|
Computer Technology Committee
Filed: 3/10/2005
|
|
09400HB3650ham001 |
|
LRB094 10275 MKM 43520 a |
|
|
1 |
| AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 3650
|
2 |
| AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 3650 by replacing |
3 |
| everything after the enacting clause with the following:
|
4 |
| "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
5 |
| Integrated Telecommunications Outreach, Outcomes Planning, and |
6 |
| Digital Literacy Act. |
7 |
| Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly finds that the |
8 |
| following needs are essential to statewide telecommunications |
9 |
| technological infrastructure: |
10 |
| (1) The need for affordable telephone and Internet |
11 |
| connections for all Illinoisans. The daily convenience and |
12 |
| necessity of residents, businesses,
community institutions, |
13 |
| and enterprises calls for cooperation by all to facilitate a |
14 |
| range of telephone and telecommunication services that enable |
15 |
| all persons, enterprises, and institutions to connect with each |
16 |
| other for the basic purposes of life, safety, health, and |
17 |
| productive activity and for the purpose of getting Illinois |
18 |
| online in convenient and affordable advanced communication and |
19 |
| broadband as a linked, digitally literate set of regions that |
20 |
| are competitive in our world today. |
21 |
| (2) The need for digital literacy and technological skills |
22 |
| to use Internet tools and improve citizen productivity. The |
23 |
| safety, health, and social cohesion of all individuals, |
24 |
| families, and
communities in Illinois, as well as the speed of |
|
|
|
09400HB3650ham001 |
- 2 - |
LRB094 10275 MKM 43520 a |
|
|
1 |
| expansion of voice, data, and visual communication services in |
2 |
| many modes calls for multiyear cooperation for systematic |
3 |
| outreach to all Illinois residents to understand their |
4 |
| telephone and telecommunications options, availability, costs, |
5 |
| guarantees, and qualities of service, including advertisement |
6 |
| of choices and the availability of consumer protection, the |
7 |
| development of means for systematic feedback about the quality |
8 |
| of service and its impacts on many kinds of customers, and for |
9 |
| the purpose of sustaining systematic means for user-friendly |
10 |
| ways to continually advance digital literacy to use the |
11 |
| increasingly complex electronic and telephone-linked tools |
12 |
| that are new necessities of life not only for average residents |
13 |
| who may be without the stability and resources of daily access |
14 |
| to full phone service. |
15 |
| (3) The need for assistance in providing personal |
16 |
| information management tools for average residents. The volume |
17 |
| of telephone and telecommunications-based personal and
mass |
18 |
| communication calls for designing telephone and |
19 |
| telecommunications choices to enable all residents, |
20 |
| enterprises, and institutions to manage and have privacy in |
21 |
| communication through consumer service tools provided by many |
22 |
| public, private, and community providers, as they communicate |
23 |
| with each other for basic purposes of life, liberty, and |
24 |
| happiness; which include using telephone and |
25 |
| telecommunications tools for more advanced purposes of |
26 |
| connecting with the Internet online services for public |
27 |
| services, schools and learning, health care, cultural and |
28 |
| community arts, employment, economic opportunity, commercial |
29 |
| and consumer purchasing, and transportation and local access |
30 |
| places in their community dialogs and planning. |
31 |
| (4) The need for cooperative local, regional, and Statewide |
32 |
| planning for basic telecommunications and broadband extension |
33 |
| to all Illinois citizens. The many kinds and levels of basic |
34 |
| and advanced services and the
convergence of provision by |
|
|
|
09400HB3650ham001 |
- 3 - |
LRB094 10275 MKM 43520 a |
|
|
1 |
| converging modes of wireline, cable, wireless satellite, |
2 |
| wireless towers, wireless locations, utility lines, and voice |
3 |
| over Internet call for statewide cooperation in better data |
4 |
| collection and sharing information about current and newly |
5 |
| emerging availability, choices, and costs of basic and advanced |
6 |
| telephone and telecommunications and evaluation of service |
7 |
| quality and use. |
8 |
| (5) The need for assistance to residents with special basic |
9 |
| telecommunication and assistive technology needs. There are |
10 |
| social needs for better information by many kinds of consumers
|
11 |
