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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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Posts Tagged ‘U.S. Broadband Coalition’
Thursday, November 12th, 2009
In any national broadband strategy, adoption and use need to play a major role. We’ve seen numerous examples of broadband driving future applications that will enhance lives. Advances in education, health care and economic development are out there, and many Americans are going to need to increase their technological competencies in order to realize the benefits.
While the U.S. Broadband Coalition submitted a report on a national broadband strategy to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Sept. 24, it recently submitted another that offers more detailed policy suggestions.
The Broadband Adoption and Use Working Group, chaired by Charles Benton, of the Benton Foundation; Link Hoewing, of Verizon; Karen Archer Perry, of the Knight Center of Digital Excellence; and Kenneth Peres of Communications Workers of America, collaborated with more than 30 authors representing over 25 different firms to create a new report that was delivered to the FCC Oct. 29 and will be showcased in a public forum at the FCC Hearing Room in Washington D.C. Nov. 13 at 1 p.m. EST.
“Broadband Adoption and Use: Bridging the Divide and Increasing the Intensity of Broadband Use Across All Sectors of the Economy,” is a robust document focusing on policy options that promote: inclusion, increased intensity of broadband use, interoperability, integration of broadband and technology into other programs, and expanded innovation. The report’s hundred plus policy ideas address each of these principles directly.
Inclusion
As more functions in our society move online, the cost of digital exclusion continues to escalate. Conversely, the value associated with any given Internet-enabled service increases as more people or devices access that service. This report includes specific recommendations to bridge the digital divide. Its universal design principles seek to bring access to people with disabilities. The benefits of broadband can potentially reach 40 percent of American adults who currently have inadequate or no access.
Intensity of Broadband Use
While broadband appears to be well integrated in some sectors of our nation’s economy, we’re actually in the beginning stages of broadband adoption as a whole. The potential to further leverage broadband technologies across society and the economy creates unparalleled opportunities to grow our economy and enrich lives.
The report covers a number of policy options designed to increase adoption and use in the areas of economic development, health care, public safety, education, energy and sustainability, and democracy and civic engagement.
Interoperability
While broadband developments to-date are founded on the natural interoperability of Internet Protocol (the method by which data is sent from one computer to another), more application-level interoperability is needed to accelerate development across sectors and constituencies such as in health care and public safety. The report points out where policy and standardization can drive additional deployment and create new, more effective use models.
Integration of Broadband into Everything
Broadband technology and Internet-based applications can no longer be managed and funded in “technology silos” of policy and investment. Information and Communications Technology (ICT) is integral to social services, education, health care, safety, civic rights and engagement, and all other sectors of the economy. The report recommends ICT investment and policy be incorporated into other federal and state programs such as housing, social services, education, and health care as integral funded and mission-aligned program components.
Investment
Strategic investments such as those made through the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act’s broadband stimulus funding, Universal Service Funds and USDA Rural Health programs are critical to filling gaps in the market in terms of access, adoption and applications.
Innovation
The hallmark of the Internet age has been innovation. While change is necessary to broaden and deepen the impact of broadband across the U.S., changes must also preserve and encourage continued innovation at all levels of the economy and market. A number of recent studies have shown the Internet is the new platform for innovation not only in the U.S. but globally. Consider the number of new applications and devices over the past few years.
Could any of us have accurately predicted this exact kind of innovation would take place? Can we accurately predict the future possibilities that exist? Probably not.
But as the Coalition suggests, we can encourage policies that will “focus not on protecting status quo but in continuing to create a fertile environment for U.S.-based innovation, expansion as well as adoption and use.”
Over 30 industry experts from 25 firms contributed to “Broadband Adoption and Use: Bridging the Divide and Increasing the Intensity of Broadband Use Across All Sectors of the Economy,” In addition to the report co-chairs, Alcatel-Lucent, Net Literacy, Telcordia, Utilities Telecom Council, PC Rebuilders and Recyclers, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, OneCommunity and many others contributed to this report.
Each report section includes a statement on the opportunity, barriers and possible policy options to be implemented at the federal, state or local levels of government. While the report reflects a few areas of contention, there is strong overall agreement that increasing the adoption and use of broadband technology and services is good for America and for Americans.
