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With More Tech On The Farm, Rural Colorado Left Waiting, Wanting For Broadband

Bente Birkeland
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RMCR
Yuma County is one of the largest agricultural producing counties in the state. Farmers here are starting to embrace precision agriculture, to use the latest technology to monitor information on the farm such as planting, yield, water and nutrients.

People living in many parts of rural Colorado still don鈥檛 have access to high speed Internet. It鈥檚 a problem for schools and businesses, and in eastern Colorado it is making it harder for farmers to take full advantage of the latest technology even as state lawmakers passed legislation to try and even the playing field.

If you from the Governor鈥檚 Office of Information Technology you鈥檒l see high Internet speeds are prominent in the larger metro areas of the Front Range, but it鈥檚 a different story for places like Yuma County.

鈥淲e are agriculture on steroids out here,鈥� said Darlene Carpio, the county鈥檚 director of economic development. She said the Internet access they have now is too slow and unreliable. That directly impacts their way of life, which is agriculture, an industry that brings in about $5 billion annually to the state.

鈥淚t鈥檚 big business that needs the very latest technology to be able to perform and compete on an efficient scale, but it takes broadband to do it,鈥� she said.

That鈥檚 why Carpio is serving on a regional task force studying what it would cost to bring broadband to the entire region. She鈥檚 encouraged after lawmakers updated the state鈥檚 telecom laws in 2014, creating a fund to put money into rural broadband.

鈥淚t was a huge step forward,鈥� Carpio said. 鈥淭he tractors of today are nothing like the tractors of even five and ten years ago. They are equipped with GPS and incredible data technology. 鈥�

Credit Luke Cure / FarmReign
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FarmReign
A screengrab of some of the newest technology in the market available to farmers; providing a comparison of applied down force to measured down force. The map on the right shows how often the DeltaForce system is reacting to the changing field conditions. The map on the left reflects how much force is actually being measured at the depth limiting gauge wheels, demonstrating why the varying amounts of down pressure are needed to place the seed at the same planting depth in different areas of the field.

What you鈥檒l goes beyond traditional farm implements like a brand new $350,000 combine. Brian Cunningham, part of the dealership in Yuma, works with farmers on what鈥檚 known as precision agriculture. The goal is to use the latest technology to collect and analyze real time information on yield and soil moisture, to maximize production and minimize resources such as water.

鈥淲e can and then to the customer鈥檚 computer. So the broadband speed and connectivity is pretty important,鈥� Cunningham said.

Even with more farmers using technology, Cunningham knows that it鈥檚 difficult for Internet providers to invest in sparsely populated areas with few overall customers.

鈥淩ural America, we鈥檙e all kind of in the same boat, we鈥檙e kind of used to being behind as far as some of the conveniences you see in the city, I鈥檓 not sure we should be comfortable staying there,鈥� Cunningham said.

Representative Don Coram (R-Montrose) was a sponsor of the telecom reform package that passed during the legislative session. One of the flagship bills would redirect some of the money currently used to pay for high cost land lines into building broadband connections in underserved areas. But Coram said it will take a while before people see impacts on the ground.

鈥淭his is basically the first layer. It鈥檚 probably a year before any of those funds are put back into the community,鈥� he said.

Credit Bente Birkeland / RMCR
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RMCR
Luke Cure, who started FarmReign, an agriculture consulting business, to help farmers use technology to help make better decisions.

For 29-year-old Luke Cure of Wray near the Kansas border, the changes can鈥檛 come soon enough. He started his own business called to consult with farmers on using technology to make better decisions. He said it鈥檚 an exciting time to be in the burgeoning industry, but Internet service is a hurdle.

鈥淥n one farm we collected 375 million data points on planting, on one farm in one season. And we鈥檙e only collecting one small subset of all the information we could be collecting,鈥� he said.

Cure believes the lack of broadband also makes it more difficult for his customers to use technology.

鈥淎 farmer may have to go wait at the top of the hill for that data set to load. If I鈥檓 sending a prescription 100 miles away he may have to sit and wait before he can execute. It really slowed my business down,鈥� Cure said.

Yuma鈥檚 economic development director Darlene Carpio said she thinks people in her region are becoming less complacent and accepting of slower speeds.

鈥淚 am convinced that broadband is the next utility, as electricity was back in the 20s and 30s, as water is. It really is something we depend on now for our way of life,鈥� she said.

The goal is to bring broadband to every home and business in the region within the next five years. The task force will next be looking at how feasible at is and what the cost would be.

Meanwhile the state of Colorado plans to update it鈥檚 mapping system to get feedback from customers on how fast Internet speeds actually are across the state. Currently Internet providers give the state that information. The Governor鈥檚 Office of Information Technology will also examine the affordability of high speed Internet.

Bente Birkeland is an award-winning journalist who joined Colorado Public Radio in August 2018 after a decade of reporting on the Colorado state capitol for the Rocky Mountain Community Radio collaborative and KUNC. In 2017, Bente was named Colorado Journalist of the Year by the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), and she was awarded with a National Investigative Reporting Award by SPJ a year later.
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