By Stacy M. Brown | NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent

(NNPA) – The digital divide and digital redlining, zone casting, and overall access to the internet for Black and brown communities top the agenda of Federal Communications Commissioner Geoffrey Starks.
With three Democrats and two Republicans, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is an independent government agency overseen by Congress.
The commissionโs chief responsibility begins with implementing and enforcing the nationโs laws and regulations surrounding communications.
The body regulates interstate and international communications by radio, television, wire, satellite, and cable.
Starks, whose coming up on five years at the FCC, said he believes that communications technology has the potential to be one of the most potent forces on Earth for promoting equality and opportunity.
โTo unlock that potential, however, all Americans must have access,โ Starks said during an appearance on the National Newspaper Publishers Associationโs live morning news broadcast, Let It Be Known.
โWhat we regulate is the infrastructure of the internet, the pipeline,โ the commissioner added, noting further that the FCC protects consumers and promotes universal service.
โWeโve been talking about the digital divide for over 30 years,โ Starks asserted. โItโs no longer just the digital divide, and these are issues of equity, fundamental issues of fairness about whoโs connected and whoโs not.โ
Starks said heโs focused on the data that shows a disproportionately high number of Black and brown individuals who remain disconnected on the affordability issue.
โThe good news is that Congress has heeded that call, and we now have over $14 billion [to help] those with low income, those on SNAP, WIC, Medicaid, and public housing. So if you are [in those categories], we will help you get connected to the internet free,โ Starks pronounced.
โWeโve got to do better and ensure our brothers and sisters are connected. This helps with job opportunities, telemedicine, and telehealth,โ he continued. โThere are so many reasons we have to do so, and Iโm passionate about this.โ
Earlier this year, the FCC launched a task force to target digital discrimination and โdigital redlining.โ
Commissioners noted that everyone, regardless of where they live and who they are, needs access to complete high-speed broadband services for 21st-century success.
โWhere broadband networks get built shouldnโt be determined by the income, race, ethnicity, or religion of the communities they will serve,โ officials noted in a release.
The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act requires the FCC to create rules and policies to address digital discrimination and redlining to promote equal access.
โThe task force was part of the Infrastructure Law,โ Starks stated. โIโve seen digital discrimination firsthand in my travels. So weโre taking a hard look to ensure digital equity throughout the country. Thatโs the chief goal.โ
Starks also addressed ZoneCasting, the FCC rule that allows stations to broadcast geo-targeted content for five minutes or less each hour.
โZoneCasting is a new technology thatโs before me as a commissioner. Itโs the ability to use boosting to advertise better locally,โ Starks said.
โI have been honored to hear from the National Association of Black Owned Broadcasters and so many of their colleagues there who have made clear that this makes sense for small Black and brown radio stations. Iโm working with my colleagues to make sure they know and recognize the value of increasing the ability of small Black and brown radio stations to have hyper-local advertising.โ
Watch the complete discussion with Commissioner Starks here.
