Walker County Messenger

Gov. Kemp signs broadband bill focusing on rural Georgia

- By Dave Williams

tachments to their utility poles.

High pole attachment fees have been a key obstacle to extending broadband technology into underserve­d rural communitie­s in Georgia.

The goal of the Georgia Broadband Opportunit­y

Act is to lower those fees to encourage telecoms to invest in delivering the service in rural counties while not making them so low they force EMCs to raise electric rates for their existing customers.

“The EMCs eagerly look forward to working with the Public Service Commission as an integral partner to expand access to broadband in rural Georgia, while keeping our neediest and most vulnerable citizens from shoulderin­g the burden of that progress,” Dennis Chastain, president and CEO of Georgia EMC said Wednesday, Aug. 5.

“The EMCs are fully invested with staff and technical resources dedicated to one goal: working with PSC commission­ers and staff to help solve the digital divide while simultaneo­usly protecting rural Georgians, our EMC members, from unfair subsidies and increasing energy costs. This is even more critical now, as entire communitie­s of EMC consumers struggle from the financial fallout of COVID-19.”

Despite arguments from opponents that the bill would hurt the pocketbook­s of EMC customers and give the PSC unpreceden­ted power, the measure cleared the Georgia House of Representa­tives on Crossover Day in March, the deadline by which bills must pass at least one legislativ­e chamber.

The Senate then passed it during the final week of the 2020 General Assembly session in June.

The bill was sponsored by Rep. Ron Stephens, R-Savannah.

 ??  ?? Ron Stephens
Ron Stephens

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