Remember last year’s incredible fiasco precipitated by Gov. Piyush Jindal when he spurned that $80.6 million Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) grant to provide high speed broadband internet to rural areas of Louisiana?
Well, it’s back—perhaps to bite him in the gluteus maximus.
State Superintendent of Education John White has released a report that shows Louisiana public school students and teachers are lacking the technology to enter the digital age.
The Louisiana Technology Footprint report discusses technology guidelines that provide a snapshot of the current state of digital readiness of school districts and campuses in the state.
Louisiana Believes, the highly-touted plan by the department includes, among other goals, one for all schools to be digital-ready by 2014-2015.
The report provides districts with an initial footprint picture of network, bandwidth and device requirements need to fully implement online assessments by the 2014-2015 school year and full digital readiness thereafter.
“Data and technology specifications…indicate school campuses in Louisiana have 197,898 devices available for online testing but only 67,038 (33.9 percent) met new device standards,” the report says.
Only five districts—Ascension, City of Bogalusa, Red River, St. James and FirstLine Schools of New Orleans—meet the minimum device readiness requirements and only two—Ascension and St. James—meet both device and network readiness guidelines for online testing, it said.
It was last Oct. 26 that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Division (NOAA) issued its final termination letter for the grant after repeated efforts to get the state to comply with its request for additional information.
The project, which LouisianaVoice learned was opposed by the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), would have created 900 miles of cable over 21 rural parishes in Louisiana and would have supported several Louisiana universities with expanded optical fiber networking capacity.
That could have complimented the Board of Regents’ $20 million Louisiana Optical Network Initiative (LONI) project, designed to extend high-speed networking capabilities in the state.
But Jindal, whose wife’s charitable foundation received considerable funding from AT&T, apparently preferred that the project be carried out by private companies—such as…oh, say AT&T, for example.
The governor refused to re-apply for the grant because what he termed a “heavy-handed approach from the federal government that would have undermined and taken over private business.”
U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu call Jindal’s stated reason “hogwash.” She said the grant would not have interfered with private enterprise and in fact, would have granted money for private companies to lay the cable. “We weren’t trying to create a government broadband system,” she said.
Almost a year before the final rejection of the grant, ALEC, at its annual meeting in San Diego in August of 2010, passed a resolution opposing initiatives targeted at providing universally accessible broadband service because of “the unnecessary, burdensome and economically harmful regulation of broadband internet service companies, including the providers of the infrastructure that supports and enables internet services…”
Looks like someone forgot to tell White about Jindal’s opposition to expanded availability to that evil internet.
In fact, White, in his report, encourages school districts to join a statewide consortium that will aid in consolidated purchasing and contracts as well as providing technology services and support.
Wonder who’ll get the contract to form that consortium?
Like the rest of the state, John White must yield before Jindal’s pandering to national Republicans.
And we can see how attractive building broadband networks in rural Louisiana is to private companies, since companies are crawling all over themselves to bring the internet to the rural poor. They just jumped all over that opportunity, didn’t they? NOT.
Congratulations on passing the 1000 followers mark. More people are waking up every day, thanks to your blog.
Thanks. I didn’t think anyone but me would notice.
Things may come back to haunt you. You don’t have to wait until Halloween.
White and Jindal must not have collaborated on this page of Louisiana Believes!
Once again, Jindal is requiring the the people of Louisiana, who should be his first priority, to pay the bill for something the Feds would have funded.
Of course, this is a tiny blip compared to the billions in federal funds he idiotically (Idiotlogically?) says he will refuse by not expanding Medicaid. And as the Advocate documented, we citizens will have to pay more to replace lost funding for the Charity Hospital system, more for hospital services to subsididize the uninsured poor getting expensive care in emergency rooms, more for insurance to pay the higher hospital charges, etc. For someone who is billed as being very smart, Bully Jindal does and says dumb things all too often.
The closing comment was: “Wonder who’ll get the contract to form that consortium?” My best guess would be Ed Antie and his buds in Louisiana’s fiber-optic business…Antie’s appointment to the Board of Regents was so mangled by his self-dealing with fellow regents that he “voluntarily” withdrew his name. This was after a state senate hearing in which he was sharply questioned about lobbying his colleagues on the board about contracts he and other Telecomms owners had with LONI (Louisiana Optical Network Initiative—a linkage between state universities) which the regents govern. Their existing contracts with LONI might well have been rendered superfluous by the new federally-funded network. And even worse: the new network would have been mandated by the grant conditions to resell capacity to competitors, leading to (gasp) competition for contracts in the Delta region that only he and his cronies can currently fulfill.
http://blog.lafayetteprofiber.com/2011/10/louisianas-lost-broadband-grant.html
Check out “d2d blog site” to read more about Jindal’s corporate raid on public education. Link: http://democrat2democrat.blogspot.com/