The 2011 ban went hand in hand with federal subsidies meant to encourage telecoms giants to expand their infrastructure. The Federal Communications Commission gave $250 million in subsidies to AT&T, Windstream and CenturyLink that year to build out broadband in Arkansas. But it didn't work, Keppler reports.
State Senator Breanna Davis, a Republican who co-sponsored the bill, observed that "We were one of the five states that had the most restrictive laws [on municipal broadband] in the nation . . . and almost last in broadband." Instead, Arkansans are losing out on remote jobs, can't do homework or take online classes, and some can't even sell their houses because buyers want a neighborhood with good internet, Keppler reports.
The new law won't give municipalities complete control to set up networks. They'll have to get a grant or loan from a second party, which Davis hopes will allow rural towns to get funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's $600 million e-Connectivity pilot program., Keppler reports.
"That this is happening at all is significant. That it’s happening in a deep-red state is perhaps monumental. Arkansas outlawed municipal broadband in 2011 as a wave of other states passed similar laws. It was, in part, a factor of the Tea Party movement, which ushered small-government Republicans into state capitols," Keppler reports. "By 2018, 21 states had some law banning or restricting municipal broadband; many were cut-and-paste 'model legislation' from the American Legislative and Exchange Council, backed by telecom giants. They sought to kill municipal broadband under the belief that 'such services should not be offered by government in competition with private-sector providers.'"
Other states with similar bans may follow suit, including North Carolina, Keppler reports.
from The Rural Blog http://bit.ly/2KOUIs1 Arkansas legislature repeals law banning cities and towns from building their own broadband networks - Entrepreneur Generations
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