Monday, March 4, 2024
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For the First Time, All States will have a Plan to Address Digital Equity
Digital Equity and Adult Education
Technology Education Programs in Prisons increase Prosocial Behaviors and Computing Attitudes
Digital Equity
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Digital Equity
All 50 States, DC, and Puerto Rico have submitted their Digital Equity Plans to NTIA for acceptance. This is a milestone moment in closing the digital divide. For the first time in our nation’s history, each state will have a plan to connect communities with the resources they need to achieve digital equity. That’s never been true before, and it’s an exciting indicator of how far we’ve come as a nation in acknowledging and addressing this challenge. 2024 is a big year for digital equity where we’ll start investing millions of dollars to empower communities with the skills, devices, and capacity needed for people to thrive online. This year alone, nearly $800 million will be available to states through our State Capacity Grant program when we launch our first funding opportunity this year. Along the way, we are not losing sight of why this work matters. In an increasingly digital world, communities need access to affordable, reliable, high-speed Internet, regardless of their background or circumstances.
Strong partnerships and innovative community solutions are key for organizations looking to advance adult education opportunities using upcoming Digital Equity Act funds. This was the message of Digital Equity Champions for All Learners: Preparing Adult Education, a webinar hosted by the Department of Education’s Office of Educational Technology (OET) in partnership with the Coalition on Adult Basic Education (COABE) and World Education. The webinar, part of a series on the subject in advance of the COABE National Conference later this month, featured a number of “possibility models” of successful and replicable strategies for closing the digital access divide. In each model, coalition-building and sustainable partnerships were crucial to maintaining digital inclusion work.
Currently, the majority of incarcerated people in the United States cannot access consistent, high-quality education. When they are released, they often lack skills that are in high demand by employers. Unsurprisingly, 75 percent of returning citizens are still unemployed one year post-release, and over 67 percent of returning citizens are re-arrested within three years post-release. To curb this cycle, experts recommend comprehensive reforms, which include expanding educational and vocational training opportunities within correctional facilities—a recommendation that is getting increased attention as a consequence of Second Chance Pell. Over the past three years, a coding education program has launched in medium- to low-level correctional facilities in Missouri. This prison education program has positive impacts that extend beyond employment and recidivism. Indeed, participating in the program was associated with significant increases in prosocial behaviors and computing attitudes.
Broadband Funding
Biden-Harris Administration Announces Tens of Millions of Dollars to Help Close the Digital Divide in Pennsylvania as Part of President Biden’s Investing in America Agenda
The Biden-Harris Administration announced the approval of $20 million for digital connectivity projects in Pennsylvania under the US Department of the Treasury’s Capital Projects Fund (CPF). The award will fund Pennsylvania’s Digital Access Opportunity Grant program, through which the commonwealth will partner with community anchor institutions (CAIs) to increase access to laptops, tablets, desktop computers, and Wi-Fi devices to individuals in Pennsylvania. Devices will be available for use in home or public spaces, such as schools and libraries, through loan programs from CAIs. CAIs will also offer digital literacy training. Pennsylvania estimates this program will benefit approximately 12,000 individuals annually. The American Rescue Plan’s Capital Projects Fund provides a total of $10 billion to states, territories, freely associated states, and Tribal governments to fund critical capital projects that expand economic opportunities and provide internet connectivity in communities with unmet needs. Through high-speed internet, multi-purpose community facilities, and digital technology investments, CPF funding is both closing the digital divide and bringing workforce, education, and health care services to communities in need.
California Public Utilities Commission Delivers $7 Million Boost for High-Speed Internet Projects in Rural Communities
The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) delivered a $7 million boost for high-speed internet projects in rural communities across the state. The newest multi-million-dollar grant award is a continuation of the CPUC’s work to support California’s Broadband For All initiative. Funding will go to three projects:
- Equal Access Summits to the Sea Project (Up to $5.65 million): This initiative enables Cruzio Media, Inc. to construct a middle-mile and last-mile broadband network that will bring high speed internet service to unserved households in Monterey, San Mateo, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz Counties.
