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Closing the Digital Divide
How communities are addressing the digital divide equitably and quickly.
Inequitable access to the internet became a glaring public health issue during the pandemic. Here鈥檚 how three communities addressed the digital divide equitably and quickly.
Dorothy Baunach
DigitalC
In Cleveland, the nonprofit DigitalC has been working to provide equitable internet service since 2003, when it started connecting neighborhood networks to the larger internet. DigitalC is now bringing wireless broadband service to those neighborhoods.
Cleveland is one of the most inequitably connected cities in the nation according to 2019 American Community Survey data and The Brookings Institution, with just 63% of majority-Black neighborhoods connected via broadband, compared with 81% of majority-White neighborhoods. Through its initiative, DigitalC brings internet connectivity to about 1,000 customers in several underserved neighborhoods in Cleveland, charging just $20 per month.
鈥淭he community itself recognized we have a crisis from a social justice perspective,鈥 says DigitalC Chief Executive Dorothy Baunach. 鈥淲e no longer have to tell people what or why. It鈥檚 just 鈥榟ow are we going to solve this?鈥欌
Expanding connectivity to all of Cleveland鈥檚 underserved neighborhoods will cost $40 million, Baunach says. Potential investors balked at that figure prior to the pandemic, so DigitalC is now turning to community stakeholders like hospitals, universities, and churches, in addition to traditional funders, to finance that expansion.
Jason Eyre
Murray City School District
When schools across the U.S. closed in March 2020, the Murray City School District in Utah was more prepared than most. The district had equipped all of its 6,100 students with laptops in 2018 and was in the process of developing an online learning system intended for snow days and other unforeseen closures. Even in this suburb of Salt Lake City, moving to fully remote learning revealed that due to economic barriers: All of the homes without internet overlapped with the 34% of Murray students receiving free or reduced lunch, according to school district data. With the help of money from the federal CARES Act passed in the early days of the pandemic, the school district created an LTE network by installing 25 seven-foot-tall cell towers on 11 school district buildings.
鈥淲e鈥檙e just in the finishing touches,鈥 says district technology supervisor Jason Eyre. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got every corner of our district covered and we鈥檙e just filling in the harder to reach places in the middle now.鈥
Eyre says that the district has distributed 184 routers鈥攚hich connect the students鈥 district-provided laptops to the network鈥攖o students as of April 2021, all at no cost to the participating student households.
Adam Bouhmad
Project Waves
The success of Project Waves鈥攁 community-owned internet network in Baltimore鈥攊s a testament to community trust, says founder Adam Bouhmad. Since March 2020, Project Waves has been able to connect more than 120 households via fixed wireless service. An additional 68 households are connected through a partnership with Baltimore City Schools.
A 2018 American Community Survey found 96,000 households in Baltimore lacked reliable, high-speed internet service, and one-third of homes did not have a computer. Bouhmad says that developing relationships with community stakeholders like schools, churches, and cultural organizations has been essential to building trust within the community, and also brings public awareness to the nonprofit鈥檚 services.
鈥淭his past year has been about building those needed connections with folks in communities, but also building the infrastructure itself so we can have the capability to serve hundreds of households,鈥 Bouhmad says.
Project Waves started out with a pay-what-you-can model, but has been able to offer its customers internet service for free since May 2020, thanks to a National Science Foundation grant and other fiscal sponsors. Bouhmad expects to have extended service to about 680 families by 2022.