New Hot Job: State High-Speed Internet Network Director (axios.com) 7
States are shoring up expertise in high-speed internet networks by creating or expanding broadband offices to prepare for an influx of infrastructure cash. Ensuring that more than $40 billion in new funding connects every American to high-speed internet service is a job that's falling to the states -- and they need help. From a report: Of all the job openings posted for states' burgeoning broadband offices, the "director" position is the most common vacancy, according to data The Pew Charitable Trusts shared with Axios. Directors are often responsible for crafting state broadband plans and overseeing hundreds of millions in funding from multiple state and federal programs. The Pew tracker found 15 director-level positions posted, out of about 68 total positions since September 2021. Washington, Colorado, and Maine had the most job postings. The Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment Program (BEAD), funded by the bipartisan infrastructure law, will provide $42.45 billion to expand high-speed internet access by funding planning, infrastructure deployment and adoption programs in all 50 states, D.C., Puerto Rico and U.S. territories.
the pay sucks but the kickbacks are really good! (Score:3)
the pay sucks but the kickbacks are really good!
You know what they say (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
But... (Score:2)
Can you WFH? Has the salary range been publicly posted? Do the responsibilities include "green initiatives"?
Re: (Score:1)
Responsibilities include: being a mafia don, being able to accept $40 billion in cash, and being able to launder it without a trace.
Tasks (Score:3)
2) Return millions in taxpayers' dollars.
3) Resign, saving the state even more money.