MN Tools to promote Application for Educational Benefits – including Internet and utility discounts

Below is information from the Department of Education to promote Application for Educational Benefits. I thought some readers might be in a position to share these with patrons and some reader might appreciate a reminder to apply…

The Application for Educational Benefits does more than connect eligible families to important supports — it also helps schools access critical funding for programs and student services. Even now that school meals are provided at no cost, a drop in applications can reduce resources for your school community.

This toolkit includes flyers, posters, social media graphics, sample messages, and outreach templates to help schools and districts explain why the form still matters and encourage more families to complete it.

The Application for Educational Benefits may help eligible families access:
• Summer grocery support (Sun Bucks)
• Internet and utility discounts
• Test fee waivers
• Tutoring and after-school programs
• Local discounts at museums and events

Flyers and Posters

Download a printable flyer (8.5″ x 11″) or poster (11″ x 17″) that explains why the Application for Educational Benefits matters — and how it can support eligible families and schools. Use the flyer for handouts, newsletters, or email attachments. Display the poster in hallways, entryways, and community spaces.

Flyers (8.5″ x 11″)

Download in English
Download in Spanish
Download in Somali
Download in Hmong

Posters (11″ x 17″)

Download in English
Download in Spanish
Download in Somali
Download in Hmong

Social Media Graphics and Captions

Download the ready-to-use graphics and matching captions for Facebook, Instagram, and other platforms. Each file name clearly identifies its format (horizontal, square, or vertical) so you can choose the right size for your post. Just download the file to your computer, copy the graphics, copy the captions, and add your school’s link or QR code.

Design Option 1 (Text with White Background)

Download Horizontal Graphic
Download Vertical Graphic
Download Square Graphic

Design Option 2 (Text with Dark Blue Background)

Download Horizontal Graphic
Download Vertical Graphic
Download Square Graphic

Design Option 3 (Image on White Background)

Download Horizontal Graphic
Download Vertical Graphic
Download Square Graphic

Social Media Captions

Download Social Media Captions

Sample Press Release

Download Sample Press Release

Prewritten Message Toolkit

Download Prewritten Message Toolkit

Unintended tax law changes in 2017 mean BEAD grants will be taxable

Broadband Breakfast reports

President Trump has already set to work growing on the promise of the BEAD Program with the administration’s release of new broadband policies and a Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) for BEAD funds in June 2025.

Unintended consequences makes broadband grants taxable

But this promise is now in jeopardy. Unintended consequences resulting from changes in the federal tax law made broadband grants treated as taxable income. That means Washington is trying to claw back 20 to 30 percent of the grant funding that has been allocated to rural and last-mile broadband providers.

Instead of investing every dollar into finally connecting those who need access to broadband the most, providers will be forced to send money back to Washington, unless the president and Congress step in to help.

This is not just bad policy, it is devastating for American workers, rural communities, and taxpayers who deserve this connectivity. It will halt thousands of broadband projects across the country and cost tens-of-thousands of hardworking Americans their jobs.

Broadband providers will be forced to scale back, leaving hundreds of thousands of Americans, many in rural communities that strongly support President Trump without affordable internet access.

This isn’t exactly news but it’s resurfacing. Beyond Telecom Law wrote about it in Feb 2025 and March 2022…

In March 2022, we published a blog post explaining that broadband grants are apparently subject to federal income taxation. Three years later, and with $42.5 billion in BEAD grants on the verge of disbursement, nothing has changed.

As discussed in 2022, the taxability of broadband grants seems to be an unplanned quirk of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Prior to that, broadband grants were generally exempt from taxation based on a favorable IRS interpretation of Section 118 of the tax code. But the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act amended Section 118 to the effect that “contributions to capital” (including grants) made from governmental or civic groups to a corporation are taxable as gross income.

Recent recipients of state and federal broadband grants are already struggling with this. 

Minnesota maintains highest possible bond rating

This feels broadband adjacent, from News from the States

Minnesota has earned the highest possible bond rating from three of Wall Street’s major credit agencies, affirming the state’s strong financial position despite some concerning fiscal trends and uncertainty from the federal government.

Minnesota’s AAA bond rating, which it has maintained for four consecutive years, means that the state can borrow money cheaply to fund infrastructure projects.

Can better broadband help girls in rural MN become better math students?

MinnPost reports

Minnesota girls’ math skills fell nearly half a grade level behind boys in the years after the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new analysis of standardized test scores.

The Associated Press looked at average test scores for third through eighth graders across 15 years in over 5,000 school districts in 33 states, compiled by the Educational Opportunity Project at Stanford University.

