Marketplace    Homes    Jobs    Classifieds    Coupons
[SeMissourian.com] Fair ~ 77°F  
River stage: 24.91 ft. Falling
Thursday, Sep. 2, 2010
Print Email link Respond to editor Read comments (2)

Rural Missouri lags in broadband access

Sunday, October 14, 2007
(Photo)
Tanja Schroot accessed the Internet with her laptop using the wireless connection at Cup 'N' Cork on Friday. Without Internet access at home, Schroot relies on public connections to check e-mail and keep in touch with friends and family.
(Aaron Eisenhauer)
[Click to enlarge]
Providing universal access to broadband capability has been compared to driving the golden spike that completed America's transcontinental railroad in 1869. Though the higher cost may deny access to some, high-speed Internet technology is available to most people who live in urban areas. But rural America remains on the frontier that separates many of those who live there from the rest of the world.

"Certain people are definitely treated in a lower class than in other communities," said Robert M. Clayton III, a member of the Missouri Public Service Commission.

By mid-2008, some Southeast Missouri communities that have had to get by without broadband are expected to get DSL service from AT&T, according to Marsha Haskell, the company's regional director for external affairs. The communities due to receive DSL service within a year are Oak Ridge, Bell City, Benton, Delta, Deering, Essex, Fisk, Altenburg-Frohna, Holcomb, Hornersville, Morehouse, Old Appleton, Patton, Wappapello, Qulin, Risco, St. Mary's, Wardell and Wyatt.

Last month, PSC member Clayton and former PSC commissioner Steve Gaw released a study showing that one in five Missouri households doesn't have access to broadband technology. Kentucky, the state considered the model for broadband connectivity, has an estimated 90 percent coverage.

Many but not all of those Missouri households are in rural areas, where the expansion of broadband systems has lagged because of the lack of financial incentive. Four-hundred-twenty-two telephone exchange areas have no cable broadband, and 128 have no DSL, high-speed Internet access available over phone lines. Ninety-one of the 689 telephone exchange areas in Missouri have neither cable nor DSL broadband access.

(Photo)
With a warm beverage at her side, Tanja Schroot accessed the Internet using the wireless connection at Cup 'N' Cork on Friday.
(Aaron Eisenhauer)
[Click to enlarge]
Some suburban areas also are going unserved because they are more than 18,000 feet from the central office of their telephone company, the limit of DSL reach.

The rural broadband study recommended making a state agency responsible for collecting data on broadband deployment and making broadband access a priority in the state by providing regulatory or tax incentives.

'Tight time frame'

Last week, Missouri Gov. Matt Blunt announced he will appoint a task force to help expand rural access to broadband technology. Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder will be the chairman. The 16 members will include representatives from small business, education, government, the Missouri Farm Bureau and the director of the Missouri Department of Economic Development.

The task force has a mandate to produce a report by Feb. 1. "We have a tight time frame," Kinder said.

This week, a staffer or two from his office will attend a seminar on rural broadband access being led by Illinois Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn in Springfield.

"Access to high-speed Internet service is a keystone for economic development in the 21st century," Kinder said. "It is vital for our schools in rural areas and small-town schools to have access to high-speed Internet as most urban and suburban schools do. We want the same advantages for them."

Kinder said broadband also is vital for farmers and ranchers to compete in global agricultural markets.

"We don't want there to be these gaps that exist right now."

Clayton said the lack of broadband capability limits a community's opportunities for business -- both commercial and personal -- education and recreation. Dial-up also potentially subjects people to higher costs, he said, citing the example of having to buy airline tickets by phone rather than spending an hour online.

He hopes the study helps create a consensus about the importance of broadband, "that all persons in a society should have equal access. How we get there is another question," he said.

Oak Ridge is one of the Missouri communities that lacks DSL or broadband capability by cable. Fran England, the town treasurer, says the unavailability of broadband is not an issue that has come before the town board. She uses a dial-up service she calls "awfully slow. It takes forever to get anything."

The Rev. Jon Sedgwick of the First Baptist Church of Oak Ridge brought broadband into his home through INetPlus, a Perry County company that provides broadband access through five towers positioned around the county. He is close enough to be served by the tower at Pocahontas.

Sedgwick sought out a broadband service because his wife is a medical transcriptionist who works at home and because they have three teenage children. "There is a phone hub a block away from where we live," Sedgwick said. "We continued to call Southwestern Bell and continued to get the runaround."

The cost is $34.95 a month plus $485 for the peanut-shaped receiver and equipment and $99 for installation. Sedgwick said the quality is as good as any high-speed Internet service he has used and is better than a satellite service because it is not affected by weather.

Broadband can be delivered in a variety of ways. Cable and DSL are the most common. Fixed wireless, known as Wi-Fi, sends and receives Internet signal between an antenna and the customer's antenna. Fiber optics can combine telephone and video to the home by a bidirectional fiber optic strand. A dedicated circuit is often used by industry and schools such as Oak Ridge's to provide broadband. Satellite delivers Internet signals between a satellite orbiting the earth and the customer. These systems have longer delay times than others.

The study did not gauge satellite broadband use in the state.

It found that communities lacking any broadband access tend to be served by the largest phone carriers. "The large companies didn't do well." Most of the small rural phone companies provided 80 percent coverage.

The not-for-profit Rural Broadband Coalition maintains that broadband is as essential as any other utility. Some communities have succeeded in building Wi-Fi systems by treating them as a utility.

Clayton, the PSC member, said he is not advocating that step. "In the circles where I operate, I don't want to create that stir without first establishing a consensus that broadband is important," he said.

sblackwell@semissourian.com

335-6611, extension 137


Comments
Note: The nature of the Internet makes it impractical for our staff to review every comment. If you feel that a comment is offensive, please Login or Create an account first, and then you will be able to flag a comment as objectionable. Please also note that those who post comments on semissourian.com may do so using a screen name, which may or may not reflect a website user's actual name. Readers should be careful not to assign comments to real people who may have names similar to screen names. Refrain from obscenity in your comments, and to keep discussions civil, don't say anything in a way your grandmother would be ashamed to read.

Broadband should be considered a utility. How many schools rely on the internet as part of their classroom curriculum. Those students without high speed internet service are without a valuable resource. If my memory serves me correctly, the same thing was argued about electricity in the 1930's and 1940's until we had the Rural Electrification Act of 1935. Then the electric companies wanted the farmers to pay for the construction then pay for the electricity. I am sure today many in the cities and towns where broadband is available will say the same thing. Lets hope we have advanced our thinking since the 1930's.

-- Posted by cannedheat on Sun, Oct 14, 2007, at 8:48 AM

Affordable high speed broadband should be available to all Americans. It is becoming more essential day by day. Students withjout access are being left behind. Rural economic growth is suffering. The USF should be reformed and a National internet policy adopted.

The Communications Workers Of America's project, Speed Matters is working twoards this goal. For more information check out the website at www.speematters.org

-- Posted by seaowl on Mon, Oct 15, 2007, at 12:26 PM


Respond to this story

Posting a comment requires free registration. If you already have an account on seMissourian.com, semoball.com, or shethemagazine.com, enter your username and password below. Otherwise, click here to register.

Username:

Password:  (Forgot your password?)

Your comments:
Please be respectful of others and try to stay on topic.

Enter your email address to subscribe to our mailing lists: