ConnectSuperior sees 10 percent uptake in the first 2 months of service

Wisconsin Public Radio reports about our neighbors to the East.

This summer, after five years of planning, the city of Superior launched a new city-owned fiber optic network called ConnectSuperior.

ConnectSuperior works kind of like a highway, where the city supplies the infrastructure, and businesses can use that network to provide high-speed internet service to residents.

Stephanie Becken, the city’s broadband manager, told WPR’s “Wisconsin Today” that the new network has been a game-changer for Superior. Before, residents were limited to a handful of existing internet service providers in the area, and connectivity could be spotty because those companies hadn’t invested in updated infrastructure.

“Now, with this system, we’re able to really (welcome) as many internet service providers as the market can bear,” Becken said.

For some households, this means parents can work, kids can do schoolwork and other family members can play games or stream movies together, all at the same time — something that was inconceivable with the older internet speeds.

Paul Bunyan Communications completes broadband expansion in Sandy Pike, & Wuori Townships (St Louis County)

From Paul Bunyan Communications

Paul Bunyan Communications has completed expanding its all-fiber optic network, the GigaZone®, to areas of Sandy, Pike, and Wuori Townships that included over 680 homes and businesses. Those who have signed up for service are being contacted to set up service installation.
“We remain fully committed to bringing all-fiber optic gigabit broadband to the underserved areas in our region. Reliable Internet is no longer a luxury, it’s a necessity, and we’re proud to now serve Sandy, Pike, and Wuori Townships.” said Chad Bullock, Paul Bunyan Communications CEO/General Manager.
“This is a major upgrade for both residents and businesses,” said Leo Anderson, Chief Technology Officer at Paul Bunyan Communications. “With our all-fiber optic network now offering Internet speeds up to 10 Gig, things like remote work, distance learning, telehealth, and streaming are not only possible, but they are seamless. It is a true game changer for these communities.”
Anyone interested in getting connected to the all-fiber optic broadband network in these areas can still sign up for service. The cooperative will return to bring the network up to locations with no construction fee when feasible.
There is no membership fee to join Paul Bunyan Communications, membership is included by subscribing to either local phone service or GigaZone® Internet service.
To check to see if a specific location is within an expansion area and learn more about the expansion construction process, visit http://www.gigazone.com
This project was made possible through the USDA ReConnect 3 Grant Program. This project is estimated to cost $13,588,555 with the USDA grant contributing $10,191,416. Paul Bunyan Communications investing $3,381,112, and Wuori Township contributing $16,026.

Mayo Clinic is closing six locations, locals worry about lack of broadband impeding telehealth alternatives

Explore Okoboji reports

Mayo Clinic is closing six locations in Southern Minnesota. Montgomery, Belle Plaine, Wells, Caledonia, North Mankato, and Saint Peter will all lose clinics. The Mayo Clinic Health System said in a statement it plans to consolidate clinic services, but locals worry about a lack of access. Montgomery City Administrator Brian Heck said rural Minnesota does not have robust broadband and not every patient is able to use virtual care. The six clinics will close on December 10th.

Still no resolution on Digital Discrimination Case Minnesota Telecom Alliance v. FCC

Broadband Breakfast reports

A year after oral arguments, the fate of the Federal Communications Commission’s digital discrimination rules remains unresolved in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit.

A three-judge panel, all Republicans, heard the caseMinnesota Telecom Alliance v. FCC, on Sept. 25, 2024. But the court has yet to issue a decision.

In the meantime, the legal landscape has shifted: The Supreme Court’s Loper Bright decision ended Chevron deference, Trump issued an executive order eliminating the disparate impact standard across federal agencies, and digital discrimination rules critic Brendan Carr is now the FCC chairman.

Stacy Cluff, IT & Broadband Manager, MLEC on Aitkin County Podcast NaturallyBetter

I have a new favorite, local podcast Aitkin County NaturallyBetter with Mark Jeffers, the Economic Development Coordinator for Aitkin County. Today I listened to an interview with Stacy Cluff, IT & Broadband Manager at MLEC. It was a terrific, firsthand account of broadband coming to Aitkin County. It is as much of an introduction to MLEC and the local economy as it is broadband, which makes sense as it’s intersectional.

It’s informational to the community and could be inspirational to other communities.

