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According to a Pew Research Center Internet & American Life Project study, "The Mobile Difference," nearly 40 percent Americans have positive and improving attitudes about their mobile communication devices, thereby further immersing themselves into a more robust digital lifestyle.
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How will broadband affect burgeoning controversies over health care? The answers to this question and more came courtesy of a Broadband Cenus-hosted, hour-long panel discussion. View a video of the discussion.
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President Obama on Innovation and Sustainable Growth. President Barack Obama has new plans to strengthen the economy that will all favor people with hi-tech educations.
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Elevate Miami, a comprehensive Digital Inclusion program launched by the city of Miami, aims to serve youth, low-income families, minorities, seniors and residents facing barriers to digital inclusion.
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The Knight Center of Digital Excellence held its first Stimulus Webcast Session for Knight communities and program directors July 23. Watch it online now.
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By pushing hard on broadband, lawmakers hope to close the "digital divide" that has long separated rural America. In doing so, they hope to give rural consumers access to the same sorts of high-speed services and opportunities - think telemedicine, distance-learning and Web-based commerce - that city dwellers have enjoyed for years.
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Archive for the ‘Opinion’ Category
Tuesday, November 17th, 2009
A crucial part of President Barack Obama’s transparency agenda has always been to increase public participation in government by bringing it online. In fact, you may have heard him or a member of his administration discussing e-government as a key element of a national broadband plan.
These statements are not just rhetoric – using broadband to increase civic participation in policymaking efforts is the law. No, you didn’t just misread that sentence – there’s a law stating what a national broadband plan must include, and e-government is stamped right on it.
Now that we know the law, let’s take a closer look at what drives successful e-government initiatives – information. After all, information has allowed civilians to participate in local and national government since there’s been a government.
“Informing Communities: Sustaining democracy in the Digital Age,” a report by The Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy, provides an outstanding perspective on how “information is as vital to the healthy functioning of communities as clean air, safe streets, good schools and public health.”
According to the report, “America needs ‘informed communities,’ places where the information ecology meets people’s personal and civic information needs. This means people have the news and information they need to take advantage of life’s opportunities for themselves and their families. They need information to participate fully in our system of self-government, to stand up and be heard. Driving this vision are the critical democratic values of openness, inclusion, participation, empowerment and the common pursuit of truth and the public interest.”
| Are you an informed community? |
| According to the report, a community is a healthy democratic community – an “informed community” – when:
• People have convenient access to both civic and life-enhancing information, without regard to income or social status.
• Journalism is abundant in many forms and accessible through many convenient platforms.
• Government is open and transparent.
• People have affordable high-speed Internet service wherever and whenever they want and need it.
• Digital and media literacy are widely taught in schools, public libraries and other community centers.
• Technological and civic expertise is shared across the generations.
• Local media – including print, broadcast, and online media – reflect the issues, events, experiences and ideas of the entire community.
• People have a deep understanding of the role of free speech and free press rights in maintaining a democratic community.
• Citizens are active in acquiring and sharing knowledge both within and across social networks.
• People can assess and track changes in the information health of their communities.
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The commission also states that to achieve its vision of informed communities, the following three fundamental objectives must be pursued:
Maximizing the availability of relevant and credible information to communities
The availability of relevant and credible information implies creation, distribution and preservation. Information flow improves when people have not only direct access to information, but the benefit also of credible intermediaries to help discover, gather, compare, contextualize and share information.
Strengthening the capacity of individuals to engage with information
This includes the ability to communicate one’s information, creations and views to others. Attending to capacity means that people have access to the tools they need and opportunities to develop their skills to use those tools effectively as both producers and consumers of information.
Promoting individual engagement with information and the public life of the community
Promoting engagement means generating opportunities and motivation for involvement. Citizens should have the capacity, both individually and in groups, to help shoulder responsibility for community self-governance.
A large part of the report also focuses on the importance broadband technology and new media in revitalizing traditional journalistic roles and values. Since the advent of the 24-hour news cycle and the subsequent rise of sometimes superfluous content, many have forgotten the media was initially created to serve as a “watchdog of the government” – to provide civilians with accurate information on what their elected public officials were doing and to take those officials to task when they overstepped their bounds.
Traditional, accurate journalism efforts on civic affairs have always played a crucial role in providing individuals with the necessary information to participate in government. That service can only be enhanced as consistent innovation creates new information channels. The challenge for media outlets is to revamp their old business models to better incorporate new broadband technologies while staying true to their original “watchdog” role.
However, it’s extremely difficult to predict what kinds of innovation will occur in any industry, yet alone communications. But given what we have today, it’s imperative for public bodies to invest in the creation of universal broadband access for all Americans. Enabling citizens to participate in civic affairs through the accessibility of a national broadband infrastructure is a proper role for government.
Tags: 24-hour news cycle, Barack Obama, broadband, Broadband Expansion, community, digital, e-government, education, government transparency, high-speed, information, information channel, informed communities, innovation, Internet, journalism, Knight, Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy, network, new media Posted in Opinion, broadband, national broadband plan | 3 Comments »
Thursday, November 12th, 2009
By Doug Adams, Knight Center of Digital Excellence
My life is not that different from most men in their early 40s. Weekends are hectic, filled with kids’ games, events and errands – all while never straying too far from “work mode” as I am connected via Blackberry and laptop seven days a week. Was life this crazy for my father when I was young?
