According to Gov. Tony Knowles, the Regulatory Commission of Alaska (RCA) designed and will administer the program -- funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Community Facilities Grant program.
"This program, administered by the state and funded by the federal government, is targeted at bringing basic online services to even the remotest communities in Alaska," Knowles said.
According to the Alaska Department of Labor and the Denali Commission, 68 communities in Alaska lack local Internet service. Most of these communities are not accessible by road, have fewer than 250 residents and have unemployment rates of 20 percent or more.
"There's a huge digital divide in rural Alaska that can only be addressed if state, federal, and local governments, as well as the private sector and the telecommunications industry work together," said Lt. Governor Fran Ulmer, chair of the state's Telecommunications Information Council.
The RCA will review applications and award grants to programs serving qualified communities to achieve the goal of sustainable Internet service, said RCA chair Nan Thompson.
"The applicants' plans for continuation of the program after the grant funds are expended will be crucial," Thompson said. "The goal is to provide seed money to programs that will be able to continue without government support."
The RCA and its parent agency, the Department of Community and Economic Development, will advertise the program and begin to seek grant applications next month.
Office of Gov. Tony Knowles