The Hamilton County Broadband Survey is your chance to let county officials know whether you have the broadband you need for your business – now and for the future.
This online survey will inform the Hamilton County Commissioners’ disbursement of $10 million in federal ARPA recovery funding for local broadband improvements. Help shape Hamilton County’s broadband investment. Click the button below to take the survey today. Take the Hamilton County Business Broadband Survey Here!
The survey takes approximately 20 minutes to complete, and will be used to expand and improve broadband services in the Hamilton County community. For more information, check out the County’s website www.hamiltoncountyohio.gov/broadband.
Presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump failed on promises to secure funding to repair the 50-year-old Brent Spence Bridge spanning the Ohio River at Cincinnati. (Atony-22/Wikimedia Commons)
The White House is detailing its goals for improving Ohio’s infrastructure through the American Jobs Plan.
According to a fact sheet released Monday, Ohio has more than 1,300 bridges and nearly 5,000 miles of highway in poor condition that would benefit from the proposal’s $115 billion national investment road and bridge repair. A 2021 infrastructure report card gave Ohio a grade of “C-minus.”
Nick Bates, outreach director for One Ohio Now, said the president’s proposal to include $85 billion for public transportation is a welcome investment.
“So many people, in not just urban areas but rural areas as well, rely on public transit to go to and from work, to get to the grocery store and to be connected to their community,” Bates explained. “So those investments to make sure that people around the state can stay connected will be essential.”
According to the White House, Ohio will benefit from $13 billion for drinking water infrastructure over the next two decades and a national investment of $200 billion to increase the availability of affordable housing.
Critics question the use of corporate tax increases to pay for the $2.7 trillion plan, which they argue is too broad.
Bates is also excited to see the plan will invest $100 billion to expand broadband, which is out of reach for 14% of Ohioans.
“Infrastructure is more than just bridges and roads,” Bates contended. “It has to include things like broadband access. I have two kids, and watching them and their classmates struggle to learn digitally with the pandemic, having spotty internet connections and no internet connections, made that task even more difficult.”
Ohio passed an increase in the state fuel tax in 2019 for road and bridge repairs, which Bates argued was just the first of many steps needed to address the state’s crumbling infrastructure.
He pointed out infrastructure often requires the federal government to step in.
“Public projects of the 1930s and ’40s built up a lot of the infrastructure, expanding electricity into parts of the country that never had it before,” Bates recounted. “We can look at the original development of our interstate highway system.”
The plan also invests in clean-energy jobs, manufacturing, home energy, child care and caregiving jobs.