| who have limited telephone and telecommunications choices, |
12 |
| including needs to understand special programs for basic life |
13 |
| connections and assistive services, as well as opportunities to |
14 |
| benefit from stable telecommunications addresses and special |
15 |
| service designated for universal service connectivity. |
16 |
| (6) The need for better public access to telecommunications |
17 |
| services. There are needs for all consumers to better |
18 |
| understand how to use public access information services, |
19 |
| including call-in and call-out services of 911, use of 411 |
20 |
| personal services and electronic directory assistance, 311 |
21 |
| local government information, and new 211 public and community |
22 |
| human services. |
23 |
| (7) The need for better cooperation among local, county, |
24 |
| regional, and Statewide telecommunications planning and |
25 |
| outcomes tracking. There are needs for local, county, and |
26 |
| statewide public officials and
planning bodies to have better |
27 |
| information on telephone and telecommunications capacity and |
28 |
| usage and digital and technological skills in order to |
29 |
| undertake multi-year plans and public infrastructure |
30 |
| investments, to communicate the telecommunications readiness |
31 |
| of particular facilities or areas, and reduce the costs to |
32 |
| local taxpayers for basic infrastructure, as well as for |
33 |
| emergency safety and core health connections services, which |
34 |
| often require advanced telecommunications for life supporting |
|
|
|
09400HB3650ham001 |
- 4 - |
LRB094 10275 MKM 43520 a |
|
|
1 |
| uses and greatest savings in public and resident costs and |
2 |
| efficiencies in network usage |
3 |
| (8) The need for lesser connected residents to maintain |
4 |
| access and technological skills at home, at work, and in public |
5 |
| settings in order for Illinois to compete in the world |
6 |
| marketplace. There are needs for all Illinois residents, and |
7 |
| especially residents with less
than average resources or in |
8 |
| lesser connected communities or with special needs, to gain and |
9 |
| maintain technological and digital literacy skills to use basic |
10 |
| and advanced telecommunications in homes, at work, in schools, |
11 |
| libraries, community centers, and health care facilities, and |
12 |
| in public agencies and in settings, including at public and |
13 |
| commercial information kiosks or information ATM machines; |
14 |
| including the need to systematically increase the |
15 |
| telecommunications use capacity of the Illinois workforce to |
16 |
| reduce unemployment and underemployment in Illinois, which |
17 |
| continues at substantially higher levels than national |
18 |
| averages and which lags in terms of hiring for professional, |
19 |
| technical, and entry-level employment in the face of regional |
20 |
| and worldwide employment. |
21 |
| (9) The need for cooperation among State agencies |
22 |
| concerning telecommunications access and technological skills |
23 |
| programs to increase stakeholder investments from public and |
24 |
| private parties. There are needs for cooperation among many |
25 |
| State agencies, including cooperation among the Department of |
26 |
| Commerce and Economic Opportunity, the Illinois Commerce |
27 |
| Commission, and the many programs that have responsibility for |
28 |
| outreach concerning skill building, public benefit access, and |
29 |
| community quality of life planning and implementation. |
30 |
| (10) The need for a public-private coordinating committee |
31 |
| to work with the Department of Commerce and Economic |
32 |
| Opportunity and its Advisory Committee on Elimination of the |
33 |
| Digital Divide to integrate outreach and multi-year |
34 |
| sustainable approaches. Coordinating and cooperating parties |
|
|
|
09400HB3650ham001 |
- 5 - |
LRB094 10275 MKM 43520 a |
|
|
1 |
| need to include telecommunications providers, |
2 |
| telecommunications-related technology product and service |
3 |
| providers, community technology providers, consumer interest |
4 |
| and economic development and health and safety organizations, |
5 |
| community service and research programs of institutions of |
6 |
| higher education and community service and technological |
7 |
| skills programs of elementary and secondary education, public |
8 |
| agencies and local and regional planning bodies in all regions |
9 |
| of the State, and other State and federal agencies and offices |
10 |
| to assist in enabling all interested parties in participating |
11 |
| in outreach, outcomes, planning, and digital literacy |
12 |
| activities, in identifying appropriate sources of revenues for |
