Today, Explained - America Offline
Episode Date: December 2, 2020Low-income students are dropping out of college because many don’t have a reliable way to get online. Vox’s Emily Stewart says the solution is simple: Give everybody the internet. Transcript at vo...x.com/todayexplained. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Visit connectsontario.S. is facing a COVID college crisis.
Due to the pandemic, tens of thousands of low-income students are deciding
not to enroll. We know that there were more than 100,000 high school seniors who did not complete
their federal financial aid form known as the FAFSA this year, so that's a big indicator.
Danielle Douglas-Gabriel covers the economics of education for The Washington Post.
We also know that college enrollment of freshmen is down 16% from the previous year.
16% of freshmen not coming to class or not enrolling, that's pretty significant.
And especially for low-income students, what starts out temporary can often end up becoming permanent.
It's very difficult for them to get back into school after the fact, oftentimes because they start working.
And the opportunity cost just doesn't make sense anymore to them because they're earning a paycheck.
For some, it's because of money. Others are dealing with mental health problems. But with
so many schools going to remote learning, one of the biggest causes of students dropping out
is lack of reliable internet access. I mean, millions of Americans are struggling with poor
broadband access. I've spoken to students Americans are struggling with poor broadband access. I've
spoken to students who have tried to do their assignments, college assignments, using their
smartphones or posted up in parking lots with Wi-Fi hotspots. So they're desperate to try to
stay in class, remain in college, but in some instances, it's just not working out. One of the primary folks that we spoke to for the story I worked on with my colleague Heather Long about this trend,
her name is Paige McConnell.
Paige is a recent high school graduate who is the first in her family to go to college in rural Tennessee,
who simply just did not have Wi-Fi at home to keep up with
her classes at the local community college. She would go to a local library where they turned
her away because they were really worried about having people sit around during the pandemic.
She spent hours in a McDonald's parking lot using the fast food chain's internet,
but she kept getting kicked off of the college's virtual classes because the network wasn't safe. So after two weeks of doing this back and forth, she decided to withdraw.
So this is happening in rural Tennessee where Paige is. Is it happening in big cities too?
It's in both because of how piss poor broadband and access is for a lot of folks. And it's not just, you know, the connectivity of broadband.
It is also the cost, right?
So if you can afford to have internet access on your smartphone,
for a lot of students, they can't afford to also have internet access at home,
and neither can their parents.
So they're making a choice here, and the choice is to have that mobile accessibility
when they can't afford to
do both. Internet access is not cheap right now. And that's true whether you're in the Bronx or if
you're in rural Tennessee. I know a lot of places are setting up outdoor heated areas for restaurants.
Is anyone setting up outdoor heated areas for Wi-Fi? Yeah, actually there, you know, we have
community colleges in our neck of the
woods out in D.C. and Maryland and Virginia that have tried to create Wi-Fi hotspots in their
parking lots in order to serve this population. And also because a lot of these community colleges
serve adults who have children, and they don't want those poor children to have to sit in the
car the entire time our mommy or daddy is taking a class, they have started to provide portable hotspots so that students could take that home and at
least have that form of access. So there are schools that are trying to meet this community
where they're at. It's just not enough in a way that could really make a big difference for the
students who are having to drop out.
What are some of the big picture implications to having a significant increase in dropouts
and a significant decrease in freshman enrollment?
What impact does something like this have on the U.S. economy?
Well, I think, you know, the long-term impact, it will be not having a workforce that can
apply to the jobs that are out there.
A lot of jobs these days require a college degree, at least a bachelor's in many instances,
often an associate's degree.
And not having that credential limits the economic possibilities for not only those
students, but also for the economy.
So that's a very concerning part of this equation.
It is still hopeful that perhaps if the economy
picks back up, we have a new administration who's willing to invest in higher education to make it
more affordable and accessible. And thinking about these issues of broadband access and the like,
then maybe we'll start to see some of these students coming back.
Are we going to potentially see like a generation here that has just worse economic futures because of a lack of college opportunity?
That is certainly the worst case scenario, but it is a reality.
You know, we are hoping that at the same time, while the demand for a post-secondary credential is not going to change all that much, you will still need some level of college. But there are jobs, there are career training education jobs
that are a viable pathway for many of these students. But again, that's still coming through
places like community colleges. So you have to have access and you also have to have investments
in those institutions in order to make it a reality for these students.
How do you fix such a widespread, sprawling problem like this?
