes of calculating its E-rate discount level.2 We seek to refresh the record on that proposal. The NCES codes could be a reliable indicator of rural areas for the E-rate, because the Department of Education’s definition is specifically targeted to schools, pinpoint more precisely whether a school is located in a rural area, and is readily available through the Department of Education’s website which has the coding system broken down by state.3 Therefore we seek comment on changing our rules to read as follows:



§ 54.505 Discounts.
(a) * * *

(b) * * *

(1) * * *

(2) * * *

(3) The Administrator shall classify schools and libraries as “urban” or “rural” based on location in an urban or rural area, according to the following designations.

(i) Schools and libraries whose locale code is city, suburb, town-fringe, or rural-fringe, as measured by the U.S. Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics, shall be designated as urban.

(ii) Schools and libraries whose locale code is town-distant, town-remote, rural-distant, or rural-remote, as measured by the U.S. Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics, shall be designated as rural.

281.Because NCES codes are not assigned immediately, it is possible that not every school that is part of an E-rate application will have a code or classification. If we adopt the proposed rule above, how should we handle such schools?

282.An alternative to relying on NCES codes would be to use census data. The census classifies areas into three groups: urbanized areas, urban clusters, and rural areas. Urbanized areas “consist[] of densely settled territory that contains 50,000 or more people,” urban clusters “consist[] of densely settled territory that contains at least 2,500 people, but fewer than 50,000 people,” and rural areas include all areas that are not urbanized areas nor urban clusters.1 As of the 2010 Census, 220 million Americans lived in urbanized areas, 29 million lived in urban clusters, and 59 million lived in rural areas.2 How could we use census data to classify a school for purposes of E-rate? Should it be based solely on the location of the school, and if so, should the “rural” designation only apply to schools located in rural areas or also those in urban clusters? Should it be based on where its students live, so that if a majority of student live in a rural area, the school should be designated “rural” for E-rate even if it’s located in an urban cluster? How should the classification account for the fact that schools are often located in small towns, which may be considered urban clusters, even though the costs of providing to the service to the school are significantly higher than the costs in urbanized areas (such as cities and their suburbs)? We seek comment on relying on census data for purposes of the rural-urban classification, and on changing our rules to read as follows:

§ 54.505 Discounts.
(a) * * *

(b) * * *

(1) * * *

(2) * * *

(3) The Administrator shall designate a school or library as “urban” if and only if the school or library is located in an urbanized area as determined by the most recent rural-urban classification by the Bureau of the Census; the Administrator shall designate all other schools and libraries as “rural”.
283.In 2010, the American Library Association (ALA) pointed out that libraries do not have urban-centric locale codes.1 We therefore seek comment on how libraries should determine whether they are considered urban or rural. How can we ensure libraries serving rural areas receive sufficient support? Should libraries use the locale-code of the school closest to each library? If we adopt our proposal below to adopt district-wide discount criteria should a library use the urban-centric code of the school district in which it is located? Are there any library systems that have facilities in multiple school districts? If so, we seek comment on how to account for such library systems. We also invite commenters to suggest alternate definitions of rural for use in the E-rate program, and we ask that commenters who offer other definitions explain the benefits and drawbacks of their proposals as compared to our proposal.

284.Finally, we seek comment on how existing E-rate schools and libraries that that receive support would be impacted by changes to the rural definition. Should we phase in changes to the rural definition over time to help schools and libraries that are reclassified as non-rural to adjust?




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