Sanford vows to
extend Internet to poor
The Associated
Press
COLUMBIA - Gov. Mark Sanford said
Wednesday he wants $2 million in next year's state budget to help
extend high-speed Internet access to the state's rural
communities.
"In an increasingly global economy, it's incredibly important
that people living in places like Allendale have the same
opportunity to access the information superhighway as people living
in places like Greenville," he said in a release.
His proposed budget for 2007-08 will recommend creating a
Broadband Advisory Committee within the Department of Commerce to
oversee efforts to provide people in rural communities with Internet
access other than dial-up.
The $2 million from the state's general fund would be used for
both direct and matching grants, said Sanford spokesman Joel
Sawyer.
State law does not allow the regulation of broadband services, so
their availability and subscription levels in South Carolina are
unclear. According to the Federal Communications Commission, some
form of Digital Subscriber Line is available in 73 percent of the
places statewide where phone companies provide service.
Tom Persons, president and chief executive of the South Carolina
Technology Alliance, called the proposed initiative a "great first
start." High-speed Internet access would open up economic
development opportunities for poor, rural areas, he said.
"I believe broadband access should be like air and water," said
Persons, a former AT&T executive. "It should be the right of
every citizen to have basic, good high-speed Internet."
Bob Elek, a Verizon spokesman, said extending broadband services
to rural areas with few potential customers is a "very costly
venture."
"It will take a multi-prong approach to expand broadband into
rural areas," he said, adding the company is interested in the
governor's
idea. |