My father might not have had three soccer leagues plus football to juggle, or a workday that extended beyond nine-to-five to deal with, but I can manage my responsibilities and take advantage of so many new opportunities thanks to broadband. In many ways, my life is very different from what I envisioned it would be as a kid – or even what I envisioned five years ago. While the substance of my life is much as I would have anticipated, I never imagined being able to watch my beloved Indianapolis Colts via an iPhone application at the same time as my son Jack is scoring a goal at his soccer game. Being a supportive father in 2009 may require more work – but it is also a whole lot easier.
About a year ago, I introduced my son to U2. He loves the music almost as much as I do now, which is great – because what good is having kids if you can’t teach them to like what you like? Unfortunately, the 2009 U2 concert tour did not make it our way, but we watched the Los Angeles show this weekend streaming live via YouTube from start to finish.
Last weekend, I awoke on Saturday to my 4-year-old daughter on a Skype Internet call with her grandma in Connecticut. Zoe, a child of broadband and the numerous educational games available online, had dialed-up grandma on her own. Just an example of how her exposure to the resources on the Web have made her so aware of the present world around her and poised to compete in a future one.
We’re a multiple laptop family – so at the same time Zoe was speaking with Grandma, 9–year-old Abby was playing her favorite online game, which requires her to organize, prioritize and accomplish tasks before being rewarded with the next level. It’s no coincidence we’ve seen these same behaviors manifest in her daily life.
My family is by no means alone in terms of how pervasive broadband has become in our everyday life. Earlier this year, eMarketer reported that consumers, even in this tough economy, are scaling back in other places while keeping their broadband services intact. When asked what they would give up if forced to scale back, Americans ranked broadband way behind digital television and telephone service (both mobile and land lines). More than 66 percent of broadband users said they would keep broadband access at the same level or even scale up.
Tags: bandwidth, Blackberry, broadband, Broadband Expansion, Connecticut, digital, digital divide, digital television, eMarketer, FCC, Federal Communications Commission, high-speed, Indianapolis Colts, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, iPhone, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, laptop, Los Angeles, network, Pew Research Center Internet & American Life Project, Skype, U2, YouTube Posted in Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Opinion, broadband | 3 Comments »
Thursday, October 8th, 2009
By Doug Adams, Knight Center of Digital Excellence
Our nation’s broadband economic stimulus plan – part of the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act – is placing a bet that our economy will improve with the expansion of high-speed Internet.
Of course, there are the jobs created just through basic construction, such as the building of broadband networks including fiber and towers. This is no different from jobs created through construction of a building. But if a region builds an office building with no use – with hardly any potential tenants – the economic impact will be short-lived and limited to the building project itself.
So what will we do with all of this broadband once we have it? The promise of broadband is much more significant than opportunities a new office park might provide. Faster and more pervasive Internet service provides a platform for innovation, research and development for all citizens – bringing with it new products, services and most importantly, revenue streams.
What kinds of products and services? Well without broadband, there would have been no impetus for the iPod, Kindle and digital cameras – and no explosive growth in the electronics market. Without broadband, there would be no way to communicate with your doctor over Internet-enabled video conferencing, potentially leaving health care costs to skyrocket even more than they already have. And without broadband, there would be no way to watch your favorite shows from anywhere on your laptop or smart phone – and along with that, there would be no growth in online advertising revenues.
To understand the economic benefit of massive broadband expansion, you need to appreciate the benefits known and unknown, seen and unseen. Early in the decade, as broadband became more common, there was no way to predict the economic impact each development would have. We wanted faster access to Web pages. The iPod and Kindle weren’t even ideas yet.
Beyond platitudes or the hypothetical, what proof do we have that broadband actually has a significant impact on our economy?
In a 2006 study funded by the U.S. Department of Commerce, researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Carnegie Mellon University concluded that broadband access “does enhance economic growth and performance, and that the assumed economic impacts are real and measurable.” Looking at a cross-section of communities across the nation, the study found that between 1998 and 2002, communities that had mass-market broadband experienced more rapid growth in employment and in the number of businesses, especially in technology-intensive sectors, compared to communities without broadband.
Another study titled, “Broadband and Economic Development: A Municipal Case Study from Florida,” by the consulting firm Applied Economic Studies, found that as a result of municipal investment in broadband networks in the early half of this decade, Lake County, Fla., experienced roughly 100 percent greater growth in economic activity than other comparable counties in Florida by a combination of indicators.
And finally, earlier this summer a report from the World Bank Group found developing countries saw an increase in economic growth of 1.3 percentage points for every 10 percentage-point increase in broadband.
Beyond the economic benefits derived from building a platform for innovation, broadband impacts productivity – making us more effective, freeing up our creative energies and allowing us to focus on the next big idea. Broadband shrinks our world and enables telecommuting for collaborative projects across the country or across the globe, making tomorrow’s iPod or Kindle a reality faster – and with it, infusing capital into our markets.
So unlike the construction of an empty building, one we hope to fill with tenants, the investment in broadband construction is sure to fill our nation with hope and change, in the form of innovation and opportunities, as we were promised last November.
Also read “It’s ‘patent-ly’ obvious: U.S. needs better broadband.”
