Lack of broadband puts tribal, rural areas ‘in jeopardy,’ lawmakers told
Cronkite News
WASHINGTON – The Havasupai tribe is falling behind in education, health and emergency needs because, like many rural communities, it lacks affordable, reliable and high-speed broadband, a tribal councilwoman told a House committee Thursday.
Ophelia Watahomigie-Corliss was one of several witnesses who said rural areas are “in jeopardy” of being left behind without the high-speed internet access of broadband, which is used for everything from telemedicine to distance learning to up-to-the-minute market reports for farmers.
“Community members can better their lives and their education through future broadband expansion,” Watahomigie-Corliss said in testimony prepared for a House Agriculture subcommittee.
“These services that ordinary Americans have been using for the past 20 years are still not a reality for my entire community, but this is the first glimmer of hope we have seen for decades,” she said of gain the tribe has made recently after decades of effort.
Efforts to set up online courses for students had faltered. But Watahomigie-Corliss said the tribe has recently secured a 30 megabits-per-second connection and set up an equipment checkout program that helped prompt its first successful online classes. “While we have had success, we also have more needs,” Watahomigie-Corliss said. She said the tribe plans to expand service to “bring broadband coverage to the whole village, increase backhaul from 50 Mbps to one Gbps (gigabit per second), provide emergency communications throughout the canyon, connect an online charter high school and allow for telemedicine in the new clinic.” And her tribe is not alone, she said. “The disparities felt by my community may be of the most extreme examples felt by rural tribal nations, but the disparity of the digital divide are being felt all across the Indian Country,” Watahomigie-Corliss told the committee. For more stories from Cronkite News, visit cronkitenews.azpbs.org.Yesterday, @repdavidscott held a hearing on #RuralBroadband and we heard why access to broadband isn't just an innovation issue, but something that's integral to the life and well-being of rural communities all across the country. pic.twitter.com/W6c3jYhAmP
— House Agriculture Committee (@HouseAgDems) July 12, 2019
House Subcommittee on Commodity Exchanges, Energy, and Credit Notice
Building Opportunity in Rural America through Affordable, Reliable and High-Speed Broadband
(July 11, 2019)
This story originally appeared on Cronkite News and is published via a Creative Commons license. Cronkite News is produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.
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