Herald-Dispatch
West Virginia's 2022 broadband bill includes more consumer protections, accountability for broadband providers
The West Virginia Legislature finished work on a bill that lawmakers said is one more significant step toward ensuring West Virginians have reliable internet access. House Bill 4001 establishes means for the state to map out certain infrastructure resources, sets parameters on broadband providers' use of federal money, and providers consumer protections for West Virginia broadband customers.
Dispute over broadband grant erupts in Huntington
A dispute has erupted over a $2.5 million POWER grant from the Appalachian Regional Commission that would deliver high-speed broadband to Huntington, West Virginia. Huntington Mayor Steve Williams says Comcast and corporate telecommunications lobbyists are actively trying to stop the city from receiving the grant funding for its “Thundercloud” project. “Unfortunately, we are learning that Comcast, which only provides a fraction of the level of high-speed broadband that they claim to provide, is actively trying to torpedo this project and our grant application,” Mayor Williams said.
Rural students struggle to succeed without internet connection
Schools transitioned online as COVID-19 cases across the nation rose, but for some students in the Tri-State (Ohio-Kentucky-West Virginia), the transition didn’t come without trouble. As students grapple with how they will be able to attend class and meet deadlines in this new normal, educators like Spanish professor Tim Mollet, of Ohio University Southern, are trying to get creative. “I’ve even considered snail mail,” Mollet said. Schools like Ohio University Southern and Boyd County High School are offering up their parking lots as a temporary solution.