The Federal Communications Commission has upheld a decision to block LTD Broadband from using any part of $1.3 billion in federal grants to subsidize the construction of high-speed internet infrastructure, including a major proposed buildout in Minnesota.
The FCC this week denied an appeal from LTD and proposed a nearly $22 million penalty for the embattled telecom company. The agency and many critics in Minnesota say the company is unlikely to deliver on its promises to serve rural areas lacking adequate broadband after winning a grant contest in 2020.
Corey Hauer, CEO of Nevada-based LTD, told the Star Tribune the company is "disappointed in the two FCC decisions and are evaluating our options, including taking the FCC to court."
"We think we have a good case," he said.
Hauer said LTD has 20,000 customers and is continuing to quickly build fiber-optic cable to people's homes and high-speed wireless coverage in small towns and rural areas with or without government subsidies.
LTD was the biggest winner in a $9.2 billion federal grant round held through the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) in 2020. Telecom providers bid in a "reverse auction" on who could build infrastructure in rural areas with the lowest amount of subsidy.
But in August 2022, the FCC revoked the huge grant award after LTD submitted more detailed plans and the feds scrutinized the company's finances more closely.
The initial bids included $311 million for Minnesota projects meant to serve 102,000 locations, like homes or businesses. It was an enormous and unprecedented amount of cash for one company to subsidize broadband infrastructure in the state.