Communications Daily is a Warren News publication.

Clyburn Urges Framing Broadband Discussion on Goals

Communities in Mississippi and around the country should take the fact that 100 million Americans aren't using broadband as an “opportunity and a challenge,” FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn told the Mississippi Broadband Coalition Summit. She urged those trying to increase…

Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article

Communications Daily is required reading for senior executives at top telecom corporations, law firms, lobbying organizations, associations and government agencies (including the FCC). Join them today!

broadband usage to frame the discussion on the possibilities it brings, in Dec. 2 remarks posted on the commission's website Wednesday. “The goals here are economic development, decreases in unemployment, gains in education, and improved healthcare,” she said. “Too often, we think of these as happy by-products of broadband access. But, how you frame a problem, makes all the difference in finding a solution.” The FCC’s multidisciplinary Connect2Health Task Force’s vision of everyone being connected “to the people, information and services they need to get well and stay healthy” is an example of focusing on the goals, she said. The “benefit of a grand vision is that it can help people who haven’t drunk the broadband Kool-Aid better understand the value proposition of broadband,” Clyburn said. “It can help Mississippians who have to choose how to spend limited discretionary income, choose to spend it on broadband. It can transform the conversation from one about surfing the Internet (which some people may not fully value), to one about improving the health of all Mississippians -- imagine the economic value that could be created if there were no lost days at work due to illness. It can take a [medical] provider network stretched thin and give it more tools to fight obesity and diabetes before the Mississippi safety net cracks under the weight of chronic disease. And, it will give hope to a nation filled with other communities facing these same problems.”