MARQUETTE — The NMU Board of Trustees met today to vote on expanding their Educational Access Network (EAN) through cooperation with the Michigan Economic Development Corporation.

The Board met at Cohodas Hall on campus to vote on the support of the MEDC in their expansion of the program. The main goal of the program is to allow students and others interested in pursuing educational opportunities to connect to a high-speed, wireless broadband service.

“Rural broadband has been a challenge for the Upper Peninsula as a whole and with our resources and our technical abilities we want to be able to share and help the communities in receiving broadband and we’re doing it through an educational broadband spectrum and through this program we are enabling K-12 students as well as community members and life-long learners to access the system,” said NMU Vice President of Finance and Administration Gavin Leach.

Now that the vote has passed, the next step is to enact the decision and build a broadband system that will encourage people to build their education.

View the statement released after the meeting by the university below.

The Northern Michigan University Board of Trustees today approved final terms of a $6.5 million investment award agreement from the Michigan Strategic Fund that will accelerate NMU’s effort to deliver high-speed educational broadband throughout the Upper Peninsula. NMU will move forward with its plan to build out and equip 64 cities and townships over a two-year period.

NMU will contribute $3.2 million in matching funds to the project. As it recovers its expansion costs through subscriptions to its Educational Access Network (EAN), the university will return 35 percent of net proceeds back to the Michigan Strategic Fund to gradually repay the investment.

“This award enables Northern to build the network much more quickly because the funds are available up front to purchase the equipment needed for the large number of sites,” said Gavin Leach, NMU vice president for finance and administration. “Our partnerships with cities and townships across the U.P. have allowed us to place equipment on their water towers and other high structures. It’s a great example of universities and communities working collaboratively for the benefit of creating an educated citizenry through access to broadband. But in areas where high structures don’t already exist, we’ll have to build them, which adds to the cost. The right equipment in the right place is a critical aspect to building a strong, reliable network.”

In the Upper Peninsula and beyond, many rural households continue to either lack broadband entirely or the minimal speeds required for educational use. Northern’s EAN merges the broadband coverage and speed of the university’s revolutionary LTE system with a growing array of courses for professional and personal development. NMU is also working with the region’s K-12 school districts and colleges to deliver broadband to students and their families.

EAN access is included in tuition for students in NMU’s associate, bachelor’s and master’s degree programs. Community members who take personal and professional development courses pay $34.95 per month for full access to the campus network, with no data caps or reduced speeds. K-12, college and university partners get full access to NMU LTE at school and home for $19.95 per month, with an optional speed upgrade for an additional $5 per month. Access for all requires a one-time purchase of an NMU LTE mobile hot spot, an indoor stationary receiver or a mountable indoor/outdoor receiver.

In a presentation to the Michigan Strategic Fund last March, Leach shared the story of a woman who expressed enthusiastic gratitude to Northern, saying its Educational Access Network “changed her life.” She routinely had to drive her daughter to a fast-food restaurant in town with wi-fi and linger there for hours in order to complete homework. With EAN access, she and her daughter now enjoy the convenience of high-speed Internet in their home.

“Northern’s Educational Access Network and building the NMU LTE across the Upper Peninsula over the next two years can be the national model for providing one of the most critical learning tools of the 21st Century to students—Internet access—to rural America. Michigan and the U.P. can lead the way,” said NMU President Fritz Erickson. “This financial support moves us closer to two goals: putting high-speed educational broadband at the fingertips of every student in the Upper Peninsula, from pre-school to lifelong learner; and helping the region develop the most highly educated rural workforce in America.

The Michigan Strategic Fund is administered by the Michigan Economic Development Corporation. For more information on NMU’s Educational Access Initiative, visit nmu.edu/EAN.