Opening Statement: Ranking Member Austin Scott Subcommittee on Commodity Exchanges, Energy, and Credit Public Hearing: “Building Opportunity in Rural America through Affordable, Reliable and High-Speed Broadband"
Washington,
July 11, 2019
Remarks as prepared for delivery: Thank you, Chairman Scott, for holding this important hearing on a subject that resonates with all Americans: Rural Broadband. And thank you to our distinguished witnesses that are here today to discuss how affordable, reliable, and high-speed broadband can bring our communities into the 21st century. More than 24 million Americans who live in rural communities do not have broadband Internet access and lack the infrastructure for a reliable and affordable connection. As we’ll hear from our witnesses today, having reliable, affordable broadband is not about having modern conveniences, although that’s certainly important for all of us. For most Americans, broadband access is about access to information, options and choices. Today, whole conversations happen entirely online, and the only participants are those people who have broadband access. Information of all forms is created, shared and consumed entirely though a broadband Internet connection. The Internet has also enabled new tools which are impossible to replicate in the physical world. Big data and artificial intelligence, cloud storage and computing, the Internet of Things and data analytics, telemedicine, and other modern tools simply cannot be replicated without broadband access to the Internet. Broadband access has become a dividing line between those 24 million rural Americans and all the modern broadband-dependent information and services most urban and suburban Americans take for granted. But, it is not just rural Americans who suffer from this divide. Suburban and urban Americans are equally cut off from the voices and talents and ideas of their rural neighbors. And this divide makes all of America poorer. For me, all options are on the table when it comes to providing our rural communities with the technological resources they need to grow and thrive. This includes strengthening effective programs already in place at the USDA and FCC, advocating for robust broadband support in an infrastructure package and even encouraging innovative technologies like TV White Spaces. This committee did great work last Congress in the 2018 Farm Bill to ensure that USDA has the tools it needs to bridge the digital divide in Rural America. Included were two of my amendments which addressed accountability measures and expanded RUS loans and grants to Middle Mile Infrastructure projects. Quality broadband infrastructure investments will connect Rural America to the rest of the world. By bridging the digital divide, we will enable access to a wealth of economic opportunities in parts of America which would have otherwise been left behind. |