Leveraging Community Engagement and Trust to Address the Digital Divide in Indiana

After the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) was signed into law in 2021, two opportunities became available to further address the digital divide in Indiana: The Broadband Equity, Adoption, and Deployment (BEAD) and the Digital Equity (DE) programs.

Addressing the digital divide is very important to improve the quality of life of any community. The digital divide is the number one threat to community and economic development today.

To ensure the state planned accordingly to address this issue, Purdue University, as the state’s land-grant institution, jumped into action to do its part in two ways.

Check out the two-page infographic

Digital Equity

The Purdue Center for Regional Development partnered with the Indiana Broadband Office and multiple state agencies and organizations to develop the state’s first ever Digital Equity Plan. The process took place in four phases over 13 months: taskforce formation, data gathering & insights, data application & community engagement, and refining & adopting the plan. This plan will help allocate the roughly $15 million the state will receive in digital equity capacity grants.

14
Organizations represented in the taskforce
1,700
Individuals engaged through key informant interviews, surveys, and regional solution sessions
13
Reports, blogs, dashboards, and interactive maps
1
Journal article (as a follow up to survey findings)

Purdue Broadband Team (PBT)

Launched by the Office of Engagement under the President’s Office, the Purdue Broadband Team or PBT consisted of Purdue Extension (including 4-Hers), Purdue students, and Purdue alumni who were tasked to increase awareness on key resources like the broadband map and speed test platform to improve broadband data across the state as well as a state broadband program—Indiana Connectivity Program.

Collectively these resources allowed the state to validate broadband data—this data will be used to identify eligible areas to invest the $868 million the state will be receiving—and increase applications to the Indiana Connectivity Program.

100,000+
Purdue Alumni reached by email newsletter about PBT
91
Counties participated through Extension personnel
234
Purdue Extension educators participated
105+
4-H youth completed speed tests across the state
920+
Purdue Extension events and presentations completed
37,500+
Email addresses used to share broadband information/resources
7
Service-learning courses
11
Service-learning community partners
89
Service-learning Purdue students
615
Individuals reported to Purdue Extension personnel that they had acted because of broadband information/resources shared
143
Speed tests completed by service-learning fellows across rural and urban counties
12,537
Broadband serviceable locations added between June 2023 and December 2023 to the broadband map
180
Average number of Indiana Connectivity Program applications in the six-months prior to launching PBT
255
Average number of Indiana Connectivity Program application in the six-months after launching PBT