New Survey: First Responders Overwhelmingly Support Reauthorization of FirstNet
Las Vegas, NV (November 10, 2025) – A new bipartisan national survey commissioned by the Public Safety Broadband Technology Association finds near- unanimous support among first responders for reauthorizing the First Responder Network Authority (FirstNet Authority)– the agency overseeing America’s dedicated public safety broadband network.
The survey, conducted by Fabrizio Ward (R) and Impact Research (D), shows that 93% of first responders support reauthorization. The FirstNet Authority sunsets February 2027 unless Congress acts. Importantly, FirstNet is self-funded and requires no taxpayer dollars.
“This research makes clear what first responders already know — FirstNet works,” said Richard Carrizzo, President of the Public Safety Broadband Technology Association (PSBTA). “Congress must act to keep it running for those who protect us and save lives every day,” Carrizzo continued.
Key Findings
- 99% satisfaction among the 62% of first responders using FirstNet
- 96% awareness of FirstNet
- 94% approve of AT&T’s performance (among 85% of those aware it is the operational partner)
- 91% want all network partners to be U.S.-based and U.S.-owned
- 86% support permanent authorization by ending the sunset provision
If Congress fails to act, first responders fear:
- 81%– losing priority network access during emergencies
- 80%– communication failures during crises
- 79%– increased cybersecurity and foreign interference risks
- 79%– degraded service in rural areas
- 78%– added costs to develop contingency plans
The poll of 500 first responders nationwide was conducted October 2–12, 2025, by Fabrizio Ward and Impact Research on behalf of the PSBTA. The margin of error is ±4.4 percentage points. Access full survey results and methodology here
About PSBTA
The Public Safety Broadband Technology Association (PSBTA) is an organization focused exclusively on ensuring the success of the entire FirstNet ecosystem that includes the legal entity created by Congress, the network infrastructure, hardware and software, and the single most important component—the end users.


