Broadband. Broadband is any service providing advanced telecommunications capability and Internet access with certain transmission speeds. There are several transmission technologies, some of which require installing fiber optic technology in conduits, which are often located in public rights-of-way similar to other utility infrastructure.
Highways and Utilities. The Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) issues utility permits and franchises on highway rights-of-way for water, gas, electricity, telephone, and telecommunications at no cost except for recovery of staff labor costs.
If a service provider is granted a permit, franchise, or lease by WSDOT and installs infrastructure in the rights-of-way, whether it be underground, at-grade, above grade, or some combination thereof, it is required to follow WSDOT standards for any trenching, pavement restoration, or traffic control. Service providers are also required to construct and maintain their facilities at their own expense, including relocation if a future WSDOT project requires it. The Washington State Supreme Court held, under the Eighteenth Amendment, that the costs of utility facility relocation may not be paid with fuel tax dollars because these expenditures are not exclusively for highway purposes.
In 2018, the U.S. Secretary of Transportation was directed under the MOBILE NOW Act to issue a regulation, for which rulemaking is still in progress, requiring each state receiving federal-aid highway funds to meet the following requirements:
WSDOT must develop a policy compliant with state and federal laws to provide information to broadband providers about planned limited access highway projects prior to construction so that potential installation of broadband facilities can be coordinated.
Broadband infrastructure is identified as a critical part of the state's infrastructure, and is thus added as one of the reasons for allowing access to limited-access highway rights-of-way. Clarification is added that fiber optic is eligible for WSDOT franchises to use state highway rights-of-way.
Subject to appropriation, the Joint Transportation Committee is directed to oversee a consultant study to provide recommendations on the following by January 1, 2022: