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USDA and the Commerce Department Supporting Broadband Access and Economic Opportunity Across America

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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-04-10 03:39 PM
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USDA and the Commerce Department Supporting Broadband Access and Economic Opportunity Across America

USDA and the Commerce Department Supporting Broadband Access and Economic Opportunity Across America through the Recovery Act

Posted by Secretary Tom Vilsack & Secretary Gary Locke

When Congress passed and the President signed the Recovery Act, they made a $7.2 billion commitment to improving this country’s broadband infrastructure. They understood broadband will be an essential piece of a successful 21st century economy. But it can only be so if we deploy networks that offer all Americans quality service, while also teaching the skills to use broadband and encouraging its use to promote our national priorities, including education, health care, energy, and public safety.

Together, we’re excited to be moving quickly to make these goals a reality. Today, the Department of Agriculture is awarding roughly $1.2 billion for 126 projects across the country to connect homes, businesses, and critical community institutions like hospitals and police stations, that don't currently have adequate access.

Many tribal areas, and areas designated as "persistent poverty counties" will be served. For example, Cimarron Telephone Company in Oklahoma will provide broadband service to parts of five counties and to members of the Osage, Pawnee and Creek tribes. Another firm, Atlink, will provide service to 14 central Oklahoma persistent poverty communities that currently have no access to the internet at any speed. The delivery of broadband to these areas will promote rural economic development, improve access to education, health care, public safety and most importantly, provide the infrastructure needed to create the environment for the growth of quality jobs. Without the Internet, business growth is stifled.

As we’ve said before, we’re on track to get all our broadband awards out the door by the end of September. Today’s awards put us one step closer. In fact, over the next 60 days, we will award the remaining roughly $4 billion dollars to help provide critical broadband services to states and communities across the country. To be as transparent as we can in this effort, below is a calendar outlining what you can expect from our programs in the next 60 days.



This calendar doesn’t convey the true power of every dollar we spend—many of the projects leverage outside capital, too. For example, while the Recovery Act allocated $2.5 billion to USDA for broadband, that should support more than $3.5 billion in activity.

While we’re excited about all of our awards and the opportunities they represent for people, businesses, and communities, we’re particularly excited about some of the awards that will come in the next two months. The Department of Commerce, for example, will announce more than half of their remaining awards the week of August 16. As with previous awards, these projects will include infrastructure projects, the creation up of public computing centers, as well as the setting up of programs that train people on the skills they need to succeed in tomorrow’s economy—and, increasingly, today’s. But they will likely also include the first of the public safety projects to be granted—supporting mobile broadband networks that will finally give our first responders the access they need to real-time information and reliable communications at the scene of an emergency. Similar awards will continue through the end of September. In fact, the majority of the final awards from the Commerce Department will go to public safety.

USDA plans to award funding to continue to improve educational and job opportunities for residents of rural America. There are fewer people in rural America with college degrees and more people who have no high school diploma. The combination of that means that we have to continue focusing on how we improve education in rural America to build job growth, which in turn allows folks to stay on the farm. Broadband is a key component in that effort.

We are looking forward to the two months ahead when we will be rolling out the remainder of our awards, and we hope many of you are as well. We’re excited to be finally building the infrastructure of the future, and to be executing the President’s and Congress’ vision of a high-speed, high-performance America.


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Inuca Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-04-10 04:41 PM
Response to Original message
1. Selfishly hoping this to be a huge success
I do live in a rather impoverished rural area. My only broadband option is satellite which is shitty, expensive and barely broadband. I know DSL is relively close by, but not close enough :-(.
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alsame Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-04-10 05:20 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. It's really ridiculous how backward we are in this regard. I hope
you get quality, affordable access very soon.
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DeschutesRiver Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-05-10 12:46 PM
Response to Reply #1
5. I live in a hard scrabble rural ranching area and satellite out here sucks
Edited on Thu Aug-05-10 12:52 PM by DeschutesRiver
So I have stuck with dialup. Our phone company uses a solar relay station at one point, high atop a mountain. Several times every winter, the propane setup that warms the solar panels to keep the ice off fails to work, and they have to take a sno-cat up there to fix it. So the phone lines are out maybe 4-6 days at a time, thus no internet for us dialups out here.

The phone company doesn't spend a lot to keep the relays closer in very good shape, and in the summer during the hottest days, they fail and we are without phone again until the guy comes from a town far far away to find out what has failed and fix it. This happens 1-2 times during the summer. I can tell it is coming, because my dialup goes from slow to intermittant for a few days before it shuts down all together. Used to be that they wouldn't come out until there was a complete failure of dial tone, which meant that for 5-14 days prior to complete loss of dial tone, internet service was sketchy.

This is such a remote area that one day when we had a lightening fire, we found out that 911 didn't go through. Asked a neighbor about it while working the fire line, and that rancher informed us that 911 hadn't worked for over 6 months, and they just assumed they'd been cut out of the system, as no one would listen or try to find the problem. We started making calls, and indeed, service had been disrupted, shouldn't have been, and it was fixed in one day with massive apologies. Now we have the direct line to quite a few people, including the president of the phone company. But they will push the people out here around a lot if they can do so.

I am not holding my breath, but if things changed and another option were available, I'd be estatic.
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flpoljunkie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-04-10 05:25 PM
Response to Original message
3. Another great thing for this country the Rethugs would've loved to have blocked!
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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-04-10 07:28 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Yup, but they'll take credit for it. n/t
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