Doug Adams oversees public information efforts for the Knight Center of Digital Excellence based in Akron, Ohio. The center is operated by Cleveland-based technology nonprofit OneCommunity, in partnership with The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and is dedicated to creating connected communities through strategies that utilize information technologies to drive civic progress and economic development. To learn more about the Knight Center, go to www.knightcenter.org or e-mail info@knightcenter.org.
Tags: American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, broadband, Broadband Expansion, Carnegie Mellon University, community, digital, digital camera, Doug Adams, economy, education, Florida, high-speed, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, iPod, Kindle, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Lake County, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT, network, smart phone, stimulus, stimulus watch, U.S. Department of Commerce, World Bank Group Posted in ARRA, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Opinion, Stimulus Package, Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, September 3rd, 2009
Now that the first round of broadband stimulus funding applications are in, it’s time to take a breather – and time to consider what might lie ahead in the next two rounds. What were the biggest challenges in Round 1? How can we improve the process? Dusting off our crystal balls – what do we anticipate?
We received answers from our own Knight Center of Digital Excellence expert, Chief Technology Officer Mark T. Ansboury, as well as others closely connected to the application process: Drew Clark, founder of BroadbandCensus.com; Craig Settles, writer and technology consultant; and Jim Baller of Baller Herbst Law Group and the U.S. Broadband Coalition. (More information on each individual is available at the end of this article.)
Q: What were the biggest challenges you identified in getting applications ready and submitted for Round 1 stimulus funding?
Ansboury: The biggest challenge was taking big ideas and expressing them within the constraints mandated by the application process. Under the somewhat rigid guidelines, it was difficult to convey broad ideas. We were very thorough and made sure that we had accurate data for every question posed – so due diligence required a good deal of time and effort.
Clark: The complexity and bureaucracy of the application form was huge. The application process provided considerable advantages to larger entities and didn’t necessarily encourage individuals bringing forth creative and new ideas. Although the NTIA and RUS have been encouraging businesses and nonprofits to bring forth synergistic solutions to the problems of broadband supply and demand, the application form hewed to the bureaucratic and is likely to favor incumbents.
Settles: A number of communities and alliances began planning their broadband networks a year or more ago, so they have much of the raw data needed for an application. However, the type of questions being asked, the level of details required, the confusing or contradictory requests, all made the 45-day window for completing the NOFA applications much too short. NTIA/RUS should have stuck to its originally stated intent to have a 30-day public comment on the rules and then a 30-to-60-day window for submitting applications.
Baller: We worked on several different kinds of projects, and each posed its own challenges. Among the most significant were: designing proposed target areas in ways that would qualify for funding and still be economically viable; getting strong-minded project partners all on the same page; developing workable approaches to demonstrating that an area was “unserved” or “underserved;” organizing, drafting, and checking the massive amounts of information required, which typically ran into the hundreds of pages for our clients; and coping with the problems that the RUS/NTIA had in processing applications.
Q: Do you have recommendations for improvements in the application process for Rounds 2 and 3?
Ansboury: We need an open framework for expressing the goals and objectives of projects. We also should have an opportunity to broadly define the benefits of such projects to communities and individuals. While there is the need to have standardized questions and formats – the desire to compare apples to apples should not stifle creativity… or we’ll just end up with the shiniest apple, not the best solution for our communities.
We would also like to see the definition of “broadband” significantly increased. Broadband as it is defined now is serving the least common denominator rather than creating a platform for innovative applications and solutions.
Clark: The NTIA and RUS need to take a more proactive role in helping to coordinate applicants, and to coordinate information about broadband applicants. Additionally, there will be a strong need for a system to verify the numerous (and likely conflicting) claims about broadband availability. These are the claims about the “unserved” or “underserved” nature of particular census blocks within the data-sets that will emerge from the nearly 2,200 applications that we saw in Round 1. Finally, the NTIA and RUS could do a better job of offering suggested contract sizes for applications: How much are they looking to spend on what sorts of last-mile, middle-mile, sustainable broadband and public computer center projects?
Settles: The rules need to be streamlined, eliminating some of the business operations reporting requirements, since community and local-government driven network projects don’t operate on the profit model. If applicants adhere to the requirement to prove the network can be financially sustained, that is sufficient.
Also, raise the speed that defines broadband to at least a minimum of 1.5 Mbps symmetrical, and definitely eliminate “advertised speeds” as any measure for network performance. Only actual speeds received by subscribers, whatever those speeds are that define broadband, should determine broadband coverage or the lack thereof.
Extra points need to be allotted for applicants who articulate the broadband needs of the constituents and stakeholders to be served, and then describe No. 1 – how their area is un- or underserved because current broadband doesn’t meet their needs, and No. 2 – how their proposal will meet the needs stated. To evaluate the merits of any proposal without giving the greatest weight to the needs to be met, the technology to be used, and the speeds it will deliver is a fundamentally flawed process.
Baller: Considering all the challenges that RUS/NTIA had to meet in the first round, I would not judge them too harshly. In Rounds 2 and 3, I would recommend that RUS/NTIA raise the bandwidth requirements in the definition of “broadband” and use minimum actual delivered speeds rather than maximum advertised speeds; give substantial credit for projects that will provide services to “unserved” or “underserved” areas, but do not treat the provision of service to such areas as a precondition to receiving funding for last-mile or middle-infrastructure projects; and make it much easier for applicants to demonstrate that areas are “unserved” or “underserved.” For example, RUS/NTIA could adopt various presumptions or safe harbors based on demographic data, etc. Where there is lots of room for subjectivity, (e.g., estimating the number of jobs that a project will create) applicants that make sound, conservative estimates may be at a disadvantage to applicants who make wild, seat-of-the-pants guesstimates, particularly if reviewers are swamped with work and don’t have time to drill deeply into applications. In such areas, RUS/NTIA should provide better guidance or “rules of thumb” on how such estimates should be made.
