Search

Working for Illinois Caucus

House Downstate Democrats work for the good people of Illinois

Tag

16-Econ

Rural broadband getting some attention from state leaders

https://ift.tt/2PWq9OM



Broadband in rural areas may be as vital as running water. One politician has seen a shortage of both in her district.

Illinois state Rep. Natalie Phelps Finnie recently witnessed Gov. Bruce Rauner sign a bill she sponsored that would address the rural broadband issue. The law creates an advisory council that will look at ways to expand internet service to those living outside metropolitan areas.

She sees the issue as a basic service to rural homes and businesses, like providing water.

“There are 90 families in Gallatin County that still don’t have water. They have to haul water to their homes every week,” said Phelps Finnie, a Democrat from the tiny southern Illinois community of Elizabethtown.

“It’s unfathomable that it’s 2018 and some people still don’t have water. We’ve let it go and said it can’t happen. No, it can happen. We just have to find a way to do it. It’s the same with broadband.”

Spotty internet service is a barrier to economic growth, say Phelps Finnie and others. That includes farms and the overall ag industry.

“Farmers are going to face the same issues rural areas everywhere in the U.S. have: Limited access to internet aside from DSL — with slow, low uploads — and satellite with low data caps and limited speeds,” said Jameson Zimmer of BroadbandNow, an association that tracks broadband trends across the United States.

Overall, Illinois is doing fairly well compared to other states. BroadbandNow ranks it 17th among the 50 states for broadband connectivity. That may be due partly to the state’s abundance of interstate highways.

“Generally, the closer you are to an interstate, the better the internet will be,” Zimmer said. “This is because the fiber lines that form the backbone of internet service are commonly buried alongside major roads.”

Still, rural areas in Illinois and other states lag behind metro regions.

“Internet is how we live our lives now,” said Wisper’s Malinda Heuring. “Internet is just part of life.”

Wisper operates through a network of radio routers mounted on tall structures throughout the Corn Belt, including water towers, grain silos and utility poles.

“Agribusinesses and farmers are going to be really instrumental in this process,” Heuring said. “We can go to a lot of areas other people can’t go to. We need help in the community to locate those tall structures.”

Phelps Finnie has made broadband expansion a mission.

“When I took office last September, one of the first things I found out when I ventured into one of our more rural counties is that we have entire counties that don’t have broadband,” she said. “We have other areas with just pockets with reliable internet.

“We need jobs in southern Illinois. But I can’t imagine we will attract any good-size company or even smaller businesses without broadband. We have to have it to function nowadays. It’s also important for schools and seniors with social needs. This is a passion of mine. We have to make this happen.”

Among other things, the advisory council will determine the feasibility of receiving grants to fund internet expansion.

“We have to figure out how do this,” Finnie Phelps said. “I won’t take no for an answer.”

So-called fixed wireless service — the type offered by Wisper and other rural providers — covers only about half the nation. The FCC grant, which was divvied between Wisper and 102 other companies, should help close the gap.

“It will really allow us to expand in rural areas,” Heuring said.

Subscribe to Daily Headlines






Nat Williams writes for Illinois Farmer Today, a Lee Enterprises sister publication of The Southern.

00-Pol RT,06-RK Email 11,16-Econ,17-Energy,19-Legal,25-Working,26-Delivered

Region: Southern,Energy,City: Carbondale,Region: Carbondale

via thesouthern.com – RSS Results in news/local/environment of type article https://ift.tt/2O20QNP

September 23, 2018 at 07:18AM

Legislative candidate calls for reopening Tamms

https://ift.tt/2PJ2SQ9

TAMMS, Ill. —  The Department of Corrections announced a new $150 million facility recently, designed to help people with mental illness.  

But that facility will be built in Joliet, several hours north, prompting a candidate for state lawmaker to ask,"Why not Tamms?"

Marsha Griffin, a Democrat running for Illinois’ 115th District, said Tamms could easily be repurposed and reopened to help inmates with mental disabilities.

"The decision to build a new facility (in Joliet)… is not only fiscally irresponsible, but shows the governor’s ignorance about the economic situation in Southern Illinois," Griffin said. "We need jobs, and there is a facility that could easily be opened and repurposed currently sitting vacant."

She said southern Illinois needs the jobs, something officials from Tamms have been saying for years.

Lamar Houston, assistant mayor for the village of Tamms, has lived there all his life.

He remembers the excitement about the Tamms Supermax Prison before it was built in the 90s.

"And then all at once, it left," Houston said. "And it left the city with it. It left us with nothing."

Former Gov. Pat Quinn announced the closure of Tamms in 2012, angering several southern Illinois politicians.

