USA TODAY International Edition

Looking for internet access during lockdown?

Several free Wi- Fi options are available for those who can’t afford or don’t have service.

- Jefferson Graham

Julia Jean parks her car in front of the local library in Port O’Connor, Texas, every day and gets out to work.

Jean, who lives in Los Angeles but is spending time with her parents in the tiny ( population 1,253) Gulf Coast town, has no internet access at home.

“We’re so off the grid that our only choice is to go to the library,” which is open to the public from 1- 4 p. m. daily, she says. But the library keeps the net going 24 hours daily, “which really comes in handy when you’re trying to work,” says Jean, who runs the Foxforce video production company with husband Chris.

Even better – the library has a desk and two chairs outside the closed building for people to access when the building is closed.

Not everybody has home internet. According to the Brookings Institutio­n, some 15% of the country does not subscribe to broadband service, meaning they either can’t afford it or don’t have access. Census data shows that homes in rural and lower- income counties trail the national average by 13%.

Maybe your home internet just went on the fritz, and you just want to get out of the house and keep working, but hanging inside a local Starbucks during a pandemic just isn’t an option. Or you’re a parent struggling with getting work done from home while sharing and straining the home internet with kids as

they complete school work. What can you do? We’ve got some ideas:

Check with your local internet provider

Even if you’re not a subscriber, Comcast Xfinity, the nation’s largest, is offering 1.5 million free Wi- Fi hotspots nationally and you don’t have to be a subscriber to the Xfinity cable TV or internet services or have a password. The free offers expire at the end of the year and is a COVID- 19- related perk. ( Check www. xfinity. com/ wifi for the coverage map.) Comcast is available in 39 states. Rival Spectrum, which is heavy in the Northeast, Midwest, Southeast and California, Oregon and Washington, says it has 500,000 hotspots in 44 states, but they’re only available to paying customers. ( Charter’s Spectrum’s free service to students expired Tuesday.)

Comcast says that since offering the service, overall usage of the public WiFi hotspots has “skyrockete­d.”

Google, which offers fast internet services via fiber lines in such cities as Atlanta, Denver, Seattle and Salt Lake City, says it’s offering free hotspots anywhere Google Fiber serves, even without being a customer.

Park your car near a hotspot

Your local Starbucks may not be welcoming you inside the store, but if you can park near the front, you can access the Wi- Fi, which is provided by Google. Also try the parking lots of McDonald’s and Panera Bread.

Head to the library

Indeed, the American Library Associatio­n recommends branches keep access either in front or the parking lot.

“People depend on our libraries for access to a number of services, including free wireless internet, that they might not otherwise have,” said Angela Craig, executive director of the Charleston County Public Library in South Carolina, said in a blog post.

“Especially while children are asked to work on schoolwork from home, it’s vital that we keep doing everything in our power to provide for everyone in our community during these challengin­g times, including those without access.”

Park by a school

According to Inside Higher Ed, many schools are leaving on the Wi- Fi for students to continue working on their laptops in school parking lots.

It points to several colleges, including Columbia Gorge Community College in Oregon that has made Wi- Fi more accessible to those who can study while parked.

Achieving the Dream, a nonprofit that works with community colleges, says many schools in its network “have spent limited resources on trying to help their students prepare for online learning, including faculty and staff innovation, designing creative ways to reach students where they are, and with what they need, including turning parking lots into Wi- Fi hotspots.”

 ??  ?? Julin Jean uses the desk outside the closed Port O’Connor, Texas public library to get a Wi- Fi signal. CHRIS PILARSKI
Julin Jean uses the desk outside the closed Port O’Connor, Texas public library to get a Wi- Fi signal. CHRIS PILARSKI
 ??  ?? Xfinity is offering free WiFi hotspots whether you're a subscriber or not, through the end of the year.
Xfinity is offering free WiFi hotspots whether you're a subscriber or not, through the end of the year.
 ??  ?? Coverage map for Xfinity free WiFi hot spots in Philadelph­ia XFINITY
Coverage map for Xfinity free WiFi hot spots in Philadelph­ia XFINITY

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