News

Timnath, Colorado Breaks Ground On New $20 Million Fiber Build

Timnath, Colorado officials have broken ground on a new $20 million fiber network that should dramatically expand affordable fiber access to the town of 7,100 residents. Working in partnership with the city of Loveland’s Pulse Fiber, the project has been several years in the making, and – as with most of the successful municipal operations in Colorado – was fueled by ongoing public frustration with the speed, availability, and cost of monopoly-dominated regional broadband access.

Southern Ute Indian Tribe ‘In The Driver’s Seat’ As Open Access Fiber Network Transforms Reservation

Among the burgeoning number of Tribal networks being built across Indian Country, a new fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) network spanning the Southern Ute Indian Reservation is unique. When service was lit up in Ignacio, Colorado in May, the network became the only open access network owned by a Tribal government, providing its residents with a choice between two different Internet Service Providers (ISP) offering lightning-fast connection speeds.

Kendall County, Illinois Builds Its Own Fiber Network After Being Snubbed By Monopolies

Frustrated by years of substandard broadband service from regional telecom monopolies, Kendall County, Illinois has entered into a public-private partnership with Pivot-Tech to bring a combination of fixed wireless and fiber to county residents. Kendall County officials tell ILSR that the full cost of the network, which will include private investment from Pivot-Tech, is expected to ultimately be $67 million, serving more than 13,000 locations county wide.

Mapping Digital Sovereignty Across Indian Country As Tribal Broadband Soars

In honor of Indigenous Peoples’ Day, ILSR celebrates the growing number of Tribal nations exercising digital sovereignty by building Tribally-owned broadband networks. Our freshly updated Indigenous Networks map and census highlights the burgeoning Tribal broadband movement, offering a window into this critical work across Indian Country. Our updates underscore how much has changed since 2020 when ILSR first undertook research on Tribal networks.

Maine Issues RFP For Long-Planned MOOSE Net Middle Mile Fiber Network

The Maine Connectivity Authority (MCA) is seeking proposals to help design and construct a major 536-mile fiber middle network that should dramatically improve affordable fiber access across vast swaths of the Pine Tree State. The RFP process closed on September 30 and partner selection will be completed by late October. Designs will be completed and presented to MCA in early 2025, and from that point construction is expected to take around two years to complete.

AAPB Launches New Mentorship Program For Communities Considering Municipal Broadband

The American Association for Public Broadband (AAPB) has launched a mentorship program that will pair communities interested in building publicly-owned, locally controlled broadband networks with cities and towns that have successfully done so. The AAPB mentorship program is the second major tool that the national nonprofit organization has created this year to assist communities in advancing a model that typically leads to lower prices, faster speeds, and more reliable service for end-users.

Coalition Building Success Takes Center Screen On B4DE Livestream

As Digital Inclusion Week 2024 swings into action, frontline digital inclusion practitioners from across the nation will come together for a timely Building for Digital Equity (#B4DE) livestream event today that focuses on “Coalition Building for Success.” The keynote speaker for the third #B4DE will be Georgia Savage, Deputy Director of #OaklandUndivided, who helped lead the way to securing $38.5 million in grant funding last week that will expand broadband infrastructure and distribute Internet-connected devices to thousands of low-income households across East and West Oakland, California.

Vermont Launches New Fiber Optic Apprenticeship Program With ‘Paycheck From The Start’

In the face of nationwide labor shortages, Vermont state broadband officials launch two apprenticeship programs to beef up its broadband workforce to help build out fiber networks across the state. Earlier this week, the Vermont Community Broadband Board (VCBB) announced the launch of a new Fiber Optic Apprenticeship Program officials say will put “participants to work right away, allowing them to learn on the job and earn a paycheck from the start.”

ILSR Launches New Digital Opportunity Lab

ILSR Community Broadband Networks (CBN) team has kicked off a new initiative deep in the heart of Texas we are calling the Digital Opportunity Lab. the Digital Opportunity Lab is a customizable hands-on program designed to support digital equity coalitions and community leaders amid a national effort to unlock the social and economic benefits of broadband for all.

Indio, California Gets $9 Million Grant For Fiber Network

Indio, California has been awarded a $9 million state grant the city will use to expand affordable broadband access. An incorporated city located in Riverside County and home to 92,000 residents, the city will use the grant to deliver gigabit-capable fiber to 479 unserved locations and an estimated 3,632 unserved local residents.

Plumas-Sierra Telecom Nabs $67 Million In FFA Grants Across Four California Counties

A California telecom and electrical cooperative says the state’s ongoing last-mile broadband grant program will help deploy affordable fiber to multiple communities across four heavily unserved and underserved California counties. The cooperative says it’s poised to receive roughly $67 million in FFA grants to expand affordable broadband to roughly 6,600 unserved and underserved locations across Sierra, Plumas, Lassen, and Nevada Counties.

Blueprints for BEAD: What We Can Learn From the Low-Cost Option That Was, Then Wasn’t, Then Was Again

BEAD will help build the physical networks necessary to connect the millions of households that still lack access to high-speed Internet service, but will it make a difference if if financially-strapped subscribers still can’t afford a plan? BEAD's low-cost plan requirement sought to ease concerns about affordability, triggering debates between industry leaders and federal and state officials over how BEAD addresses, or not, the affordability crisis.

North Carolina Telephone Co-op FOCUS Broadband Secures $5.4 Million For Fiber Expansion

The North Carolina nonprofit telephone cooperative FOCUS Broadband nabbed $5.4 million in grant funding to extend its fiber network to unserved portions of Chowan and Perquimans counties. Of the total $5.4 million in total state funding, FOCUS says that $1.9 million will be used to expand high-speed Internet service to over 300 addresses in Chowan County, with $3.4 million of the funds being utilized to bring high-speed Internet service to an additional 588 addresses in Perquimans County.

New Resource: Our New Community Network Map Shows the Explosion of Publicly Owned Networks

Today we release a complete redesign of our longstanding Community Networks Map. It shows where municipal networks are located across the United States and how they are bringing new, more affordable service and competition to communities around the country, including networks operated by over 400 municipally owned Internet service providers covering more than 700 communities. A third of those networks provide high-speed Internet access to nearly every address in the communities where they are located.

Save The Date: Coalition Building Will Take Center Stage at Next #B4DE Event

With Digital Inclusion Week 2024 only a month away, registration is open for the next Building for Digital Equity livestream event on October 7. The theme will be “Coalition Building for Success” and will bring together hundreds of frontline digital inclusion practitioners from across the nation to delve into how coalitions are finding success in pushing the digital equity movement forward