13 |
| specific programs, and in developing new sources of endowment |
14 |
| or program matching funds, including through programs and |
15 |
| partnerships to share information about the synergies and |
16 |
| shared data and outcomes information on Digital Literacy and |
17 |
| Technology Access programs for underserved areas and |
18 |
| populations in the State. |
19 |
| Section 10. Telecommunications outreach cooperation. |
20 |
| Subject to appropriation, the Department of Commerce and |
21 |
| Economic Opportunity, as part of the Director's responsibility |
22 |
| for regional planning, technology, industrial competitiveness, |
23 |
| and workforce skills, and for communication with |
24 |
| telecommunications carriers and others in relation to the |
25 |
| Eliminate the Digital Divide Law, shall establish a |
26 |
| telecommunications outreach program within the Division of |
27 |
| Technology and Industrial Competitiveness, in consultation |
28 |
| with the Illinois Commerce Commission. The telecommunications |
29 |
| outreach program shall do all of the following: |
30 |
| (1) Convene a working group of all public agencies, |
31 |
| telecommunications providers,
and community and consumer |
32 |
| enterprises or institutions that have substantial outreach |
33 |
| programs concerning educating residents, especially |
|
|
|
09400HB3650ham001 |
- 6 - |
LRB094 10275 MKM 43520 a |
|
|
1 |
| low-income, less connected, and special needs residents, |
2 |
| to catalog telecommunications outreach and marketing |
3 |
| programs, audiences, communication processes, and |
4 |
| potential means of cooperation. |
5 |
| (2) Undertake an expanded outreach and marketing |
6 |
| process among
telecommunications providers and others to |
7 |
| secure contributions to the Eliminate the Digital Divide |
8 |
| Trust Program, in order to highlight the locations of |
9 |
| public access community technology centers and services, |
10 |
| linked with all State departments and offices, and to |
11 |
| encourage the acquisition and maintenance of basic and more |
12 |
| advanced technological and digital literacy skills linked |
13 |
| with Internet and other telecommunications in underserved |
14 |
| communities. |
15 |
| (3) Establish and undertake a program of outreach to |
16 |
| implement a Good Samaritan Computer program to solicit |
17 |
| voluntary contributions to assist low-income individuals |
18 |
| and families in purchasing computers, coordinated with |
19 |
| other outreach and solicitation programs for individual |
20 |
| contributions. |
21 |
| (4) Establish among parties participating under this |
22 |
| Section and other Sections established in this Act, a |
23 |
| public-private coordinating committee with responsibility |
24 |
| to help identify and secure multi-year investment or |
25 |
| endowment funds and program funds, including through |
26 |
| federal, national, and international programs, including |
27 |
| through cooperative outreach programs and through |
28 |
| matching, formal or informal partnerships or cooperation, |
29 |
| including tracking outcomes and research data, through an |
30 |
| annual review of achievements of programs of the Department |
31 |
| and others, through opportunities for local access plans in |
32 |
| all communities to participate, and other means to expand |
33 |
| digital literacy and technology access through an |
34 |
| Eliminate the Digital Divide Community Trust process or |
|
|
|
09400HB3650ham001 |
- 7 - |
LRB094 10275 MKM 43520 a |
|
|
1 |
| future structure as a local-State stakeholder community to |
2 |
| assist in improving the quality of lives and strengthening |
3 |
| the family and social networks of low income and other |
4 |
| lesser connected residents and entities. |
5 |
| Section 15. Telephone and telecommunications service |
6 |
| outcomes, data sharing, and planning. Subject to |
7 |
| appropriation, the Department of Commerce and Economic |
8 |
| Opportunity, in cooperation with the Illinois Commerce |
9 |
| Commission and the Illinois Attorney General, shall establish a |
10 |
| Telecommunications Service Outcomes, Data Sharing, and Local |
11 |
| Planning program. The program shall: |
12 |
| (1) Convene a local-State-federal telecommunications |
13 |
| cooperative data
collection and sharing working group to |
14 |
| make recommendations on State-federal cooperation, |
15 |
| including basic and broadband telecommunications data from |
16 |
| FCC form 477, to assist decision-makers, planners, and |
17 |
| consumer protection parties at the State and local levels |
18 |
| to gain better data to make decisions concerning all modes |
19 |
| of telecommunications and information infrastructure. |
