Original Post: December 14, 2021 |
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By: Trimmel Gomes
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- The
bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs
Act passed by Congress contains $65 billion to give
every American affordable access to broadband internet service.
The need is pronounced in Florida's small, rural towns, where reliable internet
can be hard to find, a situation which came into focus when the world was
thrust into doing everyday business online instead of in-person.
Julio Fuentes, president and CEO of the Florida State Hispanic Chamber of
Commerce, said the pandemic exposed problems with lack of access that have been
around for many years.
"Then COVID comes around and it kind of got multiplied times a
thousand," Fuentes recounted. "It was kind of a slap in the face to
wake up; that this is a real, real problem, you know, because obviously
everybody was -- kids were doing school from home and doctor's appointments
from home."
According to research from the group Broadband Now,
affordability is Florida's most pressing problem, as fewer than six in 10
Floridians have access to a low-cost internet service plan. A study by the global
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development found the U.S. has the
second-highest broadband costs in the developed world.
Fuentes has been critical of
the Federal Communications Commission's months-long delay of its Emergency Broadband Benefit program. It
offered households in need $50 a month toward broadband service, and a one-time
discount of up to $100 to purchase a laptop or other computer, if they
contributed just $10 to the purchase. Fuentes thinks it should've been deployed
at the beginning of the pandemic.
"And we saw how bad it was once COVID came around, so I think everybody is
somewhat on the same page when it comes to this particular issue," Fuentes
contended. "But again, I just wish it would've been a lot sooner than
later."
Content
for this Post is provided by Florida News Connection, a Bureau of Public News
Service. Public News Service is a member
of the The Trust Project.
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