With the Internet celebrating only its 40th birthday and search functions just over 10 years old, this is still a field in the early stages of growth and value. There is much we can do to create greater inclusion in adoption and to drive for greater value across those sectors where broadband is already in use and this report includes a menu of serious options for consideration.
Future events
The “Broadband Adoption and Use: Bridging the Divide and Increasing the Intensity of Broadband Use Across All Sectors of the Economy” report will be publicly released Nov. 13 and will be showcased in live and webcast events at the FCC Headquarters on the same day at 1 p.m. EST. Please check the Knight Center website for more details, go to www.BB4US.net or contact Karen Archer Perry at kperry@knightcenter.org.
Tags: Alcatel-Lucent, American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, bandwidth, benton foundation, broadband, Broadband Adoption and Use, Broadband Adoption and Use Working Group, Broadband Expansion, Charles Benton, Communications Workers of America, digital, digital divide, economy, education, FCC, Federal Communications Commission, healthcare, ICT, Information and Communications Technology, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, Interoperability, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Karen Archer Perry, Kenneth Peres, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Link Hoewing, national broadband plan, Net Literacy, network, OneCommunity, PC Rebuilders and Recyclers, public safety, rural communities, stimulus, Telcordia, telemedicine, U.S. Broadband Coalition, underserved, Universal Service Funds, USDA Rural Health, utilities, Utilities Telecom Council, Verizon, Washington D.C. Posted in Digital news, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, broadband, national broadband plan | No Comments »
Thursday, September 24th, 2009
After more than 18 months of discussion and debate, the U.S. Broadband Coalition released its report on a national broadband strategy at a meeting at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Sept. 24.
Led by President Jim Baller, who has served as a contributor to the Knight Center of Digital Excellence blog and e-newsletter, the nonprofit coalition includes large and small communications providers, technology companies, manufacturers, labor unions, educational institutions, utilities, consumer groups, public interest organizations, units of state and local government, and other stakeholders committed to our broadband future. (For a more detailed history of the coalition, read Baller’s guest viewpoint “The birth of a broadband coalition.”)
The 49-page report includes sections on opportunities that universal, affordable broadband connectivity could create; federal policy options designed to stimulate broadband investment, adoption, use, availability, progress assessments and accountability; and a general set of overall plan goals, which include:
• Every American home, business and public and private institution should have access to affordable high-speed broadband connections to the Internet.
• Access to the Internet should, to the maximum feasible extent, be open to all users, service providers, content providers and application providers.
• Network operators must have the right to manage their networks responsibly, pursuant to clear and workable guidelines and standards.
• The Internet and broadband marketplace should be as competitive as reasonably possible.
• U.S. broadband networks should provide Americans with the network performance, capacity and connections they need to compete successfully in the global marketplace.
In addition, there are sections detailing more specific narrative goals, timetables for where the coalition believes the U.S. should be in 2015 and 2020 in terms of speed and availability, and how topics such as open access, network management and competition should be handled.
According to Baller, very few groups were calling for a national broadband strategy at the time his began this effort in early 2008. The report, which also includes a complete listing of all coalition members, shows how important the discussion has become and how many have come to the table to be a part of it. With the FCC tasked to prepare a national broadband plan by Feb. 17, the coalition’s work could play a major part in how that document is formed.
However, the coalition isn’t finished yet. A final, more thorough report is scheduled for a Nov. 1 release.
Tags: Baller Herbst Law Group, broadband, Broadband Adoption and Use, Broadband Expansion, digital, economy, FCC, Federal Communications Commission, infrastructure, innovation, ISPs, Jim Baller, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, national broadband plan, open Internet, open network, U.S. Broadband Coalition Posted in broadband, national broadband plan | 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
The Knight Center of Digital Excellence has been extremely active in helping its Knight communities participate in the first round of broadband stimulus funding by collaborating with like-minded organizations to create a host of innovative programs designed to create jobs and bolster local economies.
We also supported local groups with their own asks – including Philadelphia’s Digital Philadelphia initiative; Miami’s “Elevate Miami;” Miami-Dade County’s Public Safety/Special Purpose Broadband; Detroit Broadband LLC’s (Clearwire); St. Paul, Minn.; Duluth, Minn.; and Biloxi, Miss.