Across the country, the analysis shows that schools have lost ground since the pandemic following a decade in which educators had nearly closed the gender gap between girls and boys on math scores. While boys’ scores also suffered during COVID, they have recovered faster than girls’ scores. The widening gender gap in Minnesota was among the largest nationwide, equivalent to 43% of a grade level.

It turns out the situation may be worse for girls in rural Minnesota. There is the issue of broadband access…

When schools closed for the pandemic, districts had to focus on making remote learning work.

“Schools were more concerned with the logistics of getting kids on the right application and in the right Zoom room,or getting them to stay at their computers for the whole day, or even helping students and teachers find stable internet, especially in rural areas,” said Kondo, the education professor at St. Catherine University.

Also, there is the issue of girls not seeing themselves in STEM jobs…

Osakis superintendent Dahlheimer also notes that there are cultural aspects of rural Minnesota that make it more difficult to achieve his goal of creating long-term partnerships with businesses that can offer female STEM workers as role models for his district’s students.

“There are less STEM jobs out here. That may change with remote working, but for now, most homes are single-earner homes, and the person working is the husband, the father,” leading to a dearth of women whom girls can see thriving in STEM fields.

The numbers support the lack of role models in the workforce…

In Minnesota, only 26% of STEM workers are female, and only 11% are people of color, Brown said.

Obviously, better broadband would help the access issue. But it also seems that better broadband would support remote work, which would support mothers working (even part time) remotely in all fields, including STEM. Also with better broadband, girls in rural areas can more easily be introduced or even develop mentorships with women working in STEM in rural, suburban and urban areas.

There are some exceptions and I want to give a nod to Iron Rang Engineering’s #Night Program, which turned 10 last February. Here’s more info from their website…

Engineering outreach is a large aspect of Iron Range Engineering because we believe in giving back to our community. #Night is all about empowering young women to know that they can choose a career in engineering if they want to. Having more women in engineering will lead to better and more innovative ideas for solving the world’s problems.

EVENT Sep 22: MN Broadband Task Force monthly meeting

From the Office of Broadband Development…

Governor’s Task Force on Broadband

September 22, 2025

1:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.

Microsoft Teams

Join the meeting now

Meeting ID: 249 182 525 277

Passcode: KH6Rc37B

Dial in by phone

+1 651-395-7448,,377445322# United States, Minneapolis

Find a local number

Phone conference ID: 377 445 322#

Join on a video conferencing device

Tenant key: mn@m.webex.com

Video ID: 112 034 183 9

More info

For organizers: Meeting options | Reset dial-in PIN

 

1:00 p.m. – 1:10 p.m. Welcome

Teddy Bekele, Chair, Minnesota Governor’s Task Force on Broadband

1:10 p.m. – 1:15 p.m.  Approval of minutes from June and August Task Force meetings

1:15 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.  Communication Service for the Deaf (CSD)

Cameron Papazis, Business Development Manager

Irisa MacAulay, Business Development Associate

2:00 p.m. – 2:15 p.m. Break

2:15 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. The Pew Charitable Trusts

Jake Varn, Associate Manager, Broadband Access Initiative

3:00 p.m.—3:20 p.m. Office of Broadband Development Overview + Updates

Bree Maki, Executive Director, OBD

12:20 p.m. – 12:30 p.m.Other Business, Subgroup Updates, October’s Meeting Plans, Wrap-up

The FCC to look into wireless access to municipal/community rights-of-way

The FCC plans to look into state and local rules regarding wireline access to municipal rights-of-way, poles and conduit…

This Notice of Inquiry advances the Commission’s Build America Agenda by launching an inquiry into state and local statutes, regulations, and legal requirements that prohibit or have the effect of
prohibiting the provision of wireline telecommunications services in violation of section 253 of the
Communications Act (Act). To build out to consumers, providers must obtain authorizations from state
and local governments to deploy facilities in the public rights-of-way and use them to provide service.
This can be an onerous task, often requiring applications to be filed with numerous jurisdictions, and
resulting in delays and increased costs that impede deployments, disincentivize private investment in
modern networks, and potentially waste taxpayer funded federal support. In 2018, the Commission took
important steps to streamline requirements impacting deployments, which spurred significant
deployments in the ensuing years. Notwithstanding these improvements, the Commission continues to be
advised that wireline deployment projects are getting stuck in red tape created by state and local
requirements. This Notice commences in inquiry into actions the Commission could take to limit
processing times and fees for state and local authorizations in the wireline context, as it has done for
Small Wireless Facilities.
What the Notice of Inquiry Would Do:
• Seek comment on the delays that providers encounter when seeking authorizations to access and
use state and local public rights-of-way to provide wireline telecommunications services.
• Seek comment on the fees charged by state and local governments when providers seek
authorizations to deploy and provide wireline telecommunications services.
• Seek comment on in-kind compensation requirements imposed as a condition of obtaining
authorizations to access and use public rights-of-way.
• Seek comment on whether the fees, delays, and conditions imposed by state and local
governments prohibit or have the effect of prohibiting the provision of wireline
telecommunications services in violation of section 253.
• Invite broad comment on other types of state and local requirements that have a prohibitive effect
on wireline telecommunications deployments and services, including the identification of any
specific state or local statutes, regulations, or legal requirements that the Commission could
consider preempting via a sua sponte preemption proceeding under section 253(d).

Office of Broadband Development Updates: Task Force meets Sep 22, BIA has sessions for Tribal Networks

From the Office of Broadband Development …

Broadband Matters: Office of Broadband Development Updates

  • Minnesota’s BEAD Final Proposal submitted to NTIA
  • Broadband Task Force, September monthly meeting
  • Line Extension Connection Program update
  • Updated guidance on broadband infrastructure development in Tribal Communities

Minnesota’s BEAD Final Proposal submitted to NTIA

As required by the Broadband, Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program, the Minnesota Office of Broadband Development (OBD) submitted its Final Draft Proposal to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), including the Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Department of Commerce, on September 4, 2025. NTIA has committed to review and approve plans in 90 days.

OBD will continue to revise and update the documents as required by NTIA and necessary to ensure all BEAD eligible locations are served as defined by the policy notice.

Deployment and Technology-Type Results
As published in Minnesota’s Draft Final Proposal submitted to NTIA on September 4, 2025:

  • Infrastructure/Broadband Deployment: $391,611,699 (an increase from the previously reported posted draft of $381 million)
  • Technology Breakdown by Percentage and Location Count:
    • Fiber/Coax: 57.7% – 43,339 locations
    • Satellite: 24.8% – 18,651 locations
    • Fixed Wireless: 17.5% – 13,031 locations

Minnesota’s Draft of the Final Proposal and attachments can be found on the OBD BEAD webpage.

Line Extension Connection Program update

The window for residential and business sign-ups to be included in the bidding for Round 4 of the Line Extension Connection Program has closed. Registration will remain open for future rounds if and as funding is available.

OBD is preparing locations for the 10-day Line Extension Review and Challenge, which is anticipated to run from September 15 to September 24, 2025.

Updates will be posted as the are available to the OBD Line Extension webpage. Questions on Line Extension can be sent to deed.broadband@state.mn.us or (651)-259-7610.

Broadband Task Force, September monthly meeting

The Broadband Task Force will be meeting on Monday, September 22 at 1pm CST. This meeting will be held virtually and is open to anyone from the public to attend. The Teams link to join the meeting will be included as at the top of the meeting agenda, which will be posted along with other information on past meetings on the Broadband Task Force webpage.

Updated guidance on broadband infrastructure development in Tribal Communities

The Department of the Interior Office of the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs updated guidance on Streamlining the Rights-of-Way Application Processes for Broadband Infrastructure Projects Across Indian Trust and Restricted Land. Now, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) has seven business days to review an application and notify the Rights-of-Way applicant if any additional information is needed. The new policy also provides guidance on waivers of certain regulatory requirements.

Webinars are being offered to provide information on this new policy, which will be open to Indian Affairs staff, tribal realty staff, federally recognized tribes, tribal organizations, Alaska Native corporations, federal partners and industry.

The webinars will be held on:

Additional information is available on the BIA webpage.

Gateway Fiber building FTTH to Elk River and Otsego (Wright and Sherburne Counties)

Business Wire reports

Gateway Fiber announced today that it is bringing its ultra-fast, 100% fiber-optic internet service to Elk River and Otsego, MN, joining other Twin Cities communities, including Blaine, Coon Rapids, Maple Grove, Plymouth, and others, as the company expands its footprint in the area. Construction on the new network is set to begin in September, with the first customers scheduled to come online later this fall. Most residents will see service available in 2026.

By building a brand-new 100% fiber network directly to homes and businesses, Gateway Fiber is delivering the speed, reliability, and customer service that modern communities need to thrive. Unlike other technologies that rely on outdated cable or copper lines, fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) technology provides the bandwidth capacity necessary to handle today’s connected households and tomorrow’s demands.