20 |
| (2) Establish and undertake a regional-local |
21 |
| telecommunications planning process in
cooperation with 7 |
22 |
| to 10 regional telecommunications service areas in |
23 |
| Illinois, regional planning councils and their member |
24 |
| public officials, other parties within multi-county areas, |
25 |
| nonprofit community development, technology and media |
26 |
| networks, and telecommunications consumer groups in these |
27 |
| regions, along the lines of using an RFP process to provide |
28 |
| grants to community telecommunications planning processes. |
29 |
| (3) Establish and undertake special community |
30 |
| telecommunication local access planning for sustainability |
31 |
| process for community-based collaboratives or consortia, |
32 |
| with grant funding available from Department programs, |
33 |
| from public-private partnerships, or from the Eliminate |
|
|
|
09400HB3650ham001 |
- 8 - |
LRB094 10275 MKM 43520 a |
|
|
1 |
| the Digital Divide Program or a combination of sources, and |
2 |
| to plan for programs that assist low income families to |
3 |
| secure loans and access to special discount programs of |
4 |
| electronic product companies. |
5 |
| (4) Undertake demonstration telephone and |
6 |
| telecommunications quality of
service feedback assemblies |
7 |
| in a number of local access places in areas of 5,000 up to |
8 |
| 60,000 residents in each telecommunications service |
9 |
| region, with an initial focus on low-income or otherwise |
10 |
| lesser connected communities, with a purpose of bringing |
11 |
| together a cross-section of consumers of all modes of |
12 |
| telecommunications to provide systematic feedback on top |
13 |
| priorities for telecommunications infrastructure or |
14 |
| services to improve the quality of families and |
15 |
| communities, and specific improvements in the quality, |
16 |
| availability, costs, and information about each |
17 |
| telecommunications provider or service. The assemblies |
18 |
| shall be hosted by non-profit, educational, community, or |
19 |
| public agencies or enterprises that are not substantial |
20 |
| providers of telecommunications services and that shall |
21 |
| work closely with regional planning councils and related |
22 |
| community development and consumer services networks in |
23 |
| the area. |
24 |
| Section 20. Technological literacy trust grants and |
25 |
| outcome tracking initiative. Subject to appropriation, the |
26 |
| Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity shall |
27 |
| establish an Eliminate the Digital Divide Community Trust |
28 |
| Program as a continuation and expansion of the Eliminate the |
29 |
| Digital Divide grant program, in cooperation with other State |
30 |
| agencies, community technology networks, consumer |
31 |
| representatives, education and higher education agencies and |
32 |
| extension services, regional planning councils, local public |
33 |
| agency officials, and public, nonprofit, and business |
|
|
|
09400HB3650ham001 |
- 9 - |
LRB094 10275 MKM 43520 a |
|
|
1 |
| institutions or enterprises that provide grants and other |
2 |
| resources for telephone, telecommunications and related |
3 |
| quality of life services, training, or infrastructure and in |
4 |
| consultation with the advisory committee on elimination of the |
5 |
| digital divide. The Trust Program may receive voluntary |
6 |
| contributions directly from members of the public, including |
7 |
| any entity, and from the voluntary contribution programs of |
8 |
| telecommunications providers authorized under the Eliminate |
9 |
| the Digital Divide Law. |
10 |
| The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity shall |
11 |
| do all of the following: |
12 |
| (1) Provide "Train the Trainer" grants, other |
13 |
| professional development grants, and
evaluation-linked |
14 |
| grants to determine the outcomes and the impacts of digital |
15 |
| literacy and technology access programs of the Department |
16 |
| of Commerce and Economic Opportunity and other State |
17 |
| agencies and significant regional or statewide programs to |
18 |
| entities or consortia that are region-based or |
19 |
| statewide-based community technology centers or networks |
20 |
| that participate in the broadly-based annual |
21 |
| Telecommunications Conference on Economic Development and |
22 |
| telehealth sponsored by the University of Illinois |
23 |
| extension program and others. |
24 |
| (2) Provide "Community Innovation" grants of between |
25 |
| $5,000 to $50,000 to nonprofit community-based |
26 |
| organizations to demonstrate innovative means to host |
27 |
| consumer and community feedback activities on the impact of |
