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Eye On Boise

Idaho school districts could be out another $2M, thanks to continuing fallout from failed broadband network

Idaho school districts could be out close to $2 million, thanks to the continuing fallout from the failed Idaho Education Network, reports Kevin Richert of Idaho EdNews. Fifty-seven school districts and charter schools could stand to lose out on “e-rate” money – federally administered dollars collected from landline and cell phone bills. The districts were counting on the e-rate dollars to cover a share of their technology costs on purchases dating back to 2013 and 2014.

However, the Universal Service Administrative Company has written letters to the schools, saying they intend to deny payments. And that decision ties back to the contract for the ill-fated Idaho Education Network, a statewide high school broadband system. The network’s $60 million contract was overturned by courts that ruled the state issued it illegally.

This means the state did not have a valid agreement allowing the state to collect e-rate dollars to cover the bulk of Idaho Education Network costs. Citing the flaws in the network contract, and the lack of a legal mechanism to receive e-rate dollars, USAC turned down the districts’ funding requests as well. These funding requests appear to cover deals the districts made independently with Education Networks of America, the lead vendor on the Idaho Education Network project. The transactions in question involved services purchased in 2013 and 2014 from ENA, though they were beyond the scope of the Idaho Education Network broadband project itself.

The potential impacts vary widely from district to district, according to documents obtained Tuesday by Idaho Education News. In the Pocatello School District, more than $347,000 of payments are in limbo. Five other districts – American Falls, Emmett, Fremont County, Mountain View and West Bonner County – each sought more than $100,000 in e-rate payments. On the other end of the spectrum, Central Idaho’s tiny Camas County School District applied for only $467. You can read Richert’s full report here.



Betsy Z. Russell
Betsy Z. Russell joined The Spokesman-Review in 1991. She currently is a reporter in the Boise Bureau covering Idaho state government and politics, and other news from Idaho's state capital.

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