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asd83361
03-15-2010, 01:34 PM
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jack0012conn
03-16-2010, 03:43 AM
http://www.cnn.com/video/us/2010/03/12/snow.broadband.battle.cnn.640x360.jpgDave Pries stands near a decades-old weather siren in his hometown of Minneiska, Minnesota, worrying about when the next tornado will hit. Along with the weather, the city clerk voices another big concern here: slow Internet connections."It's about as slow as sending it through the post office," he says. Minneiska, like many rural communities, cannot afford to install the infrastructure for broadband. Pries says not having it is more than just an inconvenience. He says if the town had it, it would be able to send weather alerts directly to people's homes. Without it, he says, the town relies on an aging siren in need of an upgrade."This equipment that we have here is dated back to the 1970s, 1980s, maybe early 1980s." He adds, "It's going to become obsolete at the end of the year."Enter Gary Evans, the CEO of Hiawatha Broadband. Minneiska is among the communities Evans serves."That's really what broadband means to rural America," Evans says. "It means survival." When the government announced it was tapping $7.2 billion in stimulus money to bring broadband to rural communities, Evans thought he had a good case. His customers include the Prairie Island Indian Community.In Lake City, Minnesota, apple orchard owner Dennis Courtier warns of small businesses like his becoming extinct. "Not having the kind of communication capacity in rural areas for rural businesses, it's going to be like not having electricity at the end of the Depression."Evans applied for nearly $6 million in broadband grants and gets emotional when talking about what happened next. "Unfortunately, the application above was not selected for funding," says his rejection letter from the Department of Commerce. The letter says his application didn't score high enough towow leveling (http://www.wow-leveler.com/wow-power-leveling.html) move forward. The Commerce Department says, "We can't fund all the proposals we receive, nor do we have the resources to debrief every applicant."A second agency, the Department of Agriculture, rejected Evans' application because the company didn't put up enough of its own money. Jonathan Adelstein, the administrator of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Rural Utilities Service, says the government required companies to fund half the project. powerleveling aion (http://www.wow-leveler.com)Hiawatha planned to put up 20 percent.Evans says his rejection stung even more when he learned one of the projects the Department of Agriculture did fund was Bretton Woods Telephone Company in the ski resort community of Bretton Woods, New Hampshire. It won nearly $1 million in broadband grant money at the urging of real estate developer Charles Adams.