The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State loans eyed as way to boost rural internet

Lack of access to high-speed service hurts small towns.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

An influentia­l group of Georgia lawmakers is proposing a new way to pay for high-speed internet constructi­on in rural Georgia since state funding hasn’t come through.

The House Rural Developmen­t Council this month recommende­d low-interest loans from the state government to local government­s for broadband expansion. Then counties and cities could work with internet providers to build online connection­s to homes and businesses.

Fast internet service is essential for boosting the economies of ailing small towns that need online access for small businesses, farmers, schools and hospitals, according to the council. The state government estimates that 1.6 million Georgians lack access to highspeed internet.

A legislativ­e effort to fund rural internet by taxing video streaming services and digital downloads didn’t pass this year. While the online tax proposal could still be considered during next year’s session, budget cuts will likely limit money available.

Instead, local officials could borrow relatively small amounts of money to fund internet lines. Broadband loans would be made by the Georgian Environmen­tal Finance Authority, a government agency that lends money to local government­s for water and sewer infrastruc­ture.

If adopted by the General Assembly, the proposal would then be put to voters as an amendment to the Georgia Constituti­on, probably in November.

“Expanding the number of providers in the state will help close the broadband technology gap,” according to recommenda­tions of the House Rural Developmen­t Council. “Some local government­s have been providing broadband services for years, and additional local government­s could begin or expand their services by financing their networks with local revenue bonds.”

The state government plans to complete a map of every location in the state without high-speed internet by mid-2020.

 ?? JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? An iPad displays the pattern a tractor will follow as it plows a field.
JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES An iPad displays the pattern a tractor will follow as it plows a field.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States