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Utah lands $5.6 million in "Internet for All" planning grants Thumbnail Image

Utah lands $5.6 million in "Internet for All" planning grants

Utah has long been a pioneer in broadband planning. The state has its own broadband map and State Broadband Office Director Rebecca Dilg has said that it plans to use its map to "challenge location-level coverage claims in the cases of multi-dwelling buildings where federal maps would claim a location is served without considering multi-tenant living situations," according to Broadband Breakfast. 

The Biden administration announced late November that it is awarding $5.6 million to the state to enable it to plan for the flood of Broadband, Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) funding expected to come its way. 

Like most other states, Utah will receive $100 million. But will also receive a proportion of federal funding depending on the number of unserved (under 25/3 Mbps) and underserved (under 100/20 Mbps) locations as defined by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. 

Broadband.money estimates that this will vary between $397.8 M - $416.7 Million.

The Biden administration, for its part, estimates that the planning grants help Dilg's office to:

  • Identify unserved and underserved locations;
  • Train employees of Utah’s broadband program and increase office capacity;
  • Map and catalogue high-speed Internet service adoption, affordability, equity, access and deployment across the state
  • Develop the “All Utah, All Online” project, a five-year action plan supported by the precise assessment of current Internet service speeds and a better understanding of barriers.

Digital Equity

As the Biden administration's National Telecommunications and Information Administration says itself: "The Digital Equity Act provides $2.75 billion to establish three grant programs to ensure that all people and communities have the skills, technology, and capacity needed to reap the full benefits of our digital economy. 

The first part of NTIA’s execution of the Digital Equity Act is to fund digital equity planning efforts."

Utah will receive $676,684.53 to fund various activities including:

  • Development of a statewide digital equity plan;
  • Building digital access program capacity;
  • Provision of funding to create local digital equity plans.

Broadband.money can help you win your region's fair share of funding to get everyone connected.

We have the tools and data you need to create detailed broadband grant proposals that will make a real impact in your community. 

Identify unserved and underserved locations, as well as map assets across your service area to catalogue high-speed Internet service adoption, affordability, equity, access and deployment. 

We have the tools to help you develop a 5-year action plan supported by the precise assessment of current Internet service speeds, as required by the IIJA.

Find out more. Contact us

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