- ConnectAnza Phase 3 Project ($688,431): Anza Electric Cooperative, Inc. will place 3.74 linear miles of fiber on existing poles to construct a fiber-to-the-home project to help bring broadband access to San Jacinto Mountain communities. Through approval of a deviation from CPUC rules governing the placement of overhead facilities within designated State Scenic Highways, CPUC staff will now release the funds for the project that were allocated on Nov. 30, 2023.
- Mobile Home Park 1 Project (Up to $889,083): The CPUC’s actions enable Kwikbit Internet, Inc. to deploy a fixed wireless network to bring high-speed internet service to 197 unserved households located within four Manufactured Home Parks in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Diego Counties.
23,269,550. This was the number of households participating in the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) when enrollment closed on February 8th, 2024. It is more than one out of every six households in the United States. But 23,269,550 is also a very high precipice from which to fall. If the ACP ends, all enrollees will experience some combination of bill shock, disconnections, financial sacrifice, service downgrades, and/or household debt. Any successor program will have to start from zero and rebuild in the shadow of Congress’ broken commitments. 23,269,550 households is a large and diverse group of people. Yet we know four things about nearly all of them:
- They are in difficult financial circumstances. An individual enrollee likely makes less than $20,000/year; an enrolled family of four likely makes less than $40,000/year. For people in such circumstances, survey after survey after survey after survey after survey finds that cost is a primary barrier to internet adoption.
- They invested significant time in the ACP. Some ACP applications took 30-45 minutes, others spanned multiple days. Many require additional documentation, and all require annual recertification. Even if every application took only five minutes, the collective amount of time spent enrolling would total over two centuries.
- They trusted the government with their financial stability. Each enrollee accepted responsibility for a bill that the government promised to help them them pay. As a result, enrollees are collectively on the hook for about $700 million a month. For now, they can freely change or cancel their service contract, but this protection only lasts as long as the ACP does. If the ACP ends, the bill will fall squarely on enrollees' shoulders.
- They currently have internet service. Remarkably, 23,269,550 of our country’s hardest-to-connect households now reliably have internet service thanks to the ACP. The vast majority are already using this connectivity for education, healthcare, and work. As state digital equity programs roll out, the positive impacts of this connectivity will grow even larger.
The ACP is on course to end on April 30th. If it does, we will no longer know that these households have internet service. Instead, all we will know is that internet service is hard, if not impossible, for them to afford.
T-Mobile recently announced that it was able to aggregate six channels of spectrum into one bandwidth signal to a customer. The ability to wed channels together was one of the promises of the original 5G specification. The test combined two channels of 2.5 GHz, two channels of PCS spectrum, and two channels of AWS spectrum, creating an effective 245 MHz of aggregated channels. T-Mobile worked with Ericsson and Qualcomm to make this work and was able to create a single 3.6 Gbps connection from a cell tower. The tests looked at using aggregated channels for download or upload. The original 5G specifications envisioned that 5G could be used to give each customer exactly the amount of bandwidth that is needed for a transaction. The 5G vision was to minimize the impact on a cell tower by getting transactions done quickly, thus freeing up the spectrum to use for somebody else. The original 5G specification also went the opposite direction with network slicing to be able to give a customer a tiny bandwidth channel if that is all that is needed. The primary purpose for both of these changes was to be as efficient at a cell tower as possible, which would mean that more customers could be connected at any time, particularly at busy times of the day. It's hard to imagine what T-Mobile has in mind for this capability—it's a great solution for short bursts, but it could be an expensive and wasteful use of valuable spectrum longer term.
Benton (www.benton.org) provides the only free, reliable, and non-partisan daily digest that curates and distributes news related to universal broadband, while connecting communications, democracy, and public interest issues. Posted Monday through Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments, policy issues, and other related news events. While the summaries are factually accurate, their sometimes informal tone may not always represent the tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang (headlines AT benton DOT org), Grace Tepper (grace AT benton DOT org), and Zoe Walker (zwalker AT benton DOT org) — we welcome your comments.
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