Griffin’s plea to Gov. Rauner isn’t anything new, and her opponent, State Rep. Terri Bryant (R-Murphysboro), has also called for the prison to be reopened.

"Well, it’s always going to be a hot topic when you have a facility such as the one we have here and as much money is being spent there," Houston said.

Despite closing for budgetary reasons, Illinois still spends $750,000 per year on Tamms, covering utilities, maintenance and guards.

Several groups also wanted to see Tamms closed because of inhumane conditions.

Houston said no one thought about the closure’s impact on the village.

"We all had high hopes that it was going to bring a few businesses into Tamms," Houston said. "And we can see our community growing rather than like it is now. We’re not able to get anything at all from the prison. We lost a lot. This city lost a lot."

Since the closure in early 2013, lawmakers have fought about the cost of reopening Tamms, but nothing ever happened.

Despite overcrowding in the state’s prisons, it doesn’t appear to be opening back up anytime soon.

010-Inoreader Saves,00-Pol RT,16-Econ,17-Energy,25-Working,26-Delivered

via – WSIL-TV 3 Southern Illinois

September 6, 2018 at 09:56AM

New hope for Hardin County Work Camp

https://ift.tt/2N1mMbv

New hope for Hardin County Work Camp

Plans are being developed to reopen the Hardin County Work Camp as a new detention center. The work camp was closed in January 2016 and local leaders have been working since then to reopen the facility. If reopened as a detention center, it would house 75 to 100 inmates and employ approximately 35 to 40 workers.

00-Pol RT,16-Econ,19-Legal,25-Working,26-Delivered

Feeds,News,Region: Southern,City: Paducah, KY,Region: Carbondale

via WPSD Local 6WPSD Local 6 https://ift.tt/2LmFExz

August 31, 2018 at 06:37AM

Katie Stuart continues to fight for fair funding for SIUE | RiverBender.com

https://ift.tt/2wnNccP

COLLINSVILLE – This week, state Rep. Katie Stuart joined members of the Illinois House Higher Education Committee for a public hearing at SIUE to discuss state funding for the Southern Illinois University system and allocations between the Edwardsville and Carbondale campuses.

“Student enrollment at SIUE has grown exponentially throughout the past decade, but the Edwardsville campus still only receives 36 percent of the Southern Illinois University system’s state funding,” Stuart said. “This hearing was an important opportunity for my colleagues in the legislature to hear from the Edwardsville community and understand how this funding disparity is hurting the students, the faculty and our local economy.”

As a former educator at SIUE, Stuart has been leading the charge to bring fair funding to the Edwardsville campus. She has been calling for the Illinois State Board of Higher Education to conduct an independent study of the SIU Board of Trustees to review the allocation of state funds between the two campuses.

“SIUE has grown to be a major economic engine for the Metro East, not only for the students, but for all residents of the region and it’s time for the distribution of state funding to reflect that growth,” Stuart said. “I will continue fighting to bring fair funding to Edwardsville because I know that it’s the right thing to do for our community.”

Print Version

Submit a News Tip

010-Inoreader Saves,00-Pol RT,12-Coll,16-Econ,25-Working,26-Delivered,HE Blog

via RiverBender.com

August 23, 2018 at 10:21PM

Katie Stuart continues to fight for fair funding for SIUE | RiverBender.com

https://ift.tt/2wnNccP

COLLINSVILLE – This week, state Rep. Katie Stuart joined members of the Illinois House Higher Education Committee for a public hearing at SIUE to discuss state funding for the Southern Illinois University system and allocations between the Edwardsville and Carbondale campuses.

“Student enrollment at SIUE has grown exponentially throughout the past decade, but the Edwardsville campus still only receives 36 percent of the Southern Illinois University system’s state funding,” Stuart said. “This hearing was an important opportunity for my colleagues in the legislature to hear from the Edwardsville community and understand how this funding disparity is hurting the students, the faculty and our local economy.”

As a former educator at SIUE, Stuart has been leading the charge to bring fair funding to the Edwardsville campus. She has been calling for the Illinois State Board of Higher Education to conduct an independent study of the SIU Board of Trustees to review the allocation of state funds between the two campuses.

“SIUE has grown to be a major economic engine for the Metro East, not only for the students, but for all residents of the region and it’s time for the distribution of state funding to reflect that growth,” Stuart said. “I will continue fighting to bring fair funding to Edwardsville because I know that it’s the right thing to do for our community.”

Print Version

Submit a News Tip

010-Inoreader Saves,00-Pol RT,12-Coll,16-Econ,25-Working,26-Delivered,HE Blog

via RiverBender.com

August 23, 2018 at 10:21PM

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