Affordable Connectivity Program helped lower cost but not expand into rural areas

Minnesota Public Radio reports

More than two-thirds of participating households had inconsistent or nonexistent internet connections before the program launched, the FCC found. Those problems date back to March 2010 with the FCC’s launch of the National Broadband Plan, which was derailed three weeks later by a legal challenge.

“It basically set us back,” University of Minnesota Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication Associate Professor Chris Terry told MPR News on Wednesday. “And now here in 2024, we’re still living with the reality that the plan got started late. The plan was not as functional as people imagined it to be. And the reality is that you have significant gaps in our broadband infrastructure in the United States, including in rural Minnesota.”

The program helped with broadband affordability but didn’t address the lack of infrastructure for Minnesota. The Department of Employment and Economic Development’s most recent map shows people living in rural areas are less likely to have high-speed Internet than people living in cities.

“There’s significant parts of the state that get their internet access over satellite TV providers. But there’s still large portions of the state which are on old-style copper DSL wires, which don’t even come close to meeting what the current standard for broadband is,” Terry said. “When you’re talking about rural areas, you know, the difference in a half mile between where the fiber has been run and where the money ran out and people are still on copper systems are pretty significant.”

The Affordable Connectivity Program expired on June 1 after lawmakers, despite eleventh-hour urging from the White House, couldn’t come to an agreement on finding more funding or revamping the program. Last Friday, the White House announced a stopgap measure — an agreement with more than a dozen internet service providers — to offer $30 or cheaper monthly plans for low-income households throughout the rest of 2024. The administration estimates its cooperative plan will could help 10 million households.

The long-term solution to more equitable broadband access, Terry said, is laying more fiber and building out infrastructure. In March, Gov. Tim Walz announced more than $50 million in grants for broadband expansion; that’s estimated to give internet access to 8,900 Minnesota homes and businesses. DEED is also managing future grants from $652 million in federal Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment Funds.

The article includes a recent Tweet from Christopher Terry. This shows the importance of the maps, the level of detail required to adequately get internet to all (never mind plan for the future) and explains the reason we want to get it right.

 

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About Ann Treacy

Librarian who follows rural broadband in MN and good uses of new technology (blandinonbroadband.org), hosts a radio show on MN music (mostlyminnesota.com), supports people experiencing homelessness in Minnesota (elimstrongtowershelters.org) and helps with social justice issues through Women’s March MN.

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