SECTION 1. (a) This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Connectivity Act.
(b) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
(1) Communities across California face a multitude of barriers to the deployment of resilient and accessible broadband networks. Broadband internet access service in urban communities varies by neighborhood, with great discrepancies in infrastructure technology. Communities in rural areas often lack sufficient broadband internet access service, as well as the backhaul infrastructure, to provide broadband services.
(2) The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the extent to which broadband access is essential for education, telehealth, remote working, public safety, public health and welfare, and economic resilience. The pandemic adds greater urgency to develop new strategies and expand on existing successful measures to deploy reliable networks. Connection to the internet at reliable speeds is also crucial to California’s economic recovery from the impact of COVID-19. Millions of children are attending classes remotely, telehealth visits have skyrocketed, and many more Californians are telecommuting from their places of residence. Additionally, with unprecedented growth in unemployment caused by COVID-19 and the need to participate in all aspects of society from home, the demand for reliable broadband internet access service has significantly
increased as millions of additional Californians need access to successfully weather the pandemic and to recover.
(3) Wireless broadband internet access is critical to distance learning. Just as important, wireless broadband internet access is needed to address the digital divide. In 2017, for example, 73 percent of households accessed the internet using a cellular telephone. The Federal Communications Commission reports that nearly 70 percent of teachers assign homework that requires broadband access. Although California has made progress closing the digital divide at schools, internet access at home is still a challenge. Almost 16 percent of schoolage children, about 945,000, had no internet connection at home in 2017 and 27 percent, about 1.7 million, did not have broadband connections. Access varies significantly by family income, parental
education, race or ethnicity, and geography. For example, 22 percent of low-income households with schoolage children did not have any internet connection at home and 48 percent reported no broadband subscription at home.
(4) Over 2,000,000 Californians lack access to high-speed broadband at benchmark speeds of 100 megabits per second download, including 50 percent of rural housing units. More than 14,000,000 Californians, over one-third of the population, do not subscribe to broadband at the minimum benchmark speed to support distance learning and technologies that depend on upload speed. Only 34 percent of adults over 60 years of age use the internet, excluding older adults from access to telemedicine, social services, and other support.
(5) The Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services define telehealth as “a two-way, real-time interactive communication between a patient and a physician or practitioner at a distant site through telecommunications equipment that includes, at a minimum, audio and visual equipment.” Telemedicine encompasses a growing number of applications and technologies, including two-way live or streaming video, videoconferencing, store-and-forward imaging along with the internet, email, smartphones, wireless tools, and other forms of telecommunications. These technologies facilitate and leverage the latest innovations in computer, network, and peripheral equipment to promote the health of patients around the world. Critical to its success is reliable broadband internet access.
(6) Telehealth technology permits health care services to be delivered without in-person contact,
reducing the risk of disease transmission to both patients and health care workers, and frees up in-person resources for COVID-19 patients. Telehealth allows patients to receive health services away from settings where the potential for contracting COVID-19 is high, such as hospitals, health clinic waiting rooms, private practices, and other medical facilities. Telehealth can also expand the reach of resources to communities that have limited access to needed services.
(7) Due to widespread restrictions, and with fewer elective procedures occurring in California and around the country to reserve beds for COVID-19 patients, the telehealth share of total medical claim lines, which is the individual service or procedure listed on an insurance claim, increased 8,336 percent nationally from April 2019, to April 2020. Similar percentage increases have occurred
in California.
(8) Millions of Californians are working from home while sheltering in place. Even employers that had not previously permitted remote-work arrangements have changed their policies during the pandemic. The Department of General Services reports that 83.9 percent of state workers are working from home. Survey data indicates that nearly two-thirds of those who still had jobs during the pandemic were almost exclusively working from home. That compares with just 13 percent of workers who said they did so even a few times a week prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Telework is expected to continue at rates much higher than before COVID-19 even after the pandemic is over. Among those workers surveyed who had previously not regularly worked from home, 62 percent said they were enjoying the change, and 75 percent expect their
employers to continue to provide flexibility in where they work after the pandemic has passed. Indeed, the State of California, one of California’s largest employers, has stated the desire for 75 percent of the state’s workforce to remain home, at least part time, for the foreseeable future. The Metropolitan Transportation Commission in the San Francisco Bay Area voted to adopt a strategy to have large, office-based companies require people to work from home three days a week as a way to slash emissions of greenhouse gases from car commutes. Critical to the success of telework is reliable broadband internet access.
(9) The enormous increases in distance learning, telehealth, and telework require a significant boost in broadband infrastructure, especially near the homes where these activities take place. To promote wireless broadband internet
access near homes, it is in the interest of the state to ensure the deployment of wireless facilities on street light poles and traffic signal poles. It is in the interest of the state to ensure that local publicly owned electric utilities and local governments that own or control traffic signal poles or street light poles make them available to communications service providers for the placement of small wireless facilities, under reasonable rates, terms, and conditions.
(10) The state has a compelling interest in ensuring that local publicly owned electric utilities and local governments provide access to traffic signal poles and street light poles, with nondiscriminatory fees that recover reasonable actual costs, consistent with applicable federal regulations barring localities from denying reasonable, nondiscriminatory access to their pole infrastructure
for small wireless facility attachments at reasonable and cost-based rates. Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature that this act supersedes all conflicting local laws and this act shall apply in charter cities.
(11) Time is of the essence to approve small wireless facility siting applications given the immediate need for broadband internet access, as amplified by the COVID-19 pandemic.
(c) It is the intent of the Legislature to facilitate the deployment of wireless broadband internet access and to bridge the digital divide by connecting students, families, and communities with reliable internet connectivity that will remain a necessity after the COVID-19 pandemic has abated.