Our proposals included:
• Connect Your Community
• Miami-Dade Broadband Coalition Infrastructure Project
• Northeast South Dakota Rural Broadband Project
Connect Your Community
A Sustainable Broadband Adoption stimulus proposal, Connect Your Community (CYC) saw the Knight Center partner with a host of the nation’s top digital adoption experts to propose a program that would engage, train, equip and support new broadband users in multiple communities, including Aberdeen, S.D.; Akron, Ohio; Biloxi/Gulfport, Miss.; Bradenton, Fla.; Detroit; Lexington, Ky.; Miami; and St. Paul.
CYC would directly help more than 75,000 disadvantaged households benefit from Internet access through a high-touch, community-based, replicable approach. The program would include digital literacy training and support, creating about 136 direct jobs while generating another 50 indirect positions. The Knight Center has partnered with community agencies such as urban leagues, libraries, educational institutions, economic development groups and health and human services organizations that would carry out the work in each targeted region.
National collaborators that would support key aspects of CYC include the Benton Foundation; the Alliance for Community Media; PBS; PC Rebuilders and Recyclers; TechSoup; Angela Siefer, of ShinyDoor; Jim Baller, of Baller Herbst Law Group and the U.S. Broadband Coalition; and Karen Peltz Strauss, of KPS Consulting. Dr. Kate Williams, an assistant professor at the University of Illinois and a leading authority on program evaluation, would design evaluation methods for the project.
Miami-Dade Broadband Coalition Infrastructure Project
The Knight Center partnered with the Miami-Dade Broadband Coalition in the planned construction of a robust, open, carrier-neutral broadband network that would provide broadband services augmented by nearly 35 square miles of wireless Internet access to up to 900 community organizations and institutions while reaching more than 2 million residents. This project has the potential to serve as a model economic engine and platform for innovation for the healthcare, education, public safety, digital inclusion, biotechnology, research and e-government applications.
This infrastructure project is expected to create more than 1,150 immediate, high-paying jobs directly involved with the implementation of the project, and 575 indirect jobs as a result of project related activity. The estimated economic impact created by this project is projected to be more than $1 billion with an increase in direct annual income of more than $700 million.
The Knight Center and the Miami Dade Broadband Coalition submitted a proposal to the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program, requesting $64 million to cover close to 80 percent of the total project costs. If this funding is not obtained, the project will continue at a smaller scale.
Northeast South Dakota Rural Broadband Project
The Northeast South Dakota Rural Broadband Project is possible through a partnership between the Knight Center, TelServ Communications and the North East Council of Governments. The project aims to bring a wireless broadband super-highway linking 12 contiguous counties in rural Northeast South Dakota and provide broadband connectivity to more than 60,000 people. The Knight Center also worked with both partnering organizations to submit a Broadband Information Program application for funding.
In addition to the possible development and deployment of advanced public safety, e-government, telemedicine, agricultural, biotechnology and learning applications, the project is expected to generate an economic impact of more than $22 million a year, including preserving and creating more than 50 immediate, high-paying jobs directly involved with implementation and 470 indirect jobs.
These projects are just the beginning as rounds two and three should provide even more opportunities for Knight communities. The Knight Center of Digital Excellence is dedicated to helping our communities become connected communities. For more information on what the Knight Center is doing in your community and others, visit www.knightcenter.org.
Tags: Aberdeen, Akron, Alliance for Community Media, American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, Angela Siefer, Baller Herbst Law Group, bandwidth, benton foundation, Biloxi, BIP, Bradenton, broadband, Broadband Expansion, Broadband Initiatives Program, broadband stimulus funding, Broadband Technology Opportunities Program, BTOP, community, Connect Your Community, CYC, Detroit, digital, Digital Philadelphia, Dr. Kate Williams, Duluth, economy, education, electricity, Elevate Miami, Gulfport, healthcare, high-speed, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, Jim Baller, Karen Peltz Strauss, KCoDE, Knight, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, KPS Consulting, Lexington, Miami, Miami-Dade County, network, North East Council of Governments, Northeast South Dakota Rural Broadband Project, PBS, PC Rebuilders and Recyclers, Philadelphia, rural communities, ShinyDoor, South Dakota, St. Paul, stimulus, stimulus watch, TechSoup, telemedicine, TelServ Communications, U.S. Broadband Coalition, University of Illinois, utilities Posted in ARRA, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Stimulus Package, broadband | No Comments »
Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009
Guest viewpoint by Jim Baller, U.S. Broadband Coalition
Broadband connectivity to the Internet is rapidly becoming as critical to all walks of life as electricity has been for the last century. With the world growing increasingly competitive and dependent on knowledge-based industries, the nations that do best in providing their residents, businesses, and institutions affordable access to the fastest possible broadband connections will be the ones that are most successful in the years ahead.
