Washington Business Fall 2018 | Legislative Review & Vote Record | Page 17
washington business
“We will continue to engage our lawmakers
on solutions that can help all of Washington
succeed.”
—Mike Ennis, government affairs director, AWB
tool that can help rural regions in all counties catch up and give
employers more flexibility where they locate.
That’s why access to broadband was among AWB’s top
legislative objectives in the 2018 legislative session. AWB
worked with stakeholders and lawmakers on about half a dozen
rural broadband bills.
The bill gaining the most traction was Senate Bill 5935,
sponsored by Sens. Tim Sheldon, D-Potlatch, and Reuven
Carlyle, D-Seattle. The bill would have enhanced consumer
options by creating a state office on broadband access and
extending the Universal Communications Services (UCS)
program.
The original state broadband office was under the Department
of Commerce and eliminated in 2014. The UCS program was
created in 2014 to provide funding to small telecommunications
companies meeting certain criteria. The program expires in
2019.
The bill would have reestablished the broadband office under
the governor, amended some eligibility criteria in the UCS
program, and extended it to 2025.
Sheldon contrasted the challenges in rural Washington to the
impressive job growth underway in Seattle.
“The rural communities have not shared,” Sheldon said in
his testimony supporting the bill. “We have struggled.” Bringing
telecommunications to rural areas, he said, would make a “huge,
huge difference.”
Carlyle, chairman of the Senate Energy, Environment and
Technology Committee, noted that Washington has millions
in state and federal funding for broadband, plus a robust
private sector, with no overall plan to bring better coverage to
underserved areas.
Another bill would have allowed rural counties to impose
an additional sales tax as a credit against the state sales tax.
That money would be used exclusively to develop high-speed
internet infrastructure in rural areas. The bill was sponsored by
Rep. Ed Orcutt, R-Kalama.
“In my discussions with a number of folks in my area, it
became very clear that there are way too many people who are
being left behind in our current economy because they don’t
have broadband,” Orcutt said in a panel discussion at AWB’s
Spring Meeting.
Betty Buckley of the Washington Independent Telecommuni-
cations Association also attended the panel discussion. She said
it will take about $1 billion to build out Washington’s broadband
infrastructure.
“We as a state need to make the decision about whether or not
we’re going to step up to that really big ugly number and make
it happen.” Buckley said.
awb is committed to practical solutions
Broadband has evolved over the years as a basic tool that many
families rely upon to pay bills, work remotely, work from home
or find a new job. Those without reliable access can be placed
at a competitive disadvantage, Ennis said. Communities without
broadband will have a harder time attracting young people who
have left for college to move back to their hometowns and start
a family, for example.
At the same time AWB works with lawmakers on a legislative
solution, the private sector is also doing its part to increase rural
broadband availability.
Companies like Verizon, AT&T, Comcast, T-Mobile, and
dozens of smaller rural providers have worked hard for many
years to bring fast and reliable internet service to the people of
Washington state.
In the last five years alone, these businesses have invested
nearly $9.5 billion in telecom infrastructure across the state. And
their investments aren’t just about fiber and hardware, they’re
also about people.
Telecom companies employ about 22,000 Washingtonians, all
with high-tech, family-wage jobs.
“We have never been as connected as we are today because
of that investment,” Ennis said. “But we still have work to do
to close the digital divide and help create new jobs in rural
communities.”
Washington’s rural coun ties have fallen behind urban areas
in several key economic indicators like unemployment and
median wages. Many small towns are struggling, even as the
Puget Sound booms. This uneven prosperity spurred AWB to
convene Washington’s lawmakers, employers and community
leaders to find solutions.
AWB jump-started the conversation on the urban-rural
economic divide in Washington last year with two Rural Jobs
Summits. This led to the creation of a Rural Jobs Task Force,
chaired by Alex McGregor of The McGregor Company.
In addition to broadband, other rural jobs priorities include
improving job creation and workforce development, lowering
the business and occupation tax rate for manufacturing, and
investing in infrastructure throughout the state.
For more information and to get involved in AWB’s Rural Jobs
Task Force or to attend AWB’s next Rural Jobs Summit, contact
Mike Ennis at 360.943.1600 or [email protected].
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