- By Caroline Beck Alabama Daily News
- May 5, 2019
MONTGOMERY — Expanding access to high-speed broadband internet has been one of the hallmark issues in the Alabama Legislature the last two years. Most all lawmakers agree the issue is a priority, but how exactly to go about it remains the subject of much debate.
When the Alabama Senate approved a 2020 education budget Thursday, it included $30 million in potential grant money to expand broadband internet access in the state.
If approved by the House and signed by the governor, that money would go to fund a program enacted last year that helps subsidize the cost of internet providers running fiber-optic lines to less-populated areas.
Such areas often lack the potential customer base necessary for internet providers to justify the expense of building the infrastructure that carries the broadband service. The state grants aim to offset those costs to make it financially feasible for lines to be run to rural communities.
Meanwhile, the House debated and passed legislation that goes about the task in a different way. House Bill 400, sponsored by Rep. Randall Shedd, R-Cullman, would allow electricity providers to offer broadband services and use their existing infrastructure to access areas that don’t have high-speed internet service.
“We know that a lot of our rural counties are losing their population,” House Bill 400 sponsor Rep. Randall Shedd, R-Cullman, said. “We know there is a digital divide and a lot of rural Alabama has no internet. We know our grandchildren will not stay in these locations if they do not have connectivity to technology.”
The proposal would alleviate the cost of running new fiber lines to rural areas. Utilities like the Tennessee Valley Authority, Alabama Power and regional electric cooperatives could piggyback their existing networks with high-speed cable lines.
However, concerns that the bill could give an unfair advantage to utilities and electric cooperatives over cable companies led to a lengthy floor debate. There were multiple attempts to delay a vote on the bill.
The bill says “an electric provider may acquire by condemnation ways, rights of way, and easements, without limitation as to width, on, over, under, or across the lands or easements of others, to erect, construct, replace, use, install, operate and maintain advanced communications capabilities.”
Bill proponents said agriculture and business groups who support the legislation understand property rights and don’t take issue with the language.
Michelle Roth, executive director of the Alabama Cable and Broadband Association, said the organization is watching House Bill 400 and Senate Bill 90, pertaining to broadband grants, and wants to make sure lawmakers know the difference between “unserved” and “underserved” areas of the state.
“(The Alabama Cable and Broadband Association) urges members of the Alabama Legislature to maintain their focus on the unserved areas of the state, and to ensure that the Rural Broadband Investment grants, which are funded with Education Trust Fund dollars, are being allocated for that intended purpose,” Roth said. “Any efforts to divert ETF dollars to already-served areas or to infrastructure projects that do not provide broadband to end users in homes and businesses will be a disservice to the very Alabamians in need of broadband access.”
Shedd and others said some “underserved” areas need to be upgraded before providers can access unserved areas.
Lawmakers eventually amended the bill to clarify how municipalities and utility companies dealt with easement and right of way issues, which allayed many lawmakers’ concerns.
House Bill 400 passed by a vote of 92 to 2.
Local Representatives Phillip Pettus, R-Greenhill, Lynn Greer, R-Rogersville, Jamie Kiel, R-Russellville, Andrew Sorrell, R-Muscle Shoals, and Proncey Robertson, R-Mount Hope, all voted in favor of the bill.
“As I knocked doors in the rural areas of Colbert and Lawrence County for my 2018 campaign, an issue I heard over and over was broadband internet,” Sorrell said. “This bill is a step in the right direction. It may not be perfect, but I won’t make the perfect the enemy of the good. It’s time the Legislature take action on this important rural issue.”
Sen. Arthur Orr, R-Decatur, who chairs the education budget committee in the House, expressed excitement over the $30 million placed in the budget for broadband internet expansion.
“I think it’s significant for the rural areas of the state, and some urban areas as well,” Orr said.
“We need to push broadband across this state to bring us into the 21st century.”
The Governor’s Office last year estimated that as many as 842,000 Alabamians are without access to a wired connection capable of 25mbps download speeds.
The lack of high-speed has been a concern and priority for local lawmakers.
Support coalition
Last week, a group of business, education, economic development and health care groups joined to form the Alabama Rural Broadband Coalition.
The Alabama Farmers Federation, Alabama Power, the Business Council of Alabama, the Alabama Association of Realtors, the Alabama Rural Electric Cooperatives, the Alabama Hospital Association, Auburn University and the University of Alabama System were among the entities joining together to push for broadband expansion.
For hospitals, accessing high-speed internet is an essential part of modern medicine, according to Danne Howard, executive vice president of the Alabama Hospital Association.
“Hospitals are grateful for any efforts to expand access to care, and in many areas tele-health can be extremely helpful in providing access to specialists and avoiding unnecessary travel for patients ” Howard said.
Ryan Hollingsworth, executive director of School Superintendents of Alabama, said broadband would be a game changer in some rural areas of the state.
“We are very supportive of expanding broadband across rural Alabama not only for our students but also for the tremendous opportunity for economic growth this will provide,” Hollingsworth said.