Marysville Appeal-Democrat

DIVIDE: California Advanced Service Fund

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“One of the biggest things has to do with safety. Between the sheriff’s office, the fire department, or just for education, without the infrastruc­ture, you are limited in what you can do in the foothills, and that’s a big piece of the puzzle,” Fletcher said.

A bill co-authored by local Assemblyma­n James Gallagher is looking to correct that. If approved by California lawmakers, the bill – AB 1665, also referred to as the “Internet For All Now Act of 2017” – would allocate $330 million to build new broadband infrastruc­ture, not just in Yuba County, but in other digitaldis­advantaged areas throughout the state.

Gallagher’s office cited a recent UC Berkeley poll that found 87 percent of California­ns have access to a high-speed internet connection at home. Of those respondent­s, 18 per- cent only had internet access through a smartphone, and the rest had broadband access through a computing device.

Another study done in April 2016 by the California Public Utilities Commission focused more on rural areas, where 43 percent of households reported internet access was unavailabl­e, or unreliable, where they lived – a total of 424,000 households.

If it becomes law, the act would extend the soon-to-expire California Advanced Service Fund to support broadband infrastruc­ture deployment in under-connected rural areas and disadvanta­ged communitie­s.

“We look at this as a basic infrastruc­ture issue of the 21st century,” Gallagher said.

The bill’s end goal is to reach 98 percent household connectivi­ty to high-speed internet per region.

“In town, a lot of people have access to providers like Comcast, but as you get out on the periphery, there are areas that just don’t have access, or at the very most they have DSL, which is not very fast and is spotty,” Gallagher said.

The bill passed the state Assembly on June 1. The Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities and Communicat­ions is expected to discuss the bill on today.

Gallagher said he is hopeful the bill – which has received bipartisan support – will be passed before the California Legislatur­e takes about a month-long recess at the end of July.

“I hope we can see something get done before the break. There is the possibilit­y that we could have some obstacles over in the Senate, but I hope we don’t,” Gallagher said. “We had a pretty good coalition in the Assembly. We are going to push hard and hopefully get it signed by the governor.”

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