In addition, applicants should be given more time to absorb Round 2 NOFAs and guidance materials, while the agencies should be given more time and more resources/reviewers to evaluate applications.
Q: Any predictions on what to expect in Rounds 2 and 3?
Ansboury: The first round focused largely on rural communities. I expect BTOP, where the larger share of money will be allocated, will be broader and open to the needs of urban communities and at-risk populations of underserved people. I hope for and expect more leeway relating to these populations, as this is where the masses are and where there is the greatest need for revitalization.
Clark: I expect to see far more competition than we saw in Round 1. In the first round, the 2,200 applicants sought $27.6 billion in funding, out of $4.3 billion that is available. These numbers were almost certainly depressed by the complexity and bureaucracy of the application process. If the NTIA and RUS do their job right, more competition in the broadband stimulus funding process will be the result.
Settles: Given that the total dollars requested in Round 1 is seven times the amount of funds available, someone should repeat the “cash for clunkers” scenario and find more money the next round than the anticipated $1.5 billion. There may be as many people waiting in the wings to submit proposals in Round 2 as submitted in the first round.
Baller: I hope that NTIA will do what it repeatedly has said that it was going to do before the Round 1 NOFA was released – treat the stimulus process as a test bed for creative new approaches and partnerships, particularly those that will foster the development of high-capacity next generation networks.
We also spoke with David Villano, assistant administrator of the Telecommunications Program at RUS, who lent his perspective:
Q: What were your biggest challenges in Round 1 and what do you see in the coming rounds?
Villano: In Round 1, balancing – getting our first NOFA out on the street as quickly as possible versus being responsive to our all of our potential customers. We believe we met both of these goals, are ready to start the review process and get ready for Round 2. We plan to seek input from the public on how we can improve the process for Round 2 as our strategy for multiple NOFAs was to be dynamic and learn from the experience of the preceding NOFA. We want to hear from the public on how we can improve the process.
Mark T. Ansboury is chief technology officer of the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, based in Akron, Ohio. The center is operated by Cleveland-based technology nonprofit OneCommunity, in partnership with The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and is dedicated to creating connected communities through strategies that utilize information technologies to drive civic progress and economic development.
Drew Clark is the founder and executive director of BroadbandCensus.com, which provides an objective and independent measure of local broadband services in addition to allowing consumers to interact with a growing broadband database and share information about their broadband experiences. Clark is a well-respected telecom, media and technology journalist who has covered the industry for more than 15 years.
Broadband business strategist, marketing expert, author and internationally renowned speaker, Craig Settles helps organizations use broadband technologies to improve government and stakeholders’ operating efficiency, as well as local economic development. His numerous published works and in-depth analyses have established him as a prominent thought leader on appropriate business strategies for municipal broadband network deployments.
Jim Baller is president of the Baller Herbst Law Group and the founder of the U.S. Broadband Coalition, a consortium of organizations working toward the development of a comprehensive national broadband strategy. Among many commendations, The Fiber to the Home Council has recognized Baller as “the nation’s most experienced and knowledgeable attorney on public broadband matters.”
In January 2008, David Villano was named Assistant Administrator of the Telecommunications Program, where he manages the Telecommunications Program’s loan and grant programs, with an annual budget of $873 million and a $4 billion loan portfolio. Previously, he served as Deputy Administrator, Single Family Housing, responsible for administering the direct and guaranteed homeownership programs and several housing grant programs.
Tags: American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, Baller Herbst Law Group, bandwidth, BIP, broadband, Broadband Expansion, Broadband Initiatives Program, Broadband Technology Opportunities Program, BroadbandCensus.com, BroadbandUSA, BTOP, Craig Settles, David Villano, digital, Drew Clark, high-speed, infrastructure, Internet, Jim Baller, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Mark Ansboury, network, NOFA, NTIA, OneCommunity, rural communities, RUS, stimulus, stimulus watch, U.S. Broadband Coalition, underserved, unserved Posted in ARRA, Guest Viewpoints, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, OneCommunity, Opinion, Stimulus Package, broadband | No Comments »
Thursday, September 3rd, 2009
By Mark T. Ansboury, the Knight Center of Digital Excellence
As federal officials begin reviewing 2,200 detailed proposals requesting more than seven times the $4 billion in broadband investment in this round of stimulus funding, it’s a good time to revisit the big-picture and ask what outcomes are we looking for and what should drive funding decisions. With the government investing ambitiously in economic recovery, Americans should be equally bold in expecting a return on our nation’s investment.
And to ensure the long-term benefits - particularly given this is our infrastructure for innovation and global competitiveness for years to come - we all should be thinking years and decades out. To quote the “Great One,” Wayne Gretzky, you should “go to where the puck’s going, not where it is.”
So, as the Federal Communications Commission is charged with establishing our nation’s first broadband policy, we should focus not only where we fall short today, but also where we will entirely miss opportunities - and the puck. We need to know where our broadband strategy is going and what happens to our nation’s future without a bold one.