There has to be some sort of federal-level policy action, whether that means subsidizing
internet access for more low-income families across the board.
It's not that you don't have programs that are already doing that, but it's not widespread enough to benefit students like Paige.
It's not widespread enough where a student in the Bronx, who you would think is in a perfect place to have all the Internet access, can still afford to have a smartphone with Internet access as well as have Internet access at home.
And these are issues that CUNY can't solve on its own.
The state of New York can't solve on its own. The state of New York can't
solve on its own. It's going to take a federal level policy decision in order to make this a
widespread nationwide issue that we're going to address. And not just for colleges. I mean,
think about K-12, how many schools are having this exact same issue. We have to take some
lessons that are learned from this pandemic and apply them to how we move forward with policy.
My name is Toriana Antonelli.
I'm a first-generation college student attending the University of Arizona.
Back in March, I was on campus, but then the pandemic hit.
I wasn't able to stay on campus, did not have access to Wi-Fi on my own.
So I stayed with a friend.
And after staying with them, I was homeless and did not have access to reliable Wi-Fi.
So at one point, after reaching out to a teacher to explain my situation,
they suggested I go to a Starbucks and use their Wi-Fi to do classwork.
And I wasn't comfortable taking that risk because of COVID
in terms of infecting my mom or like my little siblings.
So as of a few days ago, I moved yet again.
And luckily, this place has faster, reliable Wi-Fi. And I'm able to hopefully finish off my semester and not have to drop any classes or drop out of college completely.
Up next, there's a pretty straightforward solution to the problem of spotty broadband access.
Give everybody the internet.
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emily stewart you recently wrote a piece for Recode called Give Everybody the Internet,
where you outlined how to fix the problem of spotty internet access.
Before we get to the solution, what's the best way to wrap our heads around exactly how big of a problem this is?
If you think about how much of your life is tied to the internet, it's really easy to see.
And it's not something that we think about a lot. So obviously during COVID,
we've seen how many people are doing their jobs on Zoom, right?
So the internet is hugely important for doing your day-to-day work.
Video conference tools like Zoom have become the new norm
for meetings and for groups that want to get together.
I mean, my job's on Zoom, your job's on Zoom.
I was on a Zoom call. I guess we all now live on Zoom calls.
It also means, you know, we are seeing a move towards telehealth,
toward being able to go to the doctor, to fill prescriptions, things like that.
The CalFresh program, our SNAP, our food stamp program,
can now today provide access to commodities online.
Government services, a lot of them are online,
especially in a world where we don't want people
standing in line in different places.
DMV is also rolling out new services
that can be completed online,
including title transfers and registration renewals.
It is just how we do our day-to-day lives,
even now heading into,
you know, the holidays. A lot of people are going to be gathering on Zoom for celebration. So I really think, like, if you think about what a big deal it is, it's huge. And it's huge all of the
time, but especially during coronavirus, we've really seen how enormous it is. How widespread is this?
I mean, do we know exactly how many people don't have Internet access in the U.S.?
We do and we don't.
The FCC puts out an estimate that says about 21 million Americans don't have access to quality broadband Internet.
But a lot of estimates say it's quite a bit higher than that. I mean,
just because you have an internet connection doesn't mean it's particularly good internet
connection. So it's kind of a two-sided problem. Do we know where America ranks compared to the
rest of the world in terms of internet access? I mean, it's not great. We are behind a lot of
countries like South Korea, Japan, Switzerland for typical download speeds. And
it's an area where the U.S. doesn't really have a good excuse as to why we're not doing so well.
What is the excuse that they give?
Well, we have left a lot of the internet infrastructure in the United States up to
private companies. Private companies are in the business of making money. And to be frank,
it's not lucrative for everyone in the United States to have internet. So where we have like
the interstate highway system or the postal service, like we understand that it's not
necessarily a moneymaker for the USPS to be delivering a piece of mail to Alaska, right?
But we think people in Alaska should have mail.
Yeah. And I guess to get someone high speed internet way out in Alaska, you know,
you don't just need one person bringing them the internet, you need cables and infrastructure,
right? Right. And it's pretty expensive. You know, major corporations just,
they want to give the internet to people who can pay for it. And so what happens here is it kind
of becomes a two pronged issue where to a lot of rural areas, again, it's pretty expensive and it's geographically
complicated to get them broadband internet. Well, you hear a lot about rural broadband,
but there's a second part of this that is, it's also an access problem. So, you know,
I live in New York City, let's say. There are a lot of people here who can't afford $60 a month
internet, but at the same time, you know, Verizon or Comcast or
Optimum doesn't want to sell anybody $20 internet. And so that kind of is like, has led to this issue
where we really have kind of, again, a two prong problem here. Maybe the line doesn't run by my
house in the first place. But even if it does, if I can't afford $60 a month, it doesn't matter that
there is a line running by my house.
