Benefits » Libraries
When libraries are connected to high speed Internet, the neighboring community benefits. Public libraries serve as critical gateways to information outside one’s own community, and in the Information Age this role has become even more important. Libraries give people without home computers free access to the Internet, helping America close the digital divide. As reliance upon public libraries to provide broadband telecommunications services for their community increases, it becomes essential to have universal high speed connectivity in libraries across the country.
Current Challenges
Although the need for libraries to provide broadband access is increasing, many libraries are ill-equipped to meet this need. In 2006, 98 percent of public libraries indicated that they provided public access to the Internet, but in the same survey, 45 percent reported that they did not have sufficient bandwidth to satisfy their community’s needs. Libraries without enough bandwidth to quickly transfer data, images, and video put their communities at a serious disadvantage.
Benefits of High Speed Internet to Libraries
- Students use connected libraries to download educational videos, view course lectures, and access scholarly journals.
- Librarians use the Internet for business functions, such as running online catalogs, managing digitized content, and serving patrons through e-mail and online reference.
- Residents in underserved communities such as rural or low income areas where most homes lack access to high speed Internet rely on Internet connectivity from their local public library.
- As central public meeting spaces within communities, libraries connected to high speed Internet can serve as disaster response centers, such as during a flood, fire, or hurricane.
- Senior citizens, many of whom do not own home computers, find public libraries helpful for finding information on health issues or government programs, and maintaining connections with family and friends who live far away.
- Many libraries provide information literacy training that allows less tech-savvy individuals to engage the Internet in ways that otherwise wouldn’t.
Recommendations
- Initiatives to expand high speed Internet should ensure public libraries are connected with sufficient bandwidth capabilities to support their surrounding communities.
- Library connectivity should be a priority in efforts to increase broadband proliferation, especially in underserved areas where a library is the community’s only source of Internet.
- The federal E-rate program should continue its highly-successful program of subsidies for Internet connections for libraries and schools
For More Information
Related Blog Posts:
- 12-15-2011: Vendors responding to the Gig U Project
- 10-20-2011: House Dems Ask FCC To Develop Internet In Nation’s School And Libraries
- 08-31-2011: With CWA Participation, Wisconsin Region Plans Broadband Growth
- 06-30-2011: Public Libraries Need More Broadband, Study Says
- 04-21-2011: FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn Commends the Work of the E-Rate Program
- 03-31-2011: Schools and Libraries Connecting the Unconnected
- 01-19-2011: Internet Services Help Americans Connect to Jobs
- 01-10-2011: Faster Internet Needed in Schools and Libraries
- 12-15-2010: With Broadband Needs Rising, Libraries Under Strain
- 09-27-2010: FCC Opening the E-Rate to “Dark Fiber” Raises Concerns
- 08-24-2010: The Benefits of Broadband
- 08-10-2010: CWA Support for Strenghtening E-Rate Program
- 07-22-2010: Universal Service Reform Act of 2010 introduced
- 07-16-2010: CWA Files Comments with the FCC on Universal Service Fund Reform
- 07-16-2010: Changes Proposed for the FCC’s E-Rate Program
- 07-09-2010: Baltimore Library Opens Door to High-Speed Internet Access
- 07-06-2010: Libraries need broadband to educate and bring us together
- 07-06-2010: ALA study shows libraries are often the only place for free Internet
- 06-28-2010: West Virginia Implements Statewide Fiber Optic Broadband Network
- 06-25-2010: Wisconsin Set to Deploy Broadband Stimulus Funding
- 04-19-2010: FCC’s Levin outlines plans to get more older Americans online
- 04-12-2010: FCC’s Proposed 2010 Key Broadband Initiatives Available
- 03-08-2010: Social Science Resource Council report: Barriers to broadband adoption for low-income communities
- 01-19-2010: NTIA and RUS announce second round of broadband grants
- 01-05-2010: Eighteen states and two territories ring in the New Year with NTIA grants
- 12-02-2009: Gates Foundation comes to libraries’ aid
- 11-03-2009: Connecting libraries is crucial - and possible
- 10-14-2009: In Texas, connecting public libraries a priority
- 09-15-2009: Budget cuts and job seekers strain public library resources
- 09-14-2009: Ohio makes strides in closing the digital divide
- 09-08-2009: The FCC hosts three workshops on broadband deployment and adoption
- 09-08-2009: You want broadband and you want it now
- 07-30-2009: Arkansas libraries addressing connectivity issues
- 07-09-2009: The American Library Association (ALA) recommends fiber for the future
- 06-16-2009: Arkansas Opportunity Online Broadband Summit gathers leaders to discuss future
- 06-05-2009: Broadband stimulus progress report stipulates grant application deadlines
- 05-15-2009: Libraries extending efforts to secure federal money for high-speed Internet
- 05-01-2009: Half of Tennessee on wrong side of digital divide
- 04-28-2009: Lack of high-speed Internet hurts business
- 03-13-2009: Broadband stimulus program kick off meeting big success
- 02-09-2009: Stimulus Broadband Package Looks To Help Libraries Across The U.S.
- 12-23-2008: Public libraries in seven states to engage in broadband pilot programS
- 08-07-2008: Internet access key to libraries resurgence
- 02-22-2008: Economic downturns send people to libraries for high speed Internet
- 03-15-2007: American Library Association on SpeedMatters
- 03-06-2007: Rural users strain city libraries
- 01-13-2007: Internet, Interrupted
- 10-03-2006: There’s more than books at the library


