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National Broadband Plan: Rural Electrification all over again

By | March 15, 2010, 6:31 AM PDT

On Tuesday, the FCC will roll out its National Broadband Plan to provide high speed Internet to the American masses that don’t have it and to speed it up for those who do. It’s high time we have something like this.

Let's do for broadband what we did for electricity. credit: TVA: Electricity for All

Let's do for broadband what we did for electricity. credit: TVA: Electricity for All

To solicit feedback, FCC chairman Julius Genachowski has been running a so-called Citizen Tube page where he was taking questions in text and video about broadband to influence the plan. It’s closed to questions now given the plan is only 24 hours away, but I found the “Access and Affordability” section most interesting. Others include Mobile and Wireless, Security and Privacy, Digital Economy, Internet in Schools and Other.

You can get a feel for Genachowski’s priorities from a release he put out in February and the video below (warning: it’s an hour and nineteen minutes…you better have a gigabit per second). They are very Obama-esque. You know: fix everything right now. I love it.

Affordability and Access (2,007 votes on 52 questions from 580 people) hits home more than all the other issues combined. The questions at Citizen Tube complain about several things: cost and how providers continually jack up the price; poor rural access and how that contributes to dwindling populations; and why other countries like Korea and Denmark are so much further ahead on higher speeds when the Internet, after all, was invented here.

“Why is Internet so much faster in other countries than in the U.S.? What is the FCC doing to bring access speeds up to par” asks Dan from California.

“What about our most rural towns? We have no broadband or mobile phone access. Our businesses and children are leaving,” comments Evslin in Vermont.

Read the questions for yourself and maybe you can identify with the same concerns. It must be awful to feel like a third world country when you’re living in the U.S. Imagine if YOU didn’t have access to the cloud or reading these pearls of wisdom.

I’ve been lucky to have broadband since 1995, but until last November there was only one game in town which after a half dozen mergers and acquisitions ended being Comcast. Indeed, my small town of 4,000 was one of the first in the nation to get broadband.

As soon as Verizon FIOS came to my town, I booted Comcast. While FIOS is a somewhat better service, I will be paying roughly the same as I was for Comcast when most of the promotions to lure me in run out after 3-6 months. Between mobile and FIOS, I shell out north of $300 a month to Verizon, now. While that’s a lot, it’s also a reflection of new priorities.

These large providers claim they have to recoup and profit from the billions it cost to build out the massive network infrastructure to supply millions of customers with Internet and mobile phone access. I suppose they do under the strictures of a free economy.

That was also true in 1935 when the FDR created the Rural Electrification Administration. While 90 per cent of urban dwellers enjoyed modern electricity, 90 per cent of the rural population endured life without it. That’s unimaginable now. Just ask all the people in the Northeast who’s power was knocked out by this past weekend’s storm.

“Private utility companies, who supplied electric power to most of the nation’s consumers, argued that it was too expensive to string electric lines to isolated rural farmsteads. Anyway, they said, most farmers, were too poor to be able to afford electricity. The Roosevelt Administration believed that if private enterprise could not supply electric power to the people, then it was the duty of the government to do so,” according to a history of the Tennessee Valley Authority.

Enter the Government’s “duty” to execute a Nation Broadband Plan. It’s not that radical given that developed countries already have broadband plans of their own, knowing full well, fast and available access to the Internet is one of the keys to a high standard of living.

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John Dodge

About John Dodge

John Dodge was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2009 to 2010.

John Dodge

John Dodge

Contributing Editor, Technology

John Dodge has written for the Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, PC Week (now eWeek), EDN, Design News, Electronic Business, Bio-IT World, Health-IT World, Lowell Sun, Haverhill Gazette and Newburyport Daily News. He is based in Massachusetts.

Follow him on Twitter.

John Dodge

John Dodge

John Dodge prides himself on completely independent journalism. His opinions, observations and reporting are not influenced by any financial holdings. He holds no shares in computer, electronics, software or Internet companies. He also has no business affiliations with organizations except with those for which he creates content as a freelancer.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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0 Votes
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Question:
In all these countries where "everyone" supposedly has faster Internet than we do, how available or fast is that access outside of urban areas?

Or is it that in these countries, most of the population is densely pack into urban centers unlike America, which has a very decentralized population?

One of my plans is to live far from the city and its noise and dysfunction. One of the limitations to that dream is reliable broadband access. It will be great when the taxpayers make my plans possible.
Posted by JohnMcGrew@...
15th Mar 2010
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RE: National Broadband Plan: Rural Electrification all over again
There is broadband going thru rural America and not thru the Federal Government at all but an ISP connected to the electric coops. They are not interested in the Federal Government doing anything as this ISP is putting in broadband as fast as possible and it is is first rate. Furthermore they don't have to beg for the service and they are giving just what they want. They are dead set against getting any help from the Federal Government and they are doing it under their own bootstraps. They are also getting a better system then the cities and suburbs have and don't want to go thru any justification then what they do with this one ISP. So the bottom line the plan is not worth anything as they are doing it on their own.
Posted by marvin25
16th Mar 2010
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RE: National Broadband Plan: Rural Electrification all over again
Having had high speed internet from multiple vendors since 1992, I was shocked, stunned and, frankly, freaked out when I moved this last year. When I call my previous provider to have them move my service (they do service the cities in the surrounding area, so I was not just being naive here), I was told they didn't service the rural community I was moving to. Called my cable provider, again, no. I was able to find service from a local telephone company (really, a local telephone company?), but the cost was nearly prohibitive. Eventually, a different cable provider reached town and now I pay a tidy sum for broadband. Much more that I was used to for certain.

Long story short, there ARE places, even towns without good, inexpensive broadband.
Posted by cgapperi
16th Mar 2010
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RE: National Broadband Plan: Rural Electrification all over again
Does anyone here honestly believe that the government can give broadband access to all of us less expensively than the providers we have now? I realize that there is no profit motive but the level of corruption in our government ( yes repubs and dems ) is of far greater cost than profit. Think about it.

James
Posted by james@...
16th Mar 2010
0 Votes
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RE: National Broadband Plan: Rural Electrification all over again
If this is the prevailing attitude as regards infrastructure of common interest and will not be changed quickly, it is only a matter of time that the US ends up as an African style third world country.
Posted by info@...
18th Mar 2010
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