Over the last decade, the U.S. has not fared well in the race for national broadband leadership. Unlike other leading nations, the U.S. adopted a hands-off policy toward broadband deployment, betting on the flawed assumption that competition between the cable and telephone industries would be sufficient to drive broadband deployment to acceptable levels. As a result, the U.S., once the undisputed world leader in broadband availability and adoption, has sunk to a mediocre 15th in broadband adoption among the 30 top industrial economies, and it is also lagging behind the leading nations on most of the other internationally accepted criteria of broadband success.
If the U.S. is to reverse these trends, we must have a bold and comprehensive national broadband strategy to guide our policies and action. Congress recognized as much in February 2009, when it included in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 a provision requiring the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to recommend a national broadband plan to Congress by February 2010.
Developing a nationwide consensus on the need for a national broadband strategy took a long time and many voices. I, for one, first called for a national broadband strategy in October 2004, during my keynote address at that year’s Fiber to the Home Conference. Two years later, my partner, Casey Lide, and I co-authored two lengthy papers on this issue, one detailing our country’s need for a fiber-based national strategy, and the other setting forth an eight-step plan for developing such a strategy.
At about the same time, FCC Commissioners Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein began to include calls for a national broadband strategy in most of their decisions and public statements. Nearly all of the presidential candidates, numerous members of Congress, and several prominent organizations began to do so as well.
At first, proponents of a national broadband strategy predictably argued that such a strategy should mirror their own traditional positions. To break through this logjam, Casey and I began to meet privately, first individually and then in small groups, with a wide range of stakeholders in America’s broadband future to determine whether real progress might be possible. When the group reached about 25 organizations, we circulated a confidential questionnaire to determine the nature and extent of potential consensus on a broad array of critical issues.
We found that there was much more existing and potential consensus on many of these issues than any of us had suspected. Real progress through real cooperation began to appear possible.
In July 2008, after a number of additional organizations joined our effort, we turned to developing a carefully worded joint “Call to Action” statement that would lay out several major points on which everyone could agree. This was a very difficult and time-consuming process. Kenneth Peres, an economist with the Communications Workers of America and the president of the Alliance for Public Technology, played a major role in this effort. Eventually it succeeded – again to the surprise of many.
Among other things, the statement reflected the group’s consensus that the U.S. urgently needs a national broadband strategy if it is to thrive in the emerging global economy. It also set forth the following five major goals as well as a framework for exploring the potential for further agreements:
No. 1: Every American home, business, and public and private institution should have access to affordable high-speed broadband connections to the Internet.
No. 2: Access to the Internet should, to the maximum feasible extent, be open to all users, service providers, content providers, and application providers.
No. 3: Network operators must have the right to manage their networks responsibly, pursuant to clear and workable guidelines and standards.
No. 4: The Internet and broadband marketplace should be as competitive as reasonably possible.
No. 5: U.S. broadband networks should provide Americans with the network performance, capacity, and connections they need to compete successfully in the global marketplace.
In early December 2008, on behalf of more than 50 organizations representing a cross-section of American life, we presented the Call to Action statement at an event on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. The signatories included prominent communications providers, high technology companies, manufacturers, consumers, labor unions, public interest groups, educators, state and local governments, utilities, content creators, foundations and other stakeholders in America’s broadband future.
The event received widespread, favorable media attention. The common theme of these reports was that scores of organizations that were traditionally vigorous opponents were united on the need for a national broadband strategy and were willing to cooperate to explore whether consensus was possible on the content of such a strategy. Before long, our group grew to more than 150 organizations and we named ourselves the “U.S. Broadband Coalition.”
