Chattanooga Times Free Press

Committee debates rural broadband bill

- BY TYLER JETT STAFF WRITER Contact staff writer Tyler Jett at 423-757-6476 or tjett@timesfreep­ress.com. Follow him on twitter @LetsJett.

As they debate whether to let electric membership corporatio­ns sell broadband internet, some Georgia lawmakers are debating whether they demand enough in return.

State Sen. Bill Cowsert, R-Athens, amended a bill Tuesday morning requiring that EMCs provide highspeed internet to all residents now without access. The bill is supposed to provide broadband to more rural areas.

Right now, lawmakers argue, many rural residents don’t have access to fast internet because companies believe the investment will lose money. Homes in those communitie­s are too spread out; there aren’t enough customers to pay back the infrastruc­ture costs.

But the bill’s sponsor, state Sen. Steve Gooch, said Cowsert’s amendment is too tough on EMCs. With this requiremen­t, he argued, they won’t even try to add broadband at all.

“That’s a poison pill in this bill,” Gooch, R-Dahlonega, said during a Senate Regulated Industries & Utilities Committee hearing Tuesday. “And in my opinion, we might as well stop now and go home, unless we’re going to require [private companies] to do the same thing. Then you level the playing field.”

The committee did not vote on the bill Tuesday. It will revisit it Thursday.

But some committee members argued that the requiremen­t strikes at the spirit of EMCs, which were created by the Georgia General Assembly as nonprofit organizati­ons in 1937. Thirty-six years later, the General Assembly passed an act that gave the EMCs a monopoly on electric service in different regions of the state.

Cowsert, the committee’s sponsor, said Tuesday the general assembly gave the nonprofits that advantage in exchange for absorbing the cost of providing electricit­y in rural areas.

Jason Bragg, vice president of government­al regulation­s for Georgia EMC, said the corporatio­ns would probably not expand if required to give broadband to every customer.

“In a perfect world, that’s what you would want to do,” he said. “Absent a clear business plan that makes sense, I just don’t think it’s possible for us unless the state is prepared to offer — the state or the feds or whoever, prepared to offer — millions and millions of dollars to do that.”

He said EMCs would need time to slowly build out broadband plans. Eventually, he said, they might be able to expand to the more secluded, more expensive parts of their service areas.

“How long do you think that’s going to take?” Cowsert asked. “Do you have any ideas?”

“I don’t,” Bragg said.

Later, Cowsert told Bragg, “We as a state have pretty much invested in EMCs by giving you monopolies and allowing you to have no competitio­n. You, using that monopoly power, have built out an infrastruc­ture that is ideally suited to provide broadband service.”

State Sens. John Kennedy, R-Macon, and P.K. Martin, R-Lawrencevi­lle, both agreed with Cowsert during Tuesday’s meeting.

Even though the legislatur­e has not carved out a law on the issue, some EMCs have provided broadband in Georgia for years. But to apply for federal grants that could help expand service, the EMCs need specific legislatio­n written in the state code.

In March, the federal government gave the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e $600 million for broadband expansion. Bragg said the federal government set aside another $1.75 billion as part of its farm relief bill in December.

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