Roadway rights in Ohio’s plan for more high-speed internet

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COLUMBUS (AP) — High-speed internet would spread to about 1 million unserved or underserved Ohioans along rural routes and highways previously off-limits to private development under a strategic plan released Thursday.

If approved by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the aggressive blueprint for expanding and improving broadband access across the state also would boost local governments’ chances of landing federal grants.

Republican Gov. Mike DeWine said in a statement that improvements are vital because Ohio’s lack of connectivity is putting the state at a disadvantage. The strategic document comes as digital giants, including Microsoft and Facebook, are working to solve connectivity problem in rural, often poor areas of the U.S. that has confounded policymakers for decades.

The Ohio plan emerged from a fact-finding effort by DeWine’s administration, which identified a number of causes in September for the problem being so stubborn, particularly in Appalachia. Besides access to roadway rights, it found outdated tax codes, missed funding opportunities, bureaucratic red tape and maps that incorrectly showed where service is available.

InnovateOhio, the state’s technology office, upgraded Ohio’s Connected Nation broad maps in conjunction with Thursday’s release. By converting them into interactive GIS map layers, they’ll be easier for journalists, researchers and legislators to explore, the office said.

Lt. Gov. Jon Husted, who oversees InnovateOhio, said the plan is a necessary step in helping Ohio compete for federal resources that public-private partnerships can use to make needed improvements.

“The Ohio Broadband Strategy is a crucial step forward in our efforts to bridge the digital divide and deliver high-speed internet access to unserved and underserved areas of this state,” he said.

The plan also calls for establishing a telehealth pilot that would provide mental health services in underserved areas of the state, including those hard hit by the opioid crisis, and a regulatory review of the industry. It also would ask the General Assembly to create an internet grant program to support connectivity improvements in low-population areas and rural communities.

By Julie Carr Smyth

Associated Press

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