28 |
| telecommunication access and technological skills on |
29 |
| quality of life, including assemblies in local access |
30 |
| places, in low-income areas and other underserved |
31 |
| populations and communities with special and assistive |
32 |
| needs, and for purposes of developing community |
33 |
| telecommunication plans, or community technology center |
34 |
| plans, to extend access and skills, including in homes, |
|
|
|
09400HB3650ham001 |
- 10 - |
LRB094 10275 MKM 43520 a |
|
|
1 |
| work locations, community technology centers, and public |
2 |
| settings, including information kiosks, and including |
3 |
| through innovative job-producing and revenue-generating |
4 |
| community enterprises, including in the expanding areas of |
5 |
| processing, demanufacturing and distribution of used |
6 |
| technologies, undertaking electronic product recycling |
7 |
| activities, and the development and distribution of |
8 |
| personal information management tools and information ATM |
9 |
| cards in the community, either directly or through |
10 |
| statewide or regional circuit consortia with substantial |
11 |
| experience in assisting such organizations. |
12 |
| (3) In consultation with the Advisory Committee on |
13 |
| Elimination of the Digital Divide, provide "Family and |
14 |
| Social Network Strengthening" grants
of an amount to be |
15 |
| determined to innovative organizations or enterprises that |
16 |
| have the capacity to provide and sustain Personal |
17 |
| Information Management tools and services, including |
18 |
| assistive technologies, e-mail and e-personal |
19 |
| applications, and information ATM cards, at low-cost or |
20 |
| no-cost to low income and other underserved families and |
21 |
| individuals to enable them to acquire skills and develop |
22 |
| and strengthen links with ongoing consumer services and |
23 |
| Community Technology Centers and other important work and |
24 |
| family support networks and with special focus on |
25 |
| regionwide and statewide sustainable networks and |
26 |
| services. |
27 |
| (4) Co-sponsor an annual statewide community |
28 |
| technology center professional
development conference and |
29 |
| any regional professional development online resources and |
30 |
| calendar activities recommended by the advisory committee |
31 |
| on elimination of the digital divide. |
32 |
| (5) Convene a stakeholder conference on resources to |
33 |
| eliminate the digital
divide. |
34 |
| (6) Administer the resources in the current Eliminate |
|
|
|
09400HB3650ham001 |
- 11 - |
LRB094 10275 MKM 43520 a |
|
|
1 |
| the Digital Divide grant
program, with interest on funds in |
2 |
| the program to be used by the program and with funds |
3 |
| received by the program from contributions from residents |
4 |
| and stakeholders in digital literacy, including from |
5 |
| telecommunications formulaic or other contributions, not |
6 |
| subject to reduction or use by the general treasury |
7 |
| reduction or use by the general treasury and with authority |
8 |
| to make grants of up to $75,000 for technological skills |
9 |
| and telecommunication and technology access to Community |
10 |
| Technology Centers and to "Train the Trainer" grants |
11 |
| provided for in this Section and to enable Community |
12 |
| Technology Centers to assist participants in understanding |
13 |
| and using Personal Information Management tools as part of |
14 |
| regular training and access services and as a means to |
15 |
| assist those Centers in developing on-going services to |
16 |
| participants and sources of earned revenue. |
17 |
| (7) Prepare an annual report on Digital Literacy and |
18 |
| Technology and Telecommunication Access and their impact |
19 |
| on community and economic development in the State, |
20 |
| including a summary of outcomes since the initial grants |
21 |
| under the Eliminate the Digital Divide Law, by February 1 |
22 |
| of each year. |
23 |
| (8) Propose a formal Eliminate the Digital Divide |
24 |
| Community Trust structure or entity involving |
25 |
| public-private-community partnership activity, in |
26 |
| consultation with coordinating and cooperating parties |
27 |
| involved with activities under this Act,
that has the |
28 |
| capacity to bring resources from State and local agencies, |
29 |
| telecommunications providers, business and charitable |
30 |
| entities, and cooperation among those parties, including |
31 |
| opportunities to apply for federal and other public, |
32 |
| business, or charitable grants, funds, or revenue sources |
33 |
| and that may undertake activities on October 1, 2006 or |
34 |
| January 1, 2007.".
|