Have any communities in America gotten together and said, hey, we think that the Internet is an important basic resource in order to participate in modern society?
We're going to give everyone accessible and relatively affordable Internet?
Yeah. So there are a lot of communities that have done this.
New York, Boston, Silicon Valley.
Those are the kind of innovation hubs that may come to mind when it comes to high-speed internet.
But the city, home to the country's fastest broadband, is nestled below Lookout Mountain, along the Tennessee River, Chattanooga.
Which, you know, around 2010 basically built out its own municipal broadband system.
Today, with speeds of up to one gigabyte per second, Chattanooga's 170,000 residents
enjoy broadband that's 200 times faster than the country's average.
It costs $330 million, about $100 million of which was from the federal government. And they really had to get
buy-in from different stakeholders. And they had, you know, a real battle to do it.
Here is the really big problem. Those same companies, Comcast, AT&T, and Time Warner,
are fighting public utilities that want to bring broadband to rural areas.
So Comcast, which was, you which was a major provider of internet service,
tried to sue the city a lot.
I spoke to a former mayor there, and he said they sued multiple times
to try and stop Chattanooga from building out their own internet infrastructure.
You know, he said they'd come in and say, this isn't fair.
And he'd say, but come on, guys, you have all this money.
Like, how is this not fair?
So is Chattanooga a model for the rest of the country when it comes to broadband? And he'd say, but come on, guys, you have all this money. Like, how is this not fair?
So is Chattanooga a model for the rest of the country when it comes to broadband?
Again, to get back to the corporate power and lobbying question,
you also have, you know, 20 plus states that have put in place laws that try and bar cities and municipalities from creating their own internet service.
It really shows that you still have legislators
that are really listening to corporations
and that are going to put up these roadblocks
even when the system has already changed.
In the first half of the show,
Danielle said that this is basically a policy issue.
Is there a way that the government
can actually make this happen?
So when you talk to experts about this, what they'll tell you is that it really is a federal, a state, and a local problem.
There isn't really one solution here.
But one thing that a lot of experts that I spoke to pointed to this $100 billion package put forth by House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn. We call for investing $80 billion
to deploy a secure and resilient broadband infrastructure to expand access for communities
nationwide. Getting infrastructure into a lot of rural areas that doesn't exist.
Connecting unserved and underserved rural, suburban, and urban areas across the country while prioritizing persistent poverty communities.
And then another plank of that is providing a subsidy of about $50 for low-income households.
So basically, again, solving that problem that if you have a $60 internet option that you can't pay, maybe you can pay the $10.
And a lot of experts say, you know, like, listen, this is a good place to start
in solving kind of the two sides of that problem.
And a lot of politicians were campaigning on expanded internet access, right?
Elizabeth Warren wanted a public option for the internet.
Bernie Sanders wanted to turn it into a public utility.
Does President-elect Biden have an internet plan?
So Biden has proposed investing $20 billion in rural broadband infrastructure. So that solves,
again, at least partly the rural end of it. And I think we could also probably think that he might
throw his weight behind this Clyburn bill. He and Clyburn are pretty close
allies. And I can see a world where Biden would support something like that. And is there a real
opportunity for something like that now? I mean, it almost reminds me of universal health care.
You know, we had this huge number of people that didn't have insurance. We decided it's an essential
thing to have. We even had private companies trying to block it.
But in the end, Obamacare happened.
I mean, do you think this is a moment where we might be able to overcome all these hurdles?
I certainly hope so.
I think we've really seen during the pandemic what a big deal it is for people to not have internet.
It's school, it's work, it's healthcare, it's government service.
It's really everything.
You know, one of the things that made me really optimistic when writing about this and reporting
on this is that the people who care about this issue really care about it a lot. I think that
is a thing to stay hopeful about, that the people who really care about internet access know that it is an economic issue, an education issue,
as much as it is a tech issue, if not more,
and they are going to keep fighting.
Emily Stewart writes about business and politics for Vox and Recode.
I'm Noam Hassenfeld, in for Sean Ramos-Vurham.
This is Today Explained.