We need to follow the lead of other countries and start aiming (including investing and incentivizing) for gigabit Internet speeds for all. Gigabit-speed networks would provide Americans with hundreds of times the Internet speeds broadband households currently have.
Only a broadband policy striving for gigabit speeds will put us on par with our world competitors and provide the infrastructure America will need to compete for years to come. Right now, the U.S. government and the stimulus package are allowing the bar to be set so low, we are certain to fund initiatives that are, by international standards, already obsolete, while other countries such as Australia and Korea are committing even greater funds than the U.S. to upgrade networks. Quite simply, tomorrow’s innovation will come from whatever parts of the world have the platforms to foster it.
Gigabit broadband can also drive sweeping transformation in our communities and across sectors that affect us all, such as health care, education, government and public safety, and get our economy moving in the right direction again.
If the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act is truly going to help, today’s investment needs to continue once the shovels are put back in the shed. That means investing in technologies that will continue to have impact and empower businesses individuals while creating new opportunities and sustainable growth. As our economy changes, business and individuals are looking for new ways to engage their future workforce. On the home front, it’s about addressing the future needs of a connected household, providing high-bandwidth networks to manage household services, access to sensors for environmental and health management, availability of real-time access to the workplace, school, public safety and community services and numerous applications that have not been invented yet.
What do we know? Internet service has become more and more a necessity of daily life. It was only 15 years ago when phone companies said the Internet was a fad. The world has changed and will keep changing. Enabling gigabit access throughout the community will foster economic development and enable citizens to have access to new applications where they live, work and play. We should be thinking about incentivizing investment and innovation enabling new markets, new consumers and new services so as a nation and as individual citizens, we have a choice on the type and level of services we can access. Such access will determine whether we can actively conduct business from a home office, participate in a class discussion remotely, or access top quality health care regardless how far we live from the best hospitals.
What don’t we know? The opportunities, services, efficiencies and competitive advantage that having a true platform for innovation - a gigabit national network - would provide.
Take the example of health care, and what gigabit speed - or lack of it - would mean to you. With gigabit speeds, you could live in a remote town, yet be “seen” by a top doctor any distance away via video, through your home television screen, use local sensors to provide environmental information, statistics regarding your condition or state of health, monitor the trends in regards to chronic conditions. Gigabit speed means you can be monitored daily from your home by nurses and technicians at your local caregiver or doctor’s office. This, too, is possible with medical devices available on the market and is already happening in pockets of our country, where broadband capacity is available.
Close monitoring of this kind can mean life or death to many individuals. Simultaneously, it can help shift the focus of health care to wellness and prevention, to avoid as many high-cost emergencies as possible.
Looking similarly at government, education and other key sectors of our economy, there are equally transforming possibilities that will result from gigabit speeds.
Collectively across sectors, the effect of gigabit speeds will be not just economic recovery, but also improved quality of life and sustained competitiveness. Today’s spending choices and public policy decisions amount to an incentive and investment into the business plan for America’s future. Good planning requires that we learn from the past while keeping our eye on a greater future. Our American tradition is one of reaching for the highest goals, whether, in our past, via the Oregon Trail or an Apollo mission to the moon. Today, in the 21st century, why wouldn’t we go for gigabit speeds?
Mark T. Ansboury is chief technology officer of the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, based in Akron, Ohio. The center is operated by Cleveland-based technology nonprofit OneCommunity, in partnership with The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and is dedicated to creating connected communities through strategies that utilize information technologies to drive civic progress and economic development. To learn more about the Knight Center, go to www.knightcenter.org or e-mail info@knightcenter.org.
Tags: American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, bandwidth, broadband, Broadband Expansion, broadband stimulus funding, community, digital, economy, education, FCC, Federal Communications Commission, gigabit, gigabit Internet speeds, healthcare, high-speed, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Mark Ansboury, network, OneCommunity, stimulus, stimulus watch, telemedicine, utilities, Wayne Gretsky Posted in ARRA, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Opinion, Stimulus Package, broadband | No Comments »
Monday, August 17th, 2009
More than half of Americans have been hit hard during the current recession in a number of ways, according to a recent Pew Internet & American Life Project study (“The Internet and the Recession”):
• 35 percent of Americans have seen their investments lose more than half their value;
• 27 percent of those employed full time or part-time have had their pay cut, hours reduced, or benefits slashed;
• 27 percent of homeowners have seen the value of their home reduced by at least half; and
• 14 percent of Americans have been laid off or lost their jobs.
Startling numbers, to be sure. But guess where a large portion of these Americans are going for help - the Internet.
According to the Pew study, roughly 69 percent of Americans have used the Internet to cope with the recession in the past year “as they hunt for bargains, jobs, ways to upgrade their skills, better investment strategies, housing options and government benefits. That amounts to 88 percent of adult Internet users in the country.”
While many Americans still tend to rely on traditional media outlets for economic and personal finance information, the Internet is quickly closing the gap. And for those who have broadband at home, the Internet has become the favored option. A little more than half (52 percent) of the 64 percent of Americans who have broadband Internet at home cite the Internet as the preferred medium for personal finance information. Eighteen percent of adults said they search at least once a day for recession-related material.
And they’re not just learning – they’re contributing to the discussion. The study cites 34 percent of “online economic users” – about 30 percent of the online population and 23 percent of the entire adult population – have contributed content and commentary about the recession online.
