For the upcoming weeks I’m working on a County-by-County look at the State of Broadband in MN. My hope is to feature a county a day (in alphabetical order). In November, Connect Minnesota released their final report on broadband availability. Here is how Grant County stacked up:
- Household Density: 4.5
- Number of Households: 2,601
- Percentage serviced (without mobile): 85.85%
- Percentage serviced (with mobile): 85.85%
I know that Federated tried to get ARRA funds to increase broadband in Grant County back in 2010. In 2013, Gail Hedstrom (Librarian from Elbow Lake) spoke the Broadband Task Force about access in Grant County. She noted that because they have a coop in their area, they have some good broadband coverage but that it’s not ubiquitous. She also gave a unique view from the frontlines on the important of an informed and educated population and the role of broadband in helping the community become better informed and educated.
My hope is that these county-specific posts will help policy makers and county residents understand where they stand in terms of broadband access. Assuming it might get forwarded to folks who don’t eat and sleep broadband I wanted to provide a little background on broadband to help set the stage…
How does Minnesota define broadband?
The 2015 broadband goal for Minnesota is ubiquitous access to speeds of 10-20 Mbps (down) and 5-10 Mbps (up). These numbers actually reflect 6-10 Mbps up because Minnesota goals are a little out of sync with standard federal measurements. Connect MN measured access with and without mobile access as it is often considered a slightly different service, in part because of the data caps involved with wireless services. (Data caps can make wireless an expensive primary broadband connection – especially for a household.)
Learn how the other Minnesota counties rank.
How is Minnesota working to promote border to border broadband?
In 2014, the Legislature approved $20 million for broadband grants to support broadband expansion in Minnesota. You can find a list of applicants online. The hope is the broadband sector is that more funding will be made available in 2015.