Coming: $7.2B for broadband, Internet access

 

Connecting state and local government leaders

The new economic stimulus law allots $7.2 billion for expanding broadband connections to underserved areas.

The economic stimulus package President Barack Obama signed into law last week allots $7.2 billion for expanding broadband connections to underserved areas.

Under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), the Agriculture Department’s Rural Utilities Service will dispense $2.5 billion, but the bulk of the funds — $4.7 billion — will go to the Commerce Department for disbursement.

The assistant secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information and the Federal Communications Commission will establish the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program and ensure that it doesn’t conflict with other federal broadband initiatives and that every state receives at least one grant.

To expand broadband service to rural and underserved areas, ARRA also charges Commerce with providing support, training and equipment to schools, libraries, medical and health care providers, colleges, and other community organizations. It also stresses support for job-creating facilities and public safety agencies.

FCC’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration will dole out $84 million in grants by October and $756 million in fiscal 2010. The lion’s share of the grant money — about $2.5 billion — will be spent in 2012 and 2013, with remaining funds to be dispensed by the end of fiscal 2015.

Anna Gomez, deputy administrator at NTIA and deputy assistant secretary for communications and information at Commerce, has held the post only since Feb. 3, but she is well-versed in the agency’s mission and history. Although most recently vice president of government affairs at Sprint Nextel, Gomez worked at FCC for several years, including a stint as deputy chief of the International Bureau. Because she was not registered as a lobbyist, she was not subject to Obama’s ban on hiring lobbyists to oversee issues they had previously worked to influence.

Of the USDA’s $2.5 billion for broadband spending, ARRA specifies that at least 75 percent of any area that receives stimulus grant money must lack sufficient broadband service “to facilitate rural economic development as determined by the secretary of Agriculture.”

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that USDA will have $63 million to spend in fiscal 2009 and $350 million in fiscal 2010. Spending will peak at $587 million in fiscal 2011 and decrease in the following years until finishing at $125 million in fiscal 2015.

The quickest way to get the broadband money spent in rural and underserved areas would be to immediately issue a request for proposals for service to areas where no broadband service exists, said Robert Atkinson, president of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation.

First out of the gate is not one of the big telecommunications or cable companies but IBM Corp. The company said it and International Broadband Electric Communications Inc. (IBEC) have begun establishing broadband-over-power-line (BPL) networks for nearly 200,000 rural customers in Alabama, Indiana, Michigan and Virginia.

BPL works by modifying radio signals to send voice and Internet data via electric utility power lines. Users access the service via modem.

The project is funded by low-interest Rural Broadband Access Loans from USDA, but IBM and IBEC officials also hope to tap ARRA funds, according to a report from Reuters.

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