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Broadband for Better Communities

In the 21st century, high-speed Internet access is no longer a luxury amenity, but rather an essential service for homes and businesses in this interconnected world. No other technology has produced as much innovation, competition and economic growth.

Congressional letter to the new Administration, January 30, 2017

Fiber Crew installing fiber cable underneath the streets of Manhattan.

In today’s economy, broadband access is as critical to a community’s prosperity as it is to a company’s bottom-line. That access, however, is not fully developed nor equally available.

Residents in rural areas, for example, are less likely than their urban counterparts to have access to a wide variety of Internet-access devices and online services and functions, according to a 2016 report on “The State of the Urban/Rural Digital Divide” by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.

Even in tech-pioneering California, the digital divide persists for both rural communities and low-income neighborhoods. Less than half (47%) of the state’s rural population has the same Internet access as urban areas, according to a California Public Utilities Commission report, and the state is not on track to meet its goal of 98% broadband access by 2017.

More than 618,800 households were estimated to be unserved or underserved (connected to the Internet at home only with a smartphone) statewide. Accessing the Internet only through a smartphone makes it more difficult for a student to do homework or an adult to acquire workforce skills or apply for a job. These “underconnected” residents don’t have access to the full range of digital technologies and therefore fewer opportunities to benefit from California’s economic prosperity.

Ways Californians Report Being Disadvantaged Due to Lack of Internet Access at Home

In California, the groups most likely to have home broadband connectivity only through smartphones are adults who have not graduated from high school (29%), households whose total annual income is less than $22,000 (25%), Latinos (24%), Spanish-speaking households (30%) and households whose annual income is less than $40,000 (19%), according to the 2016 annual digital divide survey by the Field Poll.

Broadband Internet Connectivity at Home (blue bars: those with Internet access; green bars: those without Internet access)
California Emerging Technology Fund, the Field Poll, 2016

Broadband infrastructure is greatly needed to improve access, speed and reliability for businesses and communities. It also helps farmers to adopt the innovative technologies transforming the food and agricultural industry. For all Californians, it can provide better access to e-health, distance learning, e-commerce, and public safety and other services.

Economic and environmental benefits

Critical to all aspects of California’s future, investments in broadband infrastructure and digital-access initiatives are fundamental to sustainable economic growth and global competitiveness.

Research indicates communities that improve their broadband service increase their jobs base and the number of businesses, generating hundreds of thousands of new jobs and billions of dollars for the California economy.

While better broadband access benefits all communities, it is especially critical for a changing agricultural economy.

California has the nation’s largest agricultural economy, totaling more than $47 billion, and ranks 9th globally when compared against entire nations. In 2011, the California Community Colleges estimated that the entire value chain of the food and agriculture cluster – which encompasses production, processing and packaging, distribution and support services – accounted for almost 2.5 million jobs.

Broadband infrastructure allows farmers to use water, fertilizer and fuel use more efficiently through remote sensing and monitoring technologies. The result is increased yields, better monitoring for food safety and security, and expanded access to market and distribution networks. Emerging agriculture and production-driven technologies depend on the wireless transmission of data for economic growth and sustainability.

Expanding broadband access is also good for public health and the environment, with modern approaches to e-government, telehealth, telecommuting, smart buildings and smart grids that help California communities reduce its carbon footprint.

Source: California Emerging Technology Fund

Strategies for improving broadband access

Closing the digital divide will require much greater investment from local, state and federal partners to support private-public partnerships, streamline permitting requirements for broadband infrastructure, provide rights-of-way for broadband providers, and develop “dig once” policies for broadband infrastructure that can reduce costs and environmental impacts.

The California Emerging Technology Fund’s “Getting Connected for Economic Prosperity and Quality of Life: A Resource Guide for Local and Regional Government Leaders to Promote Broadband Deployment and Adoption” highlights a number of steps that communities can take to increase broadband access by upgrading existing infrastructure and investing in next-generation technologies:

Land Use and Smart Infrastructure

Telecommuting

Public Services and Digital Inclusion

Smart Housing

Digital Literacy and Workforce Development

Designation of Broadband Leader

Interagency Cooperation

On the path to equal access for equitable communities

Ensuring that all residents have high-quality Internet access is a matter of social equity. Expanding broadband into underserved and unserved homes, schools and businesses will help close gaps in access to digital technologies as well as gaps in access to other basics like healthy foods, transportation, quality healthcare, good jobs and banking services. Today, education – a critical step toward individual and community prosperity – requires basic digital literacy and access to technology tools. It is imperative in all these aspects of our resident’s lives that we provide equal access to 21st-century pathways for success.

Resources