Huntsman Says Broadband Is "Critically Important."
BY Sarah Lai Stirland | Wednesday, January 4 2012
As New York Times columnist Tom Friedman recently argued, the future of a healthy modern economy hinges, in part, upon ubiquitous access to broadband networks. Yet it's mostly a subject matter that's been ignored by the Republican presidential candidates on the campaign trail.
So to some extent it was refreshing to see the advocacy group BroadbandforAmerica.com trying to pin down one of the candidates on the issue -- however short and vague the response was.
On Wednesday, the group asked Jon Huntsman what his general thoughts on broadband are.
Huntsman said:
“Broadband is all part of the knowledge economy and important as infrastructure that will raise the overall standards for this country. We did a lot of it when I was Governor of the state of Utah. It’s critically important to a knowledge economy and to the next generation.”
It would have been nice to hear what a Huntsman administration would do to encourage the roll-out of broadband, however. Should every state model itself on Utah, and encourage a Utopia-like model? Would his administration have a National Broadband Plan? What role should companies in the private sector like Google and AT&T play in fostering access? Does he think community broadband networks are a viable model?
If broadband is indeed so critical to the future of innovation and economic prosperity, it would have been great to have had at least some cursory thoughts on some of those questions.