The Mercury News

San Jose’s goal: Internet access to 50,000 households

With $24 million fund, Liccardo wants to close ‘palpable’ digital divide

- By Emily DeRuy ederuy@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Despite its “Capital of Silicon Valley” slogan, San Jose is home to thousands of residents who don’t have basic internet access at home.

The city moved to change that on Tuesday, creating the San Jose Digital Inclusion Fund — the largest of its kind in the country. The aim? To bring broadband access to some 50,000 households over the next decade and teach residents who may be new to the web the digital skills they need to navigate it.

“There’s so little awareness in San Jose of the digital divide,” said Dolan Beckel in the city’s Office of Civic Innovation and Digital Strategy.

The city estimates that, even today, around 95,000 residents have no internet access at home.

For seniors, the initiative might mean learning how to navigate a health care website that allows them to talk to their doctor more easily. For students, it might mean the ability to file a homework assignment or apply for a job online without having to trek to a library, Starbucks parking lot or someplace else with free wireless.

Long term, the city wants to close what Mayor Sam Liccardo on Tuesday called a “palpable” digital divide — a divide that puts the opportunit­ies Silicon Valley has to offer out of reach for many residents. As Google and other tech giants look to San Jose to grow their businesses, the city wants to produce students and young people capable of filling new jobs.

“Many lack resources that I believe everyone should have access to,” said Meilyn Wong, a junior at Lincoln High School.

The city will partner with the

“It’s an opportunit­y to teach a man how to fish instead of providing him with a fish.” — Councilman Johnny Khamis

nonprofit California Emerging Technology Fund to manage the $24 million initiative. The money will come from fees that telecommun­ications companies pay to place small cells on light poles around the city that allow them to deploy 5G networks — and in the future, even better cellular technology. Some other cities

collect such fees from companies such as Verizon and AT&T, but San Jose is the first major city to steer that money directly toward increasing internet access.

“Digital inclusion is a 21st century civil right,” said Sunne Wright McPeak, the president and CEO of CETF.

San Jose is “the pathfinder in our state,” Wright McPeak added, praising the city for its “vision and leadership” on the issue.

And, Wright McPeak said, while the percentage of

San Jose residents who are either “un-connected or under-connected” to the internet at home is in line with the overall figure for California as a whole — around 30 percent — the sheer number of 95,000 is so high it demands attention.

“The Digital Inclusion Fund is a premier example of what can happen with sincere public-private partnershi­ps,” Shireen Santosham, the city’s chief innovation officer, said in a statement. “We are truly

appreciati­ve of our telecom partners for working with the city to take this pioneering step and are thrilled to be working with the California Emerging Technology Fund.”

To increase connectivi­ty, the city is planning a number of grants and programs, including expanding programs to give refurbishe­d and donated computers to low-income families and educationa­l programs such as the city’s Coding 5K Challenge, an effort to teach

more young people to code. CETF is aiming to grant the first $1 million by this fall and reach people where they already are — at libraries and senior centers.

Liccardo hopes the model “will be copied throughout the country,” he said.

Replicatin­g San Jose’s model could be a difficult task for other cities, however. San Jose set up its fee schedule relatively early compared to other cities and is charging up to $1,500 per pole per year.

But the Federal Communicat­ions Commission recently took steps to limit the fees cities can charge companies. San Jose and other cities have sued to block those limits.

Regardless, Liccardo and members of the City Council say the new fund will make a valuable difference to local residents.

“It’s an opportunit­y to teach a man how to fish,” Councilman Johnny Khamis said, “instead of providing him with a fish.”

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