The Columbus Dispatch

Private sector best to close gap

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The Dispatch’s Dec. 11 editorial, “Help bridge digital divide,” urged the legislatur­e to prioritize two bills aimed at “closing the digital divide” in areas without sufficient broadband access.

This is a worthwhile goal. As the editorial states, having major broadband gaps in the state does create economic hardships; however, when dealing with government interventi­on into the marketplac­e, the devil is in the details.

Any effort that uses government funding or, even more problemati­cally, leads to actual government ownership of broadband assets should be viewed with extraordin­ary caution. As a forthcomin­g report from The Buckeye Institute shows, government-owned networks often are inefficien­t and have trouble enticing enough consumers to voluntaril­y subscribe. This leads to opaque subsidies which leaves less money for core government services.

A recent University of Pennsylvan­ia Law School research report reviewed 20 government-owned networks that reported their financial results separately from their utilities. In 11 cases the network generated a negative cash flow, another five would take more than 100 years to recover costs, and two would take more than 60 years. ( https:// www.law.upenn.edu/live/ files/6611-report-municipal -fiber-in-the-unitedstat­es

Ohio should look to models that utilize the innovation­s of the private sector to expand broadband internet service and not rely on taxpayer dollars to build, fund and own inefficien­t networks.

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