Otter Tail County Broadband Profile 2024: Green rating: Ranking out 40 of 87

Rank: 40
Code: Green
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

County 25/3
(% covered)
25/3 rank 100/20
(% covered)
100/20 rank Gig
(% covered)
Gig
rank
Otter Tail 93.44 33 88.12 40 13.41 83

Otter Tail County: getting in stride

Otter Tail County ranks 40 (up 16 places) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They had seen slow, incremental improvement since 2020 but this year and last they saw more significant gains. They will benefit from a $3.7 million 2024 MN state grant, which should help them get closer to ubiquitous access. With all of recent activity, Otter Tail has shifted from red (2022) to yellow (2023) to green ranking in 2024.

  • Over the years, Oter Tail County (or cities within) has invested $ 3,671,557 (total) for matches for 5 successful MN Broadband grants. This is an indicator of local government that is engaged and (literally) invested in better, local broadband.
  • Otter Tail County will benefit from a 2024 $3.7 million MN Broadband grant award that will serve 287 locations.
  • Otter Tail County will benefit from 35 line extension awards (Rounds 1 and 2), which extend broadband to individual locations.
  • Last years’ estimates indicated that it would cost $19.5 million to get ubiquitous broadband in the county. (I haven’t updated the number because recent report offers scenarios of costs based on BEAD funding rules that make current estimates less predictable than in the past. Yet, I think the number is still helpful.)
  • In 2022, Otter Tail ranked 43 using Microsoft’s Digital Equity Tool, which looks at various factors of a community.
2024 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 88.12 77.72 70.54 67.02 65.55 35.34 2.36 1.75
25/3 (2022 goal) 93.44 94.48 92.69 90.97 75.02 92.93 89.56 59.34

2024 Grants

  • County: Otter Tail
    Otter Tail Telcom West Fergus Falls
    Grant: $3,700,198
    Local Match: $1,233,399
    Total Budget: $4,933,598
    This Low Density Otter Tail Telcom West Fergus Falls project will construct a fiber to the home/fiber to the premise (FTTH/FTTP) network to residents and businesses in rural western Otter Tail County. Improving broadband services will enable agriculture producers, farmers, ranchers, telecommuters, business owners and independent professionals to work from home via videoconferencing; cultivate an opportunity for new businesses to relocate to Otter Tail County’s rural area; and increase job and population growth, providing a significant economic impact for the county. This project will serve 286 unserved locations. Funding partners include; Otter Tail County-$379,200, Aastad Township-$36,360, Buse Township-$17,793, Carlisle Township-$57,248, Orwell Township-$58,021, Oscar Township-$27,077, and Western Township-$41,002.

Past Grants:

  • 2023: Otter Tail Telcom – South Battle Lake – GRANT $2,331,792
  • 2022: East Otter Tail Telephone Co. dba Arvig, $1,140,704.90
  • 2022: Otter Tail Telcom, LLC, $3,381,661.00 (Learn more)
  • 2017 – Arvig – Pelican Rapids rural non-ACAM – GRANT $633,642
  • 2017 – Otter Tail Telcom LLC – Red Oak Drive – GRANT $173,683
  • 2017 – WCTA (West Central Telephone Association) – Wadena Rural Phase III – GRANT $874,581
  • 2016 – OTTER TAIL TELCOM BATTLE LAKE – GRANT: $ 238,170
  • 2016 – OTTER TAIL TELCOM FERGUS FALLS AREA – GRANT: $ 279,271
  • 2016 – WCTA WADENA RURAL NORTH — GRANT: $718,850
  • 2015 – Otter Tail Telcom Fergus Falls 864 – Hwy 59 – Grant award: $295,432
  • 2015 – Otter Tail Telcom Hwy 59/94 PRT to POM – Grant award: $164,207
  • 2014 – Otter Tail Telcom, Stuart Lake – Award: $105,364.
  • 2014 – Otter Tail Telcom, 245th – Award: $108,553.
  • 2019: Otter Tail Telcom LLC – Long and Fish Lakes Project – GRANT $156,954
  • 2019: Arvig (Loretel Systems, Inc.) – Cormorant Lakes Area Project – GRANT $430,780

Find more articles on Otter Tail County https://blandinonbroadband.org/?s=otter+tail&submit=Search

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on December 16, 2024. Red dots represent locations unserved locations. Above I have tracked wireline access because that is the Minnesota definition of broadband. The info below includes wired and wireless. BEAD includes fixed wireless connections as served locations. (I wrote more on the distinction between the two last year, which may be if interest in the numbers range greatly for your county.)

I am doing the annual look at broadband in each county – based on maps from the Office of Broadband Development and news gathered from the last year. I’m looking at progress toward the 2022 (25 Mbps down and 3 Mbps up) and 2026 (100 Mbps down and 20 Mbps up) and will code each:

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)
This entry was posted in County Profiles 2024, Green, MN by Ann Treacy. Bookmark the permalink.

About Ann Treacy

Librarian who follows rural broadband in MN and good uses of new technology (blandinonbroadband.org), hosts a radio show on MN music (mostlyminnesota.com), supports people experiencing homelessness in Minnesota (elimstrongtowershelters.org) and helps with social justice issues through Women’s March MN.

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