Gigi Sohn: From Crumbs to Connections: Minnesota’s Broadband Future

Yesterday I attended, livestreamed and posted about the MN Public Broadband Alliance meeting in Le Sueur County. Today Benton Institute for Broadband & Society has published the text of the speech from Gigi Sohn…

Thank you, Barbara. Good morning! It’s wonderful to be here in Minnesota, a state that has always prided itself on strong communities and local problem-solving.  I’m honored to be speaking alongside my friends Ry Marcatillio and Bree Maki.

Before I begin, I want to introduce you to AAPB – the American Association for Public Broadband. We promote community networks by showcasing success stories and resources. We protect them from monopoly attacks. And we ignite new growth by linking communities with the mentors and expertise they need. Together, we’re building broadband by the people, for the people.  AAPB is a membership organization, so please join us as we work to empower communities across the country.

I want to start with a truth many of us already know; when it comes to federal efforts to close the digital divide, Minnesota has been left behind. Program after program has promised transformational change—yet time and again, your communities are still waiting.

Today, I want to offer both an honest assessment and a hopeful path forward. Because while Washington has failed you, Minnesota has the power—and the track record—to build its own broadband future.

Federal Program Failures

Let’s talk first about the federal record.

Launched in 2020, the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund—RDOF—was supposed to be a $6 billion game-changer. But nearly one-third of RDOF projects defaulted nationwide. That means hundreds of thousands of families were promised service and got nothing. Here in Minnesota, the story is far worse.  ISPs defaulted on 80% of  more than $400,000,000 in state RDOF funds and on 78% of the over 142,000 RDOF locations. These numbers are nothing less than tragic.

Then came BEAD, the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment program, part of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. $42.5 billion. A once-in-a-generation opportunity. Congress made clear that states should prioritize infrastructure that could scale, last for decades, and support the technologies of tomorrow. The Biden Commerce Department determined that only fiber networks met that definition.

But the Biden Administration didn’t finish the job, and on June 6 of this year, the rules were rewritten by the new Administration. Technology neutrality replaced fiber-first. Cost took precedence over performance. Low-earth orbit satellite companies swooped in with bids as low as $700 a location—numbers no fiber provider could match. The result? In Minnesota, 22,000 out of 76,000 eligible locations received no bids at all, because ten fiber providers dropped out rather than play a rigged game.

Of the remaining locations in the state, just 58% will get fiber, while approximately 25% will get satellite and 17% fixed wireless. Let’s be clear: the latter two aren’t long-term solutions. Satellite is expensive, congested, and limited. Fixed wireless can’t keep up with the demands of advanced applications. And for nearly a third of BEAD-eligible Minnesota households, there is no solution.

But that’s not all. Congress didn’t just fund deployment—it also envisioned a future where leftover BEAD dollars could be reinvested in the things that make networks work for people: workforce development, digital literacy, adoption programs, streamlined permitting, public safety and new applications like AI.  These aren’t luxuries; they’re the essential supports that get networks built faster and ensure they’re actually used.

Yet instead of empowering states to stretch their deployment dollars and then redirect the savings to these critical efforts, the Commerce Department has made clear it will claw back the money. Whether through a rescission like Congress passed in July or by simply withholding funds—just like it’s doing with the $3 billion Digital Equity Act—these resources are being locked away in Washington rather than put to work in Minnesota communities. Once again, promises made in the Infrastructure bill are being broken, and the people paying the price are the very families still waiting for a connection.

So, let’s be honest. The federal government has shown itself—again and again—incapable of implementing broadband programs that deliver robust, affordable networks for all Americans. Minnesota cannot keep waiting.

The Case For Self-Help

The good news is that Minnesota has a long history of self-help. When Washington has failed, when the market has failed, your communities have stepped up.  You’ve built cooperatives, power systems, and water systems. Broadband should be no different.

And in fact, it already isn’t.

Willmar

Take Willmar. Years ago, when private providers refused to invest, the city built its own network. That took courage. And today, Willmar has doubled down—planning a new $24.5 million open-access fiber project. This means that not just one provider, but many, will be able to serve homes and businesses over a shared city-owned fiber system.

What does that mean in practice? It means families whose kids struggled through COVID with buffering Zoom classes, will finally have reliable service. It means entrepreneurs can now reach clients nationwide without worrying about upload speeds. And it means residents have choice—true competition—instead of the take-it-or-leave-it monopolies we’ve come to expect.