Understanding broadband affordability in context of community, location and income

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York has an interesting report on broadband affordability

Existing data on broadband pricing is often limited to aggregate price estimates at the state level or for metropolitan areas. The FCC Urban Rate Survey, an annual survey of the fixed voice and broadband service rates offered to consumers in urban areas, aims to provide reasonable comparability benchmarks for fixed voice and broadband rates for universal service purposes.29 The
data provides information about providers in each state and the average rates offered for different broadband technologies, plans, and speeds, but does not offer information about serviced geographies within each state for each provider.30
This report uses the FCC Urban Rate Survey to illustrate associations between broadband speeds, technology type, and price. However, the broader analysis utilizes data from The Markup’s point-in time estimates of address-level broadband pricing data from cities,31 the “How We Uncovered Disparities in Internet Deals” dataset used to conduct a report on disparities in Internet speeds
offered for the same price in low-income versus middle-and-high income neighborhoods32 The data, collected in 2022, uses information from 800,000 Internet plans from four Internet service providers. Pricing information from these plans, representing the lowest price offered by each plan, is available at the address level for 38 cities and provides information about average download and
upload speeds offered for each plan.
There are limitations that come with using the Internet plan pricing data provided by The Markup. One, data is sampled from only one year (2022) and therefore cannot be used to illustrate changes in price over time. Two, the data often only contains pricing information for one or two providers per city, a phenomenon which is consistent with the way internet service providers often cover distinct geographies, however, it reduces variation in the data. The data, as it is used in this study, is only intended to provide illustrative, quantitative information on what broadband prices look like relative to median household income in cities but may or may not be representative.

It’s an interesting concept and I’d love to see a rural version of it. We don’t all define affordable by the same dollar amount (for any purchase!) so percentage of income makes sense. But the broadband services are not all the same and availability isn’t the same. What’s the cost of needing one service for speed and another for reliability? Or the cost of having no choices? These are factors that seem to be more prevalent in rural areas.

Both Rep Pete Stauber and Rep Kelly Morrison talk to House Small Business Committee about rural broadband

Forbes Breaking News reports on remarks from Rep Kelly Morrison and Rep Pete Stauber at a House Small Business Committee hearing. Both recognize the importance of rural broadband, USF reform and value of FTTH…

 

Gateway Fiber expands fiber into Moorhead (Clay County)

Telecompetitor reports

Gateway Fiber is bringing lightning-fast fiber internet to Moorhead, MN, marking a major milestone in the company’s mission to connect the Fargo-Moorhead metropolitan area. With construction already underway, thousands of Moorhead residents and businesses will soon have access to game-changing symmetrical internet speeds, unlimited data, and more reliable internet than ever before, transforming how the community works, learns, and connects online.

This expansion creates a comprehensive fiber network serving both sides of the Fargo metropolitan region, confirming Gateway Fiber’s commitment to building connected communities and advancing economic development across the Red River Valley.

Gigapower, the open access fiber venture, to expand in 6 states, including MN

Broadband Breakfast reports...

Gigapower, the open access fiber joint venture between AT&T and BlackRock, the world’s largest asset management firm, has completed network construction in six states and is serving “just under 70 communities,” according to Jeff Seidenfaden, Gigapower’s chief revenue officer.

The six states are Florida, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Minnesota. Seidenfaden said the venture continues to pursue its goal of reaching 1.5 million fiber locations nationwide. Gigapower has not disclosed how many fiber passings it has completed to date.

Woodstock Communications Deploys FTTP in Hatfield (Pipestone County) with MN State Grant

The Pipestone Star reports

Woodstock Communications has begun construction of a fiber optic internet network in the Hatfield area.

Work started east of Pipestone along State Highway 30 earlier this month. Woodstock Communications General Manager Terry Nelson said the project includes installing about 45 miles of fiber that will pass 116 homes in the project area. He said the fiber will be installed this fall and internet service is expected to be ready by the end of the year.

There will be no charge to residents in the project area to connect their residences. Projected pricing for broadband service is $44.95 for 100 megabits per second (Mbps) uploading and downloading speed, $54.95 for 250 Mbps, $74.95 for 500 Mbps and $104.95 for 1 gigabit per second. Nelson said that pricing is consistent with what Woodstock Communications charges in the rest of its service areas.

The project is estimated to cost $2,150,576. Woodstock Communications received a $1,612,932 grant from the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED) last year to help pay for it. The Pipestone County Commissioners voted in 2023 to provide $268,822 for the project, which would cover half of the local match for the grant. Woodstock Communications will pay the other half.

The project in the Hatfield area is phase one of a four-phase project to provide fiber internet access to all the rural parts of Pipestone County for an estimated $15,733,299. Woodstock Communications plans to seek other grants in the future to help fund the projects.

States Revise Tentative BEAD Awards: MN must work on bids over $10,000 per passing

I’ve shared this news but sometimes, it’s good to see how it gets framed and shared other places too; Broadband Breakfast reports…

Eight states have revised their tentative awards under the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment program. Some made minor changes and others had material reductions in locations being served or money being spent.

And specifically about MN…

Meanwhile, Minnesota revealed costs thresholds NTIA is using to push spending down: Those from $10,000 to $20,000 per passing require written justification, those from $20,000 to $23,000 have to be negotiated down to $20,000, and those above $23,000 had to be renegotiated in three days. The state said it was given official notice on Monday.