These facts are just a few of the answers to the big broadband question, “So what?” At the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, a big part of our job is to help Knight communities understand the value of broadband Internet – to show them how to answer the “so whats” in their efforts to connect.
It’s no secret the recession has affected the better portion of our nation. And if we haven’t been directly affected, we probably know someone who has been – in a very dramatic way. The Pew study shows that the Internet is becoming a necessary, multi-functional tool for people looking to ease their recession burdens.
For a further look at how the Internet is changing our economy for the better, read the Knight Center’s “Advertising-supported Internet presenting new opportunities.”
Tags: broadband, Broadband Expansion, community, digital, economy, high-speed, innovation, Internet, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, mass media, network, Pew Research Center Internet & American Life Project, print media, recession, recovery.gov, so what, stimulus, stimulus watch Posted in Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Opinion | No Comments »
Monday, August 10th, 2009
Organizations not participating in the round one scramble for broadband stimulus funds still need to pay attention – both to the application process and how the money is eventually awarded.
As the Knight Center of Digital Excellence learned during attendance at Broadband Application Training workshops, the road to submitting a successful stimulus proposal is not only very lengthy and complicated, but the landscape can continually change.
We’ve seen this with the evolution of the original Broadband Initiatives Program (BIP)/Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) FAQ. A second update was required for clarification and posted shortly after the original FAQ – including nine new pages, six new sections and answers to a total of 42 new questions. This was in addition to the original 39 being modified to include more detailed information.
We’ll see fluctuations again during what could prove to be both an interesting and contentious process – application challenges. Funding applications will be posted publicly, and entities can challenge the conclusions, data and findings of other applicants inside of 30 days. Challenges can be refuted as well – also posted along with the challenger’s case and supporting data. For organizations planning to submit future-round proposals, this will be an inside look at what kinds of data other organizations are collecting, how they’re defining certain key terms and, when all’s said and done, how government agencies will define certain key terms.
During workshop presentations, government representatives said round one is a learning process for everyone, including the agencies handing out the money. However, they also indicated firms or entities that have gone down the funding route before and have already identified projects and strategies would have an advantage in obtaining stimulus funding.
It can’t be stated enough: Organizations planning to submit proposals for broadband stimulus funding in rounds two and three shouldn’t neglect what’s happening in round one. They need to pay attention to what’s going on now in order to avoid potential issues down the road.
Remember, many will apply for round one stimulus funding, and many will come back and become stronger competitors in future rounds. Having gone through the process once, they’ll have an advantage the second and third time around.
So pay attention to key federal agencies, the process and which organizations receive awards now. By doing so, you stand to increase your chances for future success.
Tags: American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, application challenges, BIP, broadband, Broadband Application Training Workshop, Broadband Expansion, Broadband Initiatives Program, Broadband Technology Opportunities Program, BTOP, community, digital, FAQ, Internet, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, network, NTIA, RUS, stimulus, stimulus watch Posted in ARRA, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Opinion, Stimulus Package, broadband | No Comments »
Friday, August 7th, 2009
By Charles Berry, Knight Center of Digital Excellence
As the Aug. 14 stimulus application deadline draws near, here are a few to-do items to include on your checklist.
Don’t forget to register by going to http://www.broadbandusa.gov/register.htm. This is a must, and time is running out. At this government registration site, you’ll be able to:
1. Get a DUNS Number for your organization.
2. Ensure your organization has a Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) or Employer Identification Number (EIN). (You should know the taxpayer name associated with these numbers.)
3. Register with the Central Contractor Registration (CCR). You also must register for a Level 1 eAuthentication ID to enable you to draw the proposed service area for the application.
Monitor BroadbandUSA’s website for FAQs and the latest announcements about funding requirements. You may also ask questions at the workshops hosted by the RUS and NTIA. The vetted answers are the basis of the FAQs.
Subscribe to Broadband Headlines Newsletter, a daily release from the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, to arm yourself with the latest news about broadband and stimulus funding. Subscribe
After covering the basics, you may also be wondering how to make your application stand out in a crowded field. Here are some things to keep in mind:
Show your community is working together to leverage assets toward common goals. Instead of going it alone, develop strong partnerships with anchor institutions in your community. Create a vision for how public/private partnerships can really work.
Pay attention to details and precise specifications in your application. Use concise, persuasive language, and present clear plans and supporting information.
Capture attention with your executive summary. Make sure it conveys the big picture, while flowing logically and matching information detailed in your narrative. At one workshop, a panelist suggested the executive summary be written after the application is complete in order to ensure consistency. Remember, the pieces have to fit together to tell your story.
Describe your methodology for gathering and analyzing data used in substantiating claims of unserved or underserved service areas.
Remember, it’s all about jobs. Focus on impacts to economic development, job creation, education/skill building and public safety.
Clearly say what you propose to do. Describe the applications to be deployed and the benefits to your community. Detail the user training and education programs, along with adoption and communication plans.
Calculate the expected ROI (return on investment) and VOI (value on investment) and explain how the project will become sustainable over time.
On the flip side, here are some things you don’t want your application to convey:
A timeline that doesn’t mesh with requirements for stimulus funding. ARRA projects must be substantially complete in two years and fully completed in three.
Don’t say what you don’t know for sure. Avoid statements or claims about resources, infrastructure or capabilities that might be difficult to substantiate should you be challenged during the due diligence period.
