San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Texas plans to spend billions on broadband — but who will get it?

- By Jayme Lozano Carver and Pooja Salhotra — Megan Rodriguez The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media organizati­on that informs Texans about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

LUBBOCK — The bright blue spots in Floydada on the Texas Broadband Developmen­t Map indicate that it is mostly connected to the World Wide Web.

A drive around the small town in the High Plains reveals there is much to be desired.

“In the city itself, we have decent coverage,” said Ryan Crowe, executive director for the Floydada Economic Developmen­t Corp. “But it seems like you get right outside of the city and it’s going to drop off to nothing.”

Crowe is not the only one who questions the accuracy of the state’s broadband map. Since it was released earlier this year, Texans from across the state have disputed the results, saying they don’t have service where the map says they do. There have been doubts over the federal broadband map as well, which will be used to determine how much broadband funding each state will receive from the bipartisan infrastruc­ture law passed in 2021.

“There’s no way Floydada is as covered as it says it is, it just can’t be,” Crowe said as he looked over the recently updated FCC map.

Last month, Texas lawmakers passed a momentous bill, filed by state Rep. Trent Ashby of Lufkin, that allocates $1.5 billion to expand internet availabili­ty across the state through the new Broadband Infrastruc­ture Fund. If approved by voters in November, that money will be added to an undetermin­ed amount of federal funding the state will receive. That allocation is slated to be announced by June 30.

Those funds will be distribute­d based on where the broadband maps show service is needed, which is primarily in rural areas where a lack of money has essentiall­y halted progress in developmen­t. However, there have been more than 2,200 challenges filed to the state’s map, according to data submitted to the state comptrolle­r’s office.

With billions of dollars on the line and 7 million Texans needing to be connected, broadband service providers and local officials are worried about how far that money can be stretched and whether it will go to the places that need it most.

“There’s a lack of understand­ing on what the solution is going to be in the rural areas,” said Charlie Cano, CEO of Etex Telephone Cooperativ­e. “The problem is going to be ongoing support and maintenanc­e.”

The amount approved by the Texas Legislatur­e is substantia­lly lower than the $5 billion Ashby initially proposed at the start of the recently

While state lawmakers have focused their attention regarding broadband internet access largely on rural areas outside the so-called Texas Triangle, parts of San Antonio have long dealt with slow online connectivi­ty or no access at all

San Antonio and Bexar County leaders are working with AT&T and Spectrum, respective­ly, to get reliable internet to people struggling with inadequate or no service. Almost 30,000 single- and multifamil­y homes and businesses could benefit.

In April, the San Antonio City Council approved a nearly $9 million contract for AT&T to lay fiber for 20,200 single-family homes and other locations on San Antonio’s East, West and South sides.

The project is expected to start late this year and take about two years to complete, said Brian Dillard, the city’s chief innovation officer. The total cost of the project for San Antonio is $22 million, with $13 million coming from AT&T and about $8.88 million from the city.

Meanwhile, the county is expected to contract with Spectrum to provide better service to more than 8,700 locations, likely with fiber.

concluded legislativ­e session. Ashby proposed using money from the state’s Economic Stabilizat­ion Fund, known as the rainy day fund. However, during negotiatio­ns among lawmakers, the Legislatur­e decided to use the state’s general operating fund, which put a limit on how much money could be used for broadband.

“Given the reliance on general revenue to fund our state’s existing obligation­s, we needed to be as conservati­ve as possible with state resources,” Ashby said in an emailed statement. “That said, I’m pleased that we were able to dedicate $1.5 billion in state funds to help expand broadband and telecommun­ications services across the state.”

Connecting the entire state is going to take a lot of time and more money than what was approved this session, however, particular­ly because of supply chain and labor shortages nationwide. This is according to Texas Comptrolle­r Glenn Hegar, who also oversees the Broadband Developmen­t Office, establishe­d during the 2021 legislativ­e session.

“This is a 10-year-window project, in my opinion, so this will be an ongoing process to get the state connected,” Hegar told the Tribune. “It’s really impossible to get all of this done, with all the internet providers we will be working with, to get it accomplish­ed in a two-year window for the next biennium.”

The Legislatur­e passed a bill this session that would force the Broadband Developmen­t Office to prioritize infrastruc­ture projects that use fiber technology. Fiber can deliver speeds that are significan­tly higher than DSL or satellite, but laying infrastruc­ture for it is costly and may be unattainab­le in rural areas.

“The reality is that you’re going to spend all your money really fast if that’s what you do,” Hegar said. “So you’ve got to have a backup plan or drop-down menu.”

Senate Bill 1238 does allow the state to consider alternativ­e technologi­es in high-cost areas. Hegar stressed that having alternativ­es to fiber could help expand availabili­ty in areas where fiber may not be suitable.

Kelty Garbee, executive director for Texas Rural Funders, said that while there are “exceptiona­l” resources and funds available now, the mindset is to use it wisely.

“This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y to increase access to broadband,” Garbee said. “We hope the Broadband Developmen­t Office will use its data and mapping tools to develop a grant process that provides those resources to areas of the state that are least likely to receive broadband without the extra support.”

Garbee also said the funds would have a greater impact in areas with little to no broadband service. One of those places is Floydada. The small town of about 2,700 is widely referred to as the Pumpkin Capital of Texas because of its flourishin­g pumpkin crop. The same can’t be said for broadband service in the town, or for Floyd County as a whole.

“It’s the times that you don’t have it that you notice it the most,” Crowe said. “We need to think of broadband like we do any utility, it’s the same as water or electricit­y. This is how you communicat­e. It’s no longer a luxury.”

 ?? Kim Brent/Beaumont Enterprise ?? State Rep. Trent Ashby, right, talks in March 2021 about the need for improving broadband access in Texas as House Speaker Dade Phelan listens.
Kim Brent/Beaumont Enterprise State Rep. Trent Ashby, right, talks in March 2021 about the need for improving broadband access in Texas as House Speaker Dade Phelan listens.
 ?? Robin Jerstad/Contributo­r ?? Maria Pena gets assistance during a digital literacy class at the San Antonio Food Bank in December 2021.
Robin Jerstad/Contributo­r Maria Pena gets assistance during a digital literacy class at the San Antonio Food Bank in December 2021.

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