Important Notice: NTCA Offices Will be Closed on May 7
As an employer and the sponsor of the Group Health Program, helping to ensure our employees maintain good physical and mental health is critical especially during these continuing unprecedented times in our personal and professional lives. NTCA has designated Friday, May 7, as a wellness day, and our offices will be closed to give employees an extra opportunity to “unplug” from their virtual and physical offices and to refresh and recharge. NTCA offices will reopen Monday, May 10. Thank you for your membership and for supporting our focus on employee well-being.
For Immediate Release Contact: Kelly Wismer, 703-351-2015, [email protected] Arlington, Va., (January 9, 2018)—In a blog post titled, “Exciting Day for Rural prosperity in Nasvhille,” NTCA Chief Executive Officer Shirley Bloomfield...
Written by Joshua Seidemann on January 03, 2018 For about seven years, we (the family) went camping every summer. We went to the same campground, frequently had the same cabin, often went the same week in August, and had a...
Recent articles and studies indicate that U.S. manufacturing jobs are being affected more by technology than cross-border competition. These data underlie a growing need to consider a new “extraction strategy” for rural America.
January 24, 2018 – (Las Vegas) I leave CES each year with pages of notes, bundles of business cards, hundreds of pictures, and enough promotional literature to wallpaper my office. I also leave with some impressions that I try to distill to answer a single inquiry: What will make a meaningful difference in rural America?
In addition to providing communications services to local residents of Kansas, Nex-Tech offers carrier-facing business services. As one of these services, Nex-Tech functions as a trusted third party (TTP) that assists ISPs with complex regulation compliance.
A 2001 article in Economic Review, the journal of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, reported a series of population trends that affect rural representation in Washington: 1990 was the first time that more than 50 percent of Americans lived in metro areas with populations greater than 1,000,000
On March 13, NTCA–The Rural Broadband Association Director of Communications Laura Withers delivered the presentation, “Crisis Communication: Turning Bad Events into Good PR."
I was in Columbus last week for the Ohio Telecom Association meeting, which was held at hotel that was not even built when I still lived there. I noticed when missing a turn, however, that it was near a street that I drove nearly every summer day for eight years to my summer job.
April, 28, 2018, NTCA–The Rural Broadband Association was a proud partner in the first event in a series of listening sessions focused on ways the government and private industries can work together to tackle rural broadband challenges and the opportunities improved e-connectivity bring to the people and economies of the nation’s rural regions.