High-speed internet in Alabama: State provides $82 million for ‘middle-mile’ network

Back in January, the Alabama Legislature and Gov. Kay Ivey approved a plan to spend $276 million of the state’s American Rescue Plan Act federal funds on the expansion of access to high-speed internet.

Today, Ivey and legislative leaders announced that $82 million of that would be used for a grant to help fund a “middle-mile” broadband network that officials said would have statewide impact.

Fiber Utility Network, a corporation formed by eight rural electric cooperatives, will create the network to connect more than 3,000 miles of new and existing fiber infrastructure over the next three years, officials said.

Leaders of the Republican and Democratic caucuses in the Alabama Senate and other legislators joined the governor for the announcement at 11 a.m. at Central Alabama Electric Cooperative in Prattville, one of the cooperatives that formed the new corporation. The other cooperatives are Coosa Valley, Covington, Cullman, Joe Wheeler, North Alabama, PowerSouth, and Tombigbee.

The “middle-mile” network will be the next step in an initiative Ivey and lawmakers have said is a priority for several years. Ivey said more than 300 Alabama cities and towns will benefit from the network.

“And once connected, it will give a whole lot more Alabama families the ability to opt to be customers to one of the last-mile service providers,” Ivey said. “If you’re at home or watching the news, what you care most about is being able to have working internet, plain and simple. Well folks, the middle mile, the infrastructure setting part of this journey, is exactly what’s going to get us there.”

Senate Majority Leader Clay Scofield, R-Guntersville, said broadband is essential for economic development, education and health care.

“Connectivity is the great equalizer. And I truly believe it will bring our most vulnerable communities into the 21st century,” Scofield said.

Senate Minority Leader Bobby Singleton, D-Greensboro, said high-speed internet can help bring hope to parts of the state that are short on jobs and resources, like electrical power did generations ago.

“Broadband is the new utility,” Singleton said. “It is the new power. It is the new water.”

Alabama’s effort to expand broadband access got a major boost when Congress approved the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA), a pandemic relief package that has sent billions of federal dollars to Alabama, including $2 billion for lawmakers to appropriate for state government purposes. The $276 billion for broadband comes from the state’s first $1 billion portion of ARPA funds. Legislators approved it in a special session in January. Legislators are expected to consider how to use the second $1 billion portion next year.

Last year, Ivey signed into law the Connect Alabama Act to set up a state government framework for making broadband available statewide. The Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs, the agency spearheading the effort, released the Alabama Broadband Map and the Alabama Connectivity Plan in January.

The map showed that about 13 percent of 1.65 million addresses in Alabama do not have access to broadband service as defined by

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Startup Aquarian House aims to supply high-speed internet at the moon (and possibly Mars)

An early-stage house internet task just received $650,000 in seed funding to function on development and complex assessments to connect the Earth, moon and probably Mars with broadband.

Aquarian House introduced the funding from Draper Associates Thursday (March 17) as a step together its eventual aim to bringing large-pace web amongst the Earth, the moon and Mars in long run many years, quick plenty of to stream 4K movie. The corporation aims to deploy its first lunar communications program by 2024.

The startup’s vision is to make what it phone calls Solnet, developed on “business large details amount, large-velocity delivery satellite networks” with speeds of 100 megabits for each next, Aquarian stated in a statement. (That’s significantly a lot quicker than normal Web speeds Us residents appreciate, with SlashGear not long ago reporting a typical U.S. resident surfs at fewer than 30.)

“In 2021 there have been 13 landers, orbiters and rovers on and all over the moon,” Kelly Larson, CEO of Aquarian Room, reported in the statement. “By 2030, we will have about 200, building a multibillion greenback lunar economic system. But this just can’t happen without having strong, trusted Earth-to-moon communications.”

Artist's impression of a CLPS mission on the moon.

Artist’s perception of a of a robotic lander on the moon. (Image credit history: NASA)

Aquarian Place is accomplishing specialized evaluations with quite a few businesses collaborating in NASA’s Professional Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) plan, the firm claimed, alongside with other businesses in the United States and internationally concentrating on moon missions.

CLPS will see numerous payloads, landers and other scientific gear alight on the moon later on in the 2020s in assist of NASA’s Artemis application, which aims to place people on the moon someday this 10 years. 

Aquarian’s hope is to deliver “conclusion-to-conclusion data and conversation products and services by 2024” with the a variety of organizations it is interacting with, while particulars had been not launched beyond indicating that customers will not want to modify their layout to accommodate Aquarian’s technological know-how.

Aquarian ultimately strategies to start a area-based relay knowledge support identified as Solnet, but has introduced handful of technological particulars so significantly such as what types of satellites it intends to use, or how it will carry these satellites to area.

Other than superior-speed Internet, Aquarian states it strategies to include things like house predicament consciousness for features together with hunting at space debris, tracking area temperature and giving scientific information from the moon and from Mars.

Stick to Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Abide by us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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