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High-speed Internet has a ‘HERO’ in rural North Carolina

High-speed Internet

MCNC announced it has successfully secured federal funding to expand its flagship broadband network once again throughout North Carolina.

MCNC received $11.2 million from the U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) for the High-speed Economies for Rural Opportunity, or HERO Project. Funded through the federal “Internet for All” initiative, the HERO Project will directly support improvements to broadband access and affordability in central and southeastern North Carolina. The total HERO Project is estimated at approximately $19 million. No state tax dollars will be used for this expansion.

“It is great to see the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law I supported is providing funding for MCNC’s HERO Project, which is essential to keep the state’s technology economy flourishing,” said United States Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC). “By providing businesses, health care, educational institutions, and government agencies with access to advanced technologies and cybersecurity solutions, MCNC is helping to create jobs, grow the economy, and improve the quality of life for all North Carolinians. This important project shows what we can do together to build a stronger and better North Carolina.”

“High-speed internet access is essential in digital age,” said North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper. “This funding will connect critical community anchors like schools and health care facilities across the state while helping tens of thousands of North Carolinians access new high-speed service in their communities.”

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On May 16, 2022, U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina M. Raimondo was in Durham to launch Internet for All, a federal investment of $45 billion to provide affordable, reliable, high-speed Internet for everyone in America by the end of the decade. The initiative is being administered and implemented by NTIA.

MCNC applied for Internet for All funding in September 2022 to extend its network, the North Carolina Research and Education Network (NCREN), by 209 fiber miles via two strategic routes. Those routes include Albemarle to Winston-Salem (74 miles) in central North Carolina, and between Sanford via Fayetteville to Jacksonville (135 miles) in southeastern North Carolina. The 11 total counties to benefit from this project currently have more than 16,000 unserved and 12,000 underserved housing units, including many substantially unserved local communities. In total, HERO would impact over 350,000 housing units and 696 community anchor institutions, bringing new opportunities to these rural and economically-challenged areas.

“MCNC continues to be the organization whose bold technology solutions can bring equity, inclusion and security to the digital landscape through the development of robust broadband,” said Keith Werner, Vice President for IT Strategy and Cybersecurity at UNC System Office and current chairman of the MCNC Board of Directors.

SOURCE: PRNewswire