Detroit Free Press

Rural areas to get more grants for broadband

$759M in funding part of larger infrastruc­ture push

- Josh Boak

RALEIGH, N.C. – The Agricultur­e Department announced Thursday it is making available $759 million in grants and loans to enable rural communitie­s to access high-speed internet, part of the broader $65 billion push for high-speed connectivi­ty from last year’s infrastruc­ture law.

Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack and White House senior adviser Mitch Landrieu unveiled the grants during a visit to North Carolina.

There are 49 recipients in 24 states. One is North Carolina’s AccessOn Networks, which will receive $17.5 million to provide broadband service to 100 businesses, 76 farms and 22 educationa­l facilities in the state’s Halifax and Warren counties. Both counties are rural and have predominan­tly Black population­s.

“Rural America needs this,” Vilsack said. “Rural America deserves this.” He made the announceme­nt in front of John Deere equipment, noting that rural areas tend to be where the electricit­y for cities is generated and where city dwellers and suburbanit­es go for vacations.

The announceme­nt and visit to North Carolina, a state with an open U.S. Senate seat, come as President Joe Biden and other top Democratic officials are trying to sell their achievemen­ts to voters before the Nov. 8 midterm elections. Landrieu, the infrastruc­ture coordinato­r and a former New Orleans mayor, told reporters on a Wednesday call that the Biden administra­tion has already released $180 billion for various infrastruc­ture projects.

The administra­tion is specifical­ly targeting support for small towns and farm communitie­s, places that generally favor Republican­s over Democrats.

“Rural communitie­s are the backbone of our nation, but for too long they’ve been left behind and they have been underrecog­nized,”

Landrieu said. “We all know how essential the internet is in order to access lifesaving telemedici­ne, to tap into economic opportunit­y, to connect with loved ones, to work on precision agricultur­e and so much more. That’s just beyond unacceptab­le that that’s not available to rural America.”

Vilsack said he and Landrieu would “learn firsthand” from people in North Carolina about the opportunit­ies internet access can create.

They met with state and local officials, including North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, at Wake Technical Community College. They will also hold a town hall in Elm City.

Cooper attributed the broadband advances to the pandemic shutdowns that made people more reliant on the internet.

“It tossed us into the future by about a decade – we had to make something good out of something bad,” he said. He added that 1 million of the state’s residents have been on the wrong side of the digital divide, something the build-out will help to correct.

Neither candidate in North Carolina’s U.S. Senate race – Democrat Cheri Beasley and Republican Ted Budd – was slated to appear at the events.

Vilsack said that past trips show how broadband connectivi­ty is starting to make a difference. While in Nevada this summer, he heard from people in the town of Lovelock who plan to use the improved internet to enhance their emergency response services and tourism opportunit­ies as well as help high school students who are earning college credit online.

 ?? ALLEN G. BREED/AP ?? U.S. Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack, from right, North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper and White House adviser Mitch Landrieu look at internet equipment.
ALLEN G. BREED/AP U.S. Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack, from right, North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper and White House adviser Mitch Landrieu look at internet equipment.

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