As part of a recent push to increase rural broadband access in the U.S., Microsoft announced today that it will partner with Michigan-based Packerland Broadband. The goal is toprovide internet access to 82,000 people living in rural regions of northern Wisconsin and the upper peninsula of Michigan over the next four years. The partnership is the first of its kind between Microsoft and a regional broadband provider like Packerland.
Microsoft President Brad Smith made the announcement at a meeting of the National Governor’s Association. The initiative is part of Microsoft’s TechSpark program, which aims to provide digital skills and job training programs, grants to local non-profits, broadband access, and other digital resources to six communities across the U.S., including Northeast Wisconsin.
“Broadband has become the electricity of the 21st century, essential for education, business, agriculture and health care,” Smith stated in a press release announcing the news.
As part of the partnership, Packerland — a subsidiary of Michigan cable company CCI Systems — will leverage TV White Spaces technology developed by Microsoft, which the company made available royalty-free as part of its Rural Airband Initiative. Consumers, small businesses and students will also be able to get access to Windows devices, Office 365, and other cloud-based services through Packerland, though Microsoft didn’t provide any details on pricing.
According to data from the Federal Communications Commission, 43 percent and 34 percent of rural residents in Wisconsin and Michigan respectively lack broadband access.
Microsoft unveiled its TechSpark initiative last October, though it has announced few details since then on how much the company will be investing in each of the six chosen communities. In Northeast Wisconsin, Microsoft announced in October that it would invest $5 million to assist with the development of a business development lab, alongside the Green Bay Packers.
Enveloped within Microsoft’s TechSpark program is the Rural Airband Initiative. Announced in July, the Airband initiative aims to get 2 million rural Americans broadband access by 2022, through partnerships with both commercial and regional broadband providers. The company also led the formation of a lobbying group in January to push the FCC to eliminate regulatory hurdles that it says stand in the way of broadband deployment.
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