Miami-Dade Superintendent Alberto Carvalho wants his schools to have wireless Internet and announced a plan Wednesday that could secure the funding needed to make his wish a reality. The plan Carvalho announced will be for the Miami-Dade community to raise $7 million.

If the community can lift the cash, the federal government will fit the price range on a ten-1 basis that means the college device might receive $70 million from the feds.

“This match is so small compared to the return on our investment that it would be foolish of us not to participate,” Carvalho said. “These federal dollars would be invested, would spur, would stimulate the local economy, put people back to work and simultaneously improve the educational environment in our schools.”

The cash might then be used to make all 350 colleges in Miami-Dade County wi-fi. As of Wednesday, just 22 colleges within the county have wireless internet; consistent with CBS4 news partner the Miami bring in.

The Herald reported that it will cost roughly $200,000 to install wireless Internet in each of the 350 schools.

“The goal is to be bold in our transition to a digital era,” Carvalho, said according to the Herald during an announcement of the campaign. “This will go a long way to closing the digital divide.”

Former Miami Heat star Alonzo Mourning is part of a group of donors who have helped raise $2 million so far.

“We need to prioritize our efforts,” Mourning said. “We’re building jails faster than we are building schools.”

The federal application is known as E-fee and is designed to assist low-source of revenue schools get access to the internet. The deadline for the deal is January 31, in accordance to herald.

The wireless Internet plan will be the first part of a plan the district has to make Miami-Dade students more ready in the digital world.

“Every child should be taught how to maximize the use of digital technology in their educational environment,” said former U.S. Attorney Roberto Martinez. “Frankly, it’s inexcusable that we’re not there already.”

The other steps, according to the herald, include: survey students to resolve who has virtual softwares after which draft a “BYOD” or convey your own device coverage so students can deliver digital instruments to university.