BILL REQ. #: S-4002.1
State of Washington | 60th Legislature | 2008 Regular Session |
Read first time 01/16/08. Referred to Committee on Water, Energy & Telecommunications.
AN ACT Relating to a statewide high-speed internet deployment and adoption effort; and adding a new section to chapter 43.105 RCW.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 A new section is added to chapter 43.105 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The legislature finds that the deployment and adoption of
telecommunications services and information technology has resulted in
enhanced economic development and public safety for the state's
communities, improved health care and educational opportunities, and a
better quality of life for the state's residents. Further, continued
progress in the deployment and adoption of high-speed internet and
other advanced telecommunications services, both land-based and
wireless, is vital to ensuring Washington remains competitive and
continues to create business and job growth. The legislature finds
that the state must encourage and support strategic partnerships of
public, private, and nonprofit sectors in the continued growth and
development of telecommunications and information technology for state
residents and businesses, and do so through formalized and structured
arrangements like the highly successful K-20 educational network.
(2) The department, as the state agency responsible for
coordinating with the education sectors on the K-20 educational
network, shall work in similar partnership with the department of
community, trade, and economic development and the utilities and
transportation commission to lead a comprehensive, statewide high-speed
internet deployment and adoption initiative to:
(a) Ensure that all state residents and businesses have access to
affordable and reliable high-speed internet services;
(b) Achieve improved technology literacy, increased computer
ownership, and high-speed internet use among state residents and
businesses;
(c) Establish and empower local technology planning teams and
partnerships to plan for improved technology use across multiple
community sectors; and
(d) Establish and sustain an environment ripe for
telecommunications and technology investment statewide, including
solicitation and receipt of grants, loans, and other financial
mechanisms.
(3) The partnership in subsection (2) of this section shall include
input and cooperation among public, private, and nonprofit agencies and
organizations representing economic development, local community
development, technology planning, education, health care, and other
relevant entities. The partnership shall additionally collaborate with
telecommunications providers, technology companies, telecommunications
unions, community-based organizations, and relevant private sector
entities to achieve the purposes in subsection (2) of this section.
(4) The high-speed internet deployment and adoption effort in
subsection (2) of this section shall include, but not be limited to:
(a) Creating and regularly updating a geographic statewide
inventory of high-speed internet service and other relevant
telecommunications and information technology services. The inventory
shall:
(i) Identify geographic gaps in high-speed internet service through
a method of geographic information system mapping of service
availability and geographic information system analysis at the census
block level;
(ii) Provide a baseline assessment of statewide high-speed internet
deployment in terms of percentage of households and businesses with
high-speed internet availability;
(iii) Provide updates to these data every six months; and
(iv) Build upon the initial utilities and transportation commission
broadband disparity study authorized by the legislature in 2007;
(b) Tracking statewide residential and business adoption of high-speed internet, computers, and related information technology;
identifying barriers to adoption; and measuring progress on these data
annually;
(c) Building and facilitating local technology planning teams and
partnerships with members representing cross-sections of the community,
including but not limited to representatives of business,
telecommunications unions, K-12 education, health care, libraries,
higher education, community-based organizations, local government,
tourism, parks and recreation, and agriculture. Local technology
planning teams shall benchmark technology use across relevant community
sectors, set goals for improving technology use within each sector, and
develop tactical business plans for achieving identified goals, with
specific recommendations for online application development and demand
creation;
(d) Working collaboratively with high-speed internet providers and
technology companies across the state to encourage deployment and use,
especially in underserved areas, through use of local demand
aggregation, mapping analysis, and creation of market intelligence to
improve the investment rationale and business case; and
(e) Establishing programs to improve computer ownership and
internet access for disenfranchised populations across the state.
(5) The partnership in subsection (2) of this section may contract
with other organizations to accomplish the objectives in this section.
Any such organization shall have an established competency in working
with public and private sectors to accomplish wide-scale deployment and
adoption of telecommunications and information technology.
(6) The partnership in subsection (2) of this section shall provide
a report on the partnership's activities to the fiscal and
telecommunications committees in the senate and house of
representatives, together with any recommendations for strengthening
the program. The report shall be provided annually not later than
December 1st, beginning in 2009, and cover the preceding fiscal year.