Bill Text: CA SCR90 | 2009-2010 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Affordable housing: in-home Internet service
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 2-0)
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2010-08-11 - In Assembly. Held at Desk. [SCR90 Detail]
Download: California-2009-SCR90-Amended.html
BILL NUMBER: SCR 90 AMENDED BILL TEXT AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 24, 2010 INTRODUCED BY Senator Lowenthal ( Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Jones ) MARCH 18, 2010 Relative to affordable in-home Internet service. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST SCR 90, as amended, Lowenthal. Affordable housing: in-home Internet service accessibility. This measure would encourage all state and local affordable housing lenders who administer competitive multifamily housing programs toensure that affordable housing funding provides forprovide competitive points for developments that will provide high-speed in-home Internet serviceat reduced pricesfree of charge for at least 10 years and recognize that in-home Internet service and network maintenance costs be eligible as operating costs and expenses in specified housing developments and programs. Fiscal committee: yes. WHEREAS, The Internet is rapidly changing the way people live, learn, and earn in modern society. Access to information and the networks available on the Internet strengthens communities, opens new markets for business, offers new workforce development opportunities, and inspires individuals towards entrepreneurship. Without access and training, many citizens will be unable to compete in the increasingly technology-driven, knowledge-based economy. This is precisely the case in California, where the disparities in levels of technology adoption between different socioeconomic groups are enormous. In response to this inequality, strategies have been developed to foster digital inclusion and ensure that all people have access to technology regardless of socioeconomic status; and WHEREAS, The federal government has acknowledged through its provision of funds in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 that due to the immense transformative ability of technology, lack of access has critical social implications; and WHEREAS, According to the Brookings Institution 2007 report, "The Effects of Broadband Deployment on Output and Employment: A Cross-sectional Analysis of U.S. Data" for every one percentage point increase in broadband penetration in a state, employment is projected to increase by 0.2 to 0.3 percent per year; and WHEREAS, According to the study, "Does Home Internet Use Influence the Academic Performance of Low-Income Children?" published in the peer-reviewed journal, Developmental Psychology, results of the academic performance of children of low-income families with median annual income of fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000), mostly from single-parent households, indicate that children who used the Internet more had higher GPAs after one year and higher scores on standardized tests of reading achievement after six months compared to children who used it less; and WHEREAS, The University of California study "Crossing the Divide: Immigrant Youth and Digital Disparity in California" concludes that home computer use and Internet access positively impacts school enrollment, high school graduation, and grades; and WHEREAS, Low-income households are significantly less likely to have a computer, Internet access, or home broadband service, while almost all adults earning over eighty-thousand dollars ($80,000) a year have a computer, Internet access at home, and a broadband connection; and WHEREAS, While 91 percent of college graduates in California subscribe to the Internet at home, less than 50 percent of those without any college education do; and WHEREAS, Overall, 73 percent of Caucasians use the Internet at least occasionally from any location, compared with 62 percent of African Americans and 56 percent of Latinos. At the time of the 2000 Census, 36 percent of Californians are Latinos and 6.7 percent are African American; and WHEREAS, According to the Pew Internet and American Life Project, 35 percent of dial-up users state that the price of high-speed Internet or broadband is too expensive for them to adopt the service, and 7 percent of non-Internet users say that high-speed Internet or broadband service is too expensive; and WHEREAS, Sixty-one percent of college graduates and 64 percent of people with annual household incomes over eighty thousand dollars ($80,000) report that the Internet is very important to them as a source of information in their everyday lives, while only 41 percent of high school graduates and 43 percent of people who earn less than forty thousand dollars ($40,000) say the same; and WHEREAS, Through its Low Income Housing Tax Credit program, California has recognized the importance of Internet service for low-income populations since 2003. The California Tax Credit Allocation Committee (TCAC), which administers the credit in California, amended its policy to encourage affordable housing developers to use low-income housing tax credit funding to provide broadband as a service amenity in affordable housing units. The current policy allows for the cost of data network infrastructure design and installation to be paid for with tax credit funding, and as a result of this amendment, 16,949 units of affordable housing throughout the state currently enjoy in-home Internet service as a basic service amenity; and WHEREAS, Currently the TCAC policy encourages, but does not require, the inclusion of free broadband in all publicly-supported housing. Furthermore, it does not provide an incentive or funding stream for the operation and maintenance of these networks, placing the financial burden on the housing developers. The nonprofit One Economy Corporation has assisted 283 affordable housing developments in California design and install data network infrastructure. The operation and maintenance of the network is paid for by the developer in 100 percent of these developments; and WHEREAS, Most affordable housing developments that receive tax credit funding also borrow money from public agencies, including, but not limited to, the Department of Housing and Community Development, local housing departments, and local redevelopment agencies; and WHEREAS, Most public lenders allow for affordable housing owners to deduct certain project operating costs before they determine the debt payment obligations; and WHEREAS, Currently most lenders do not explicitly allow for Internet service costs and network maintenance costs to be included as eligible operating costs; and WHEREAS, Allowing costs of Internet service and network maintenance would not delay the repayment of public loans and as a result slow the reinvestment of public funds to other developments; now, therefore, be it Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly thereof concurring, That the State of California encourages allstate and local affordable housing lenders to ensure that affordable housing developed with public funds be Smart Housing by aligning their lending policies to California Tax Credit Allocation Committee policies. "Smart Housing" for these purposes means publicly funded affordable housing that has the ability to provide high-speed Internet service to residents in their homes at reduced prices; and be it furtherResolved, That the Department of Housing and Community Development, in its funding for affordable housing, should recognize the costs for not only the data network infrastructure necessary to provide shared affordable Internet service to residents of affordable housing, but also the Internet service and network maintenance costs as eligible operating costs of developments; and be it furtherResolved,That local public lending agencies are encouraged to allow for in-home Internet service and data network maintenance cost as eligible operating expenses in its multifamily lending programs; and be it furtherstate and local affordable housing lenders who administer competitive multifamily housing programs to follow the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee policy on high-speed Internet access by providing competitive points for developments that will provide high-speed Internet service to each unit for a minimum of 10 years, free of charge to the tenants; and be it further Resolved, That the State of California encourages all state and local affordable housing lenders to recognize both the costs for installing high-speed Internet network infrastructure as an eligible development cost and the costs of ongoing Internet service and network maintenance costs as eligible operating costs; and be it further Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.