Avoid shortcuts. In particular, proving eligibility based on the unserved/underserved guidelines is very difficult given the lack of information available. But don’t ignore this step. Take your best shot at describing the data that leads you to believe your analysis of the service area is valid.
Finally, here are a few hints to further help you on your way:
Perform the BIP Self-Assessment test and ensure you have assigned individuals/experts who will be responsible for specific sections of the application.
Pay close attention to the Project Description section of the application. This is a three- to four-sentence description (400 characters) that should concisely describe your proposed project. Your answer will be published on Recovery.gov and BroadbandUSA.gov to showcase the types of projects received. Make sure those three to four sentences say exactly what you want to convey to the world as well as to any entities that may challenge your proposal.
Continue to collect data corroborating broadband demand and access after you submit your proposal. The NOFA infrastructure application offers incumbents a 30-day period to contest your proposal by claiming they already cover the unserved or underserved areas you want to cover. Best to compile data even after submitting your proposal, so you’ll be ready for a challenge, should it occur.
If you have questions, consult the proper documents or e-mail us at info@knightcenter.org
Charles Berry serves as Chief Operating Officer for the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, based in Akron, Ohio. The center is operated by Cleveland-based technology nonprofit OneCommunity, in partnership with The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and is dedicated to creating connected communities through strategies that utilize information technologies to drive civic progress and economic development. To learn more about the Knight Center, go to www.knightcenter.org or e-mail info@knightcenter.org
Tags: American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, ARRA, BIP, BIP Self-Assessment test, broadband, Broadband Expansion, Broadband Headlines Newsletter, Broadband Initiatives Program, Broadband Technology Opportunities Program, BroadbandUSA, BTOP, Central Contractor Registration, Charles Berry, community, digital, DUNS number, economy, education, EIN, electricity, healthcare, high-speed, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Level 1 eAuthentication ID, methodology, network, NTIA, OneCommunity, Project Description, public safety, ROI, rural communities, RUS, stimulus, stimulus application, stimulus watch, telemedicine, TIN, underserved, unserved, utilities, VOI Posted in ARRA, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, OneCommunity, Opinion, Stimulus Package, broadband | 2 Comments »
Friday, August 7th, 2009
By Doug Adams, Knight Center of Digital Excellence
While President Barack Obama and Congress have made clear how important broadband is to our nation by putting $7.2 billion in stimulus funding behind broadband initiatives, there still seems to be a perception gap among many non-adopter citizens.
In short, there is a lack of understanding of the value broadband connectivity can bring to their lives. The U.S. Telecom Association recently said many citizens aren’t adopting because of “perceived lack of Internet relevance.”
If the perception is that high-speed access is about iTunes and iPods, then public education should become part of public policy as it relates to stimulus funding on broadband networks.
We know it’s routine for students to submit their assignments online, or for job seekers to find and apply for employment. What’s less obvious is that high-speed Internet is the new platform for innovation, collaboration, education, learning and professional development opportunities. Broadband networks are critical to our individual, community, and nation’s progress.
In the Cleveland area, for example, public libraries offer summer programs to teach children 3-D imaging, animation and other skills that will prepare them for tomorrow’s opportunities.
Or go to Detroit, where an organization named Youthville is promoting a holistic and integrated approach to developing youth. Programs for children cover computer skills, leadership, academics, fitness, Web broadcasting and music studio recording. Among these programs is a new, one-of-a-kind, 24-hour broadcasting studio.
This spring in Miami, the city announced the start of a $200 million Smart Grid initiative led by state utility company Florida Power & Light. An initial build-out to 1,000 homes will validate different devices and services such as dashboards, smart thermostats, smart appliances and demand response software that are designed to help consumers more actively manage their energy consumption.
These are just a few examples of ongoing initiatives we at the Knight Center of Digital Excellence are helping along.
It is a disservice to America to trivialize the importance of broadband by relating applications primarily to pop culture. Sure, entertainment options increase as broadband expands, but that’s hardly the driving force of broadband networks. The public relations firm Ruder Finn found in a recent survey that research and self-education topped entertainment as reasons for going online. Those findings mirror a 2008 study by the federal Institute of Museum and Library Services, which found over 60 percent of online visits at public libraries were work or education related.
While our nation invests $7.2 billion in stimulus funding for broadband initiatives, let’s not lose sight of the compelling “so what” – that is, the opportunity for economic growth that will improve quality of life for Americans.
Beyond what’s at stake for individuals and communities, our nation is now in a position of playing catch-up with global competitors. We’re woefully behind in developing the broadband platform needed to continue moving forward and spurring innovation. In a recent Technology Policy Institute study analyzing download speeds, the U.S. falls between 11th and 14th in the world in that category, depending on the survey.
More disheartening is a Speedtest.net study that shows the U.S. had one of the worst increases in download speed over the past year of any nation.
It gets even worse regarding upload speeds. A number of studies shows the average U.S. upload speed to be somewhere between 371 kilobytes per second (Kbps) and 435 Kbps. Hardly adequate for the many potential business, education, telemedicine and e-government applications we need to drive down costs and spur innovation.
It’s critical to get everyone in the U.S. connected to high-speed Internet as soon as possible. When citizens aren’t online, our nation’s resources – our entrepreneurial spirit and innovative minds – are not being leveraged.
It’s time now to connect the dots on the demonstrated payoffs, so that Americans clearly know what opportunities are in store as a result of broadband adoption.