Vibrant Broadband spread broadband in rural MN with hybrid fiber and fixed wireless infrastructure

Lightwave reports

Vibrant Broadband, part of Meeker Energy, is another example of how electric cooperatives are taking their rural broadband matters into their own hands.

In 2018, Vibrant Broadband began building its hybrid fiber optic and fixed wireless infrastructure for rural members who had electricity. This hybrid system allows us to offer brilliant speeds throughout a widespread area.

Vibrant Broadband provides fiber-fed Internet to businesses and residents of Meeker, Kandiyohi, Wright, Stearns, McLeod, and Renville counties in Central Minnesota.

Andrew Kalkbrenner, IT Manager at Vibrant Broadband, said that the cooperative’s decision was a response to the limited options its members had.

The connection serves two purposes…

Considering the rural landscape that Vibrant Broadband serves, the cooperative is leveraging fiber for two purposes: gaining greater visibility into its electric business and delivering broadband.

By building out fiber to its electric infrastructure, the cooperative gained greater visibility. Electric providers can use the fiber for Substation Automation and control, enabling SCADA (Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition) and supporting modern smart grid functionalities like asset condition monitoring and remote control.

Those purposes opened a third door…

Besides taking care of its electric infrastructure and supporting its FTTH and wireless broadband networks, Vibrant sees several wholesale application opportunities for the middle mile networks.

It is working with other providers using its service to resell the internet to consumers, as well as providing facilities for wireless backhaul. “The middle mile network is mainly for our members, but there are several other opportunities,” Kalkbrenner said. “Also, there are other electric companies we’re able to help tie some of their facilities together to operate more efficiently and have private connectivity between locations to help with security.”

US-wide BEAD award has been 46 percent of original allocation – in MN that was 58 percent

Telecompetitor reports

Most states (45 as of Friday) have released their recommended awards in the Benefit of the Bargain round in the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program. The total value of the award recommendations for those states is less than half of initial allocations, according to a Telecompetitor analysis.

The initial allocation for the 45 states was about $32.8 billion. The total value of the award recommendations for the states is about $15.2 billion, or about 46% of the initial allocation.

Here is the allocation versus award by state:

Minnesota places well above average at 57.8 percent (versus US wide percentage of 46 percent) and ranks 12 in terms of percentage retained. But that could continue to change…

It’s important to keep in mind that the states’ recommendations for BEAD awards are not final. The recommendations still must be approved by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), which is rumored to be seeking reductions to the award amounts.

EVENT Oct 1: Building for Digital Equity Event: Moving at the Speed of Trust

From the Institue for Local Self Reliance…

From the demise of the Affordable Connectivity Program and the sudden termination of the Digital Equity Act to the drastic revamping of the BEAD Internet infrastructure program and the myriad ways trust in governmental institutions has been eroded, digital inclusion advocates will not want to miss the next Building for Digital Equity (B4DE) livestream.

Slated for October 1 at 3 pm EST, the next B4DE virtual gathering will speak to the moment by focusing on a fundamental formula Internet access warriors cannot afford to overlook as they face down the forces actively working to undermine efforts to bridge the digital divide.

Co-hosted by ILSR’s Community Broadband Networks Initiative and the National Digital Inclusion Alliance (NDIA), the next B4DE will spotlight local strategies for digital equity and explore why it’s necessary for frontline digital inclusion practitioners to be “Moving at the Speed of Trust.

Register for the free event here.

EVENT Sep 30: BEAD Deployment: Preparing to Connect the Heartland Once and For All

From Heartland Forward

Join Heartland Forward on Tuesday, September 30th at 10 AM CST for a 60-minute webinar, BEAD Deployment: Preparing to Connect the Heartland Once and For All.

This conversation will:

  •  Provide an overview of how heartland states plan to deploy federal funding to deliver high-speed internet to all communities.
  •  Offer practical steps local governments, ISPs and community leaders can take, such as streamlining permitting and infrastructure approvals, to accelerate deployment when funding arrives.
  •  Highlight resources like the Connecting the Heartland Jobs Board, connecting workers to high-speed internet jobs and training opportunities to support rapid deployment.

Featured Speakers:

  •  Mary Larkin Furlow – Senior Manager of Connecting the Heartland, Heartland Forward
  •  Devon Braunstein – Director, Illinois Office of Broadband
  •  Kathryn de Wit – Project Director, Broadband Access, The Pew Charitable Trusts
  •  Glen Howie – State Broadband Director, The Arkansas State Broadband Office
  •  Veneeth Iyengar – Executive Director, ConnectLA
  •  Mike Sanders – Executive Director, Oklahoma Broadband Office
  •  Peter Voderberg – Chief, BroadbandOhio

Register here for the webinar.

 

Please share this invitation with others who are invested in connecting every home, business and community in the heartland. Together, we can ensure that every heartland community has the high-speed internet access it needs to thrive.