Our next step was to form six working groups to address in greater detail the issues set forth in our Call to Action statement:
• The Needs Group is developing the case for a national broadband strategy, including why broadband connectivity to the Internet is essential throughout America, what’s at stake for the nation, and why a national broadband strategy is necessary.
• The Goals Group is focusing on defining what our national goals should be.
• The Metrics Group is exploring what data we should be collecting, analyzing, comparing and disseminating.
• The Availability Group is addressing supply-side barriers to the fulfillment of our national goals, as well as potential solutions to them.
• The Availability and Use Group is doing the same with respect to demand-side barriers and solutions.
• The Implementation Group is working on ways to put the potential solutions into effect.
This July, the coalition will meet in closed session to discuss our progress and determine where we agree and disagree. That will help us develop our final reports, which we will present at a public meeting in Washington, D.C., in September.
We hope to reach as much agreement on as many issues as possible. For issues on which cannot agree, we will try to provide thoughtful explanations of why the parties differ. Where possible, we will also suggest approaches that decision-makers might take to resolve our differences.
Our hope is that our reports and the dialogue at the conference will contribute to the FCC’s efforts in developing the National Broadband Plan that it will propose to Congress by February 2010 and to Congress’s subsequent deliberations on the proposed plan.
Two years ago, only a tiny number of voices were calling for a national broadband strategy. Today, we have national consensus on the need for such a strategy, and we are well on our way to developing one. To be sure, there are major differences among the key stakeholders that remain to be resolved. On some issues, intervention by the FCC and Congress will undoubtedly be necessary. But our progress to date has already made this effort worthwhile. Driven by a sense of common purpose, our participants are listening to each other with mutual respect and are responding to each other more constructively than they ever have done before. As a result, when we complete our process in September, we may well agree on many more issues than any of us had thought possible when we began.
Stay tuned.
Tags: American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, bandwidth, broadband, Broadband Expansion, Call to Action, Casey Lide, community, Congress, digital, digital divide, economy, education, FCC, high-speed, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, Jim Baller, Jonathan Adelstein, KCoDE, Kenneth Peres, Knight Center, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Michael Copps, network, OneCommunity, stimulus, stimulus watch, U.S. Broadband Coalition, Washington D.C. Posted in Digital news, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Opinion, Stimulus Package | No Comments »
Tuesday, April 14th, 2009
If you’re building broadband networks in your community, take note: The new Federal Communications Commission Notice of Inquiry asks for input on a national broadband policy. In doing so, the FCC poses questions that communities should ask themselves before planning investments in broadband. Two critical questions:
1) How should broadband capability be defined going forward, and what does it mean to have access to it?
2) To what extent should programs that address consumer training and education about broadband play a role in a broadband plan?
What’s exciting is the promise of an end result that will allow us to communicate and share information on levels previously unimaginable. And that’s not all. The FCC envisions high-speed ubiquitous broadband helping to restore our nation’s economic wellbeing while opening doors of opportunity for more Americans - no matter who they are, where they are, or how they live.
Among other things, the FCC is seeking public comment on the following issues:
• Whether to adopt different definitions or standards of what constitutes broadband based on the technology being used to provide the service or the context in which the service is applied, or some combination of both;
• The extent to which access to broadband hinges on affordability; and
• The value of open networks as an effective and efficient mechanism for ensuring broadband access for all Americans, and specifically on how the term “open” should be defined.
The Knight Center of Digital Excellence is working with a widely representative group, the U.S. Broadband Coalition, to develop recommendations for Broadband Adoption and Use. A leader in that effort, Jim Baller, launched the Coalition before the FCC was commissioned to create a national broadband policy . From what we hear, the Coalition’s recommendations are expected to grab the attention of FCC policymakers.
We welcome your thoughts on what you’d like to see included in those recommendations.
Tags: bandwidth, broadband, Broadband Adoption and Use, Broadband Expansion, community, digital, economy, FCC, high-speed, innovation, Internet, Jim Baller, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, national broadband policy, network, Notice of Inquiry, OneCommunity, U.S. Broadband Coalition Posted in Digital news, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, OneCommunity, Opinion | No Comments »
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