1 / 15

E-Rate Basics

E-Rate Basics. Presentation to the Technology Oversight Committee August 26, 2009. What is E-Rate?. Federal program administered by the FCC and Administered by the Universal Service Administration Company (USAC) and the Schools and Libraries Division (SLD)

martha
Télécharger la présentation

E-Rate Basics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. E-Rate Basics Presentation to the Technology Oversight Committee August 26, 2009

  2. What is E-Rate? • Federal program administered by the FCC and Administered by the Universal Service Administration Company (USAC) and the Schools and Libraries Division (SLD) • Fund comes from taxes levied on telecommunication services • Intended to ensure that schools/libraries have access to affordable telecommunications by providing discounts on telecommunications, Internet Access, and Internal connections.

  3. Funding to support technology • District Budget -Maintenance and Operations • E-Rate • Building Renewal • Bond • Other • Technology override • Grants

  4. Historical Context • 1998 - First year for E-Rate • 1998/99 – 2002/03 - Successful E-Rate applications submitted by TUSD TTS • 2003/04- 2006/07 - Unsuccessful E-Rate applications submitted by TUSD TTS • 2006/07 – AG investigation

  5. Historical Context • 2007/08 – TUSD process for E-Rate applications revised • Office of Resource Development Coordinates E-RATE process • Use of E-Rate Consultant to ensure a compliant process and application • Use of multi-department team: Purchasing, Curriculum, Facilities, TTS • Development of Technology Infrastructure Plan as part of broader Educational Based Technology Plan • Survey of Teachers, students, parents, community 3000+ responses • Identified needs and desired outcomes • Gap Analysis between what we have and what we want • Plan for bridging the gap • Proposed infrastructure standards for classrooms and schools • Governing Board approved Standards for Infrastructure August 2007 • E-Rate application is aligned to approved Infrastructure Standards

  6. Historical Context • 2007/08 - Application in Final Review • 2008/09 - Application in Initial Review* • Applications can go in and out of Initial Review at anytime before a funding commitment decision letter is issued • 2009/2010 – Application in Initial Review

  7. Who does E-Rate fund? • K-12 schools and school districts – defined as an elementary or secondary school under NCLB • Libraries- eligible under LSTA

  8. What does E-Rate fund? • Priority 1 – (funded first) • Telecommunications Services • Telephone, cell phones, long distance, WAN • Internet Access • Priority 2 – (funded with neediest applicants first) • Internal Connections • Equipment and wiring necessary to receive services in the classrooms and rooms in libraries – published list of eligible items • Basic Maintenance of Internal Connections • Necessary for continued operations of eligible internal connection components

  9. How much does E-Rate fund? E-Rate provides discounts on eligible services or equipment based on percentage of student eligible for free or reduced lunch under NSLP • District wide services (Priority 1) – discount is generally based on weighted student FRE count for the district • TUSD – Discount for 2009-2010 application 76%

  10. E-Rate Discount 75% - 100% of students FRE 48 TUSD schools 50%-74% of students eligible for FRE 42 TUSD schools 35% -49% of students eligible for FRE 9 TUSD schools 20% -34% of students eligible for FRE 11 TUSD schools 1% -19% of students eligible for FRE 5 TUSD schools 90% Discount 80% Discount 60% Discount 50% Discount 25% Discount

  11. How much does E-Rate fund? • Priority 2 – Internal connections • Discount is based on where the equipment is located • If located at a school with a 90% discount – the cost of the equipment is 90% discounted • If located at district level, discount is district weighted discount (76%) • Highly unlikely that Internal connections are funded below the 90% level

  12. E-Rate application process • Create Technology Plan • Must be approved by a USAC certified approver (ADE) • Request Services • Form 470 – Either district files or state if using SMC • RFP - Special FCC rules –more restrictive than AZ • Competitive Bidding • Choose/Contract for Services (From 471) • FCC rules about how bid evaluation is conducted • Application development & Funding Commitments • Governing Board must commit applicant share and necessary but ineligible costs

  13. E-Rate application process • Funding Commitment Decision Letter (FCDL) • Approved for funding • Denied • Appeal • Start services • Invoice USAC

  14. E-Rate Planning • Tentative Plan for Year 13 (2010/11) • Sept – Planning with E-RATE Team • Updates for Infrastructure Plan • File 470s – RFPs for necessary services • Oct – Complete competitive bidding • Nov – Presentation to Governing Board on recommendations • Dec - Presentation to Governing Board to approve bids, contracts and request commitment of applicant share and necessary but not eligible funding; Begin filing process • January – Complete applications End of Jan/early Feb - Close of filing window

  15. Questions?

More Related