Broadband board outlines budget shifts, warns of BEAD rule changes and funding uncertainty

House Energy and Digital Infrastructure Committee · January 30, 2026

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Summary

The Vermont Community Broadband Board told lawmakers it moved certain costs onto federal grant lines, highlighted a $700,000 reallocation to preserve special funds, and said BEAD rule changes expanded eligible technologies but removed some workforce/climate requirements — creating negotiation points with NTIA.

Christine Halkwist, executive director of the Vermont Community Broadband Board, briefed the committee on budget and BEAD program implications for Vermont on Jan. 29.

Halkwist said the Board reallocated roughly $700,000 from special funds to federal grant funding to preserve limited state universal service fund (USF) dollars for programmatic use. She emphasized none of the Board’s operating or administrative costs in the presentation are being paid from the state’s general fund: "We are using federal and other money and not state funds for these programs," she said.

On federal program rules, Board staff described recent NTIA/BEAD changes that broadened eligible technologies — in some states increasing take‑up of satellite — and removed some workforce and climate resilience requirements that had been in earlier guidance. Board staff told the committee that while BEAD can allow satellite in some contexts, many Vermont locations are poorly served by satellite because of tree cover and topology; staff noted technical limits, including a need for a clear sky view for many satellite systems.

Committee members asked for clearer budget documentation in advance of the FY27 budget recommendation. Halkwist said Board staff would meet with committee members offline to walk through line items and provide the requested detail. The discussion concluded with the Board reiterating its reliance on federal grant lines and planned reporting to the committee.