So what? It’s our future.
Doug Adams oversees public information efforts for the Knight Center of Digital Excellence based in Akron, Ohio. The center is operated by Cleveland-based technology nonprofit OneCommunity, in partnership with The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and is dedicated to creating connected communities through strategies that utilize information technologies to drive civic progress and economic development. To learn more about the Knight Center, go to www.knightcenter.org or e-mail info@knightcenter.org.
Tags: 3-D, American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, bandwidth, Barack Obama, broadband, Broadband Expansion, Cleveland, community, Congress, Detroit, digital, digital divide, Doug Adams, economy, education, Florida, Florida Power & Light, healthcare, high-speed, infrastructure, innovation, Institute of Museum and Library Services, Internet, iPod, iTunes, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Miami, Michigan, network, non-adopter, Ohio, OneCommunity, Smart Grid, Speedtest.net, stimulus, stimulus watch, Technology Policy Institute, U.S. Telecom Association, upload speed, utilities Posted in ARRA, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, OneCommunity, Opinion, Stimulus Package, broadband | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 5th, 2009
The recent release of the Broadband Initiatives Progam (BIP)/Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) FAQ is an important event, as it provides answers to many questions asked by BIP/BTOP application workshop participants and others working frantically to meet the Aug. 14 application deadline.
At the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, we’ve identified a few of the most commonly asked questions based on our attendance at workshops, and have provided them here, along with our perspective on why these issues are important.
Take some time to look them over, but don’t forget to download and read the both the FAQ and the BIP/BTOP applications in their entirety.
Q: Is an entity whose application is denied in the first funding round eligible to reapply for funding in a subsequent round?
A: If an application is not successful in the first round, the applicant may resubmit the proposal for the next round of funding. Applicants should be aware that NTIA and RUS intend to learn from the first funding round and,as a result, the agencies may issue subsequent NOFAs that contain different programmatic information to better achieve the agencies’ goals and to adjust the process based on the applications received. BIP and BTOP applicants will be notified in writing of the reason for the rejection. As a result, organizations resubmitting their applications in later rounds will have an opportunity to address the deficiencies identified in the first round.
Knight Center Perspective: The bottom line: Yes, you will be able to resubmit. However, be aware that much of the BIP money is being released in the first round of funding, so it benefits you to have a solid, well researched proposal to submit during the first round.
Q: Will the electronic application allow you to save your application, stop, and come back to it?
A: An applicant can edit and save an electronic application as many times as necessary until you submit the application. After the application has been submitted, the electronic system will not allow further revisions.
Knight Center Perspective: The greatest benefit of electronic submission is the ability to work collaboratively across large distances. REMEMBER: Just make sure you don’t hit SUBMIT before you’re finished. Once you hit the SUMBIT button your application becomes FINAL.
Q: If RUS or NTIA discovers that a few census blocks within a large service area are not unserved or underserved, will the agency reject the application in its entirety?
A: The determination of whether an area is unserved or underserved applies to an entire service area, not to specific census blocks within the service area. RUS and NTIA will post a Public Notice of the proposed funded service areas of each Broadband Infrastructure application for a 30-day period. If the information submitted by an existing service provider demonstrates that the applicant’s proposed funded service area is not unserved, both RUS and NTIA reserve the right to reclassify the application and consider the proposed area as underserved if the application meets the criteria in the underserved definition. If the information submitted by an existing service provider establishes that the applicant’s proposed funded service area is not underserved, both RUS and NTIA may reject the application.
Knight Center Perspective: Unserved/underserved - how do you define it? See our methodology blog.
Q: Are there any geographic restrictions on the areas served by Public Computer Center and Sustainable Broadband Adoption projects?
A: No. Public Computer Center and Sustainable Broadband Adoption applicants do not need to demonstrate that their projects are located within unserved or underserved areas. Rather, they must show that they serve vulnerable population groups where broadband technology has traditionally been underutilized.
Knight Center Perspective: You don’t have to stick to specific definitions for this part of your BTOP submission. As long as your organization provides a solid methodology for explaining why the population in the proposed area is considered VULNERABLE and UNDERUTILIZED, you should be in good stead.
Q: Please describe the “sustainability” evaluation factor for Sustainable Broadband Adoption grants. Do these projects need to be on-going after the period of performance for the award?
A: Applicants for Sustainable Broadband Adoption grants must explain how the expected increases in broadband adoption rates will be sustained without ongoing federal grant assistance after the funding period and grant program has concluded. The description should include an explanation for why the applicant believes increases in subscriber rates will be sustainable over time. Applicants also should demonstrate how any costs associated with training and/or other recurring expenses will be covered after the grant expires. NTIA expects projects funded by Sustainable Broadband Adoption grants to continue after the period of performance for the award.
Knight Center Perspective: Sustainability is the cornerstone to any business plan or grant proposal no matter who the funder is. You must have a plan for how you’re going to keep your program moving forward, no ifs ands or buts. Read our compliance blog for more information.
Tags: American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, BIP, broadband, Broadband Initiatives Program, broadband stimulus workshop, Broadband Technology Opportunities Program, BTOP, compliance, digital, FAQ, infrastructure, Internet, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, methodology, network, NTIA, rural communities, RUS, stimulus, stimulus watch Posted in ARRA, Digital news, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Opinion, Stimulus Package | No Comments »
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