Southwest Broadband

Now let’s move to Southwest Minnesota.  Nine small towns realized they couldn’t solve the broadband problem alone. So, they came together to create Southwest Broadband, a regional cooperative network.

The impact has been extraordinary. Students in Worthington can attend virtual classes seamlessly. Farmers outside Jackson can use precision agriculture tools—tracking soil health, applying fertilizer efficiently, saving money, and protecting the environment. Local clinics are expanding telehealth, so patients don’t have to drive hours for routine appointments.

Southwest Broadband is more than a network. It’s a lifeline, built because communities refused to wait for someone else to save them.

Dakota County

Closer to the Twin Cities, Dakota County built one of the nation’s first countywide fiber backbones. That backbone connects schools, libraries, city halls, and public safety facilities. The result? Students in Apple Valley can get online at their libraries. Police officers and firefighters can share lifesaving data in real time. And taxpayers save money because the county no longer pays private carriers year after year to lease lines.

Scott County

And then there’s Scott County. Their countywide network didn’t just make government more efficient—it extended opportunity into neighborhoods that private carriers ignored. Small businesses now have the bandwidth to grow. Families have access to telehealth. Local government can deliver services faster, better, and at lower cost.

These are not isolated experiments. They are part of a movement: over 700 communities nationwide have chosen to own their broadband infrastructure. They are all living proof: community-owned broadband works.

The Broader Benefits of Community Networks

And remember— community broadband is not just about fast internet. It’s about transformation.

When a community builds its own fiber network, the benefits ripple outward in powerful and measurable ways.

First, economic development. Businesses today make decisions about where to locate based on infrastructure. Roads, water, and power still matter—but high-capacity broadband is now at the top of the list. A manufacturer deciding between two towns will choose the one with reliable fiber that can support automation, logistics, and global communication. Hospitals expand services where fiber makes telehealth possible. Entrepreneurs launch startups in places they might otherwise overlook, because they can now serve customers anywhere in the world.

Second, population growth and retention. Families want to live where opportunity is abundant, and quality of life is high. In rural Minnesota, young people are more likely to stay—or move back—if they know they can work remotely, take online classes, and build a life with the same digital resources they’d have in the city. Broadband has become a cornerstone of livability, as critical as good schools and safe streets. Communities with fiber don’t just keep their residents—they attract new ones.

Third, housing and real estate values. Studies show that fiber broadband can increase home values by 3–5 percent, sometimes more. Realtors will tell you that buyers now ask about internet speed as often as they ask about property taxes. A community with fiber is a community where homes sell faster and at higher prices—strengthening the tax base and fueling local growth.

Last, but not least, cost savings and new revenue streams. When a city leases lines from private telecom companies, it pays year after year with no equity to show for it. But when a city owns its network, those dollars stay local. Instead of sending profits to shareholders in another state, communities can reinvest savings into teachers, firefighters, and other public priorities. Utilities use fiber to detect water leaks and power outages before they become disasters, saving millions. Public safety agencies share data instantly, reducing response times and saving lives.

A community-owned fiber broadband network can also be a source of new revenue. Local governments can lease excess fiber capacity to private providers, anchor institutions, or wireless companies, producing steady wholesale revenue. In addition, community networks can support smart-city applications—such as traffic management, utility monitoring, or public safety systems—that save money while opening opportunities for service contracts and partnerships. Over time, these revenue streams can reduce reliance on outside funding, lower taxes, and ensure that the economic benefits of broadband stay local.  A community network isn’t just a cost—it’s an investment that pays dividends across the community.

And fiber doesn’t just connect—it protects. With new fiber sensing technology, those same strands of glass can act as thousands of tiny guardians—detecting accidents on roadways, warning crews before a backhoe cuts a line, even picking up the tremors of an earthquake or the sound of a gunshot. Fiber doesn’t just carry data. It carries peace of mind.

And perhaps most importantly for the future, fiber is the foundation for artificial intelligence. AI applications—from precision agriculture to advanced manufacturing, from autonomous vehicles to telemedicine—depend on moving massive amounts of data with speed and reliability. Only fiber has the bandwidth, low latency, and symmetrical speeds to power real-time decision-making at scale. Without robust fiber networks, the promise of AI will remain out of reach for most communities. With fiber, Minnesota communities can lead in deploying and benefiting from these transformative technologies.

Community-owned fiber networks build stronger economies, more vibrant neighborhoods, healthier families, and more resilient communities. It creates places where people can live, work, and thrive.

Conclusion

So, let’s return to where we began. Federal broadband programs have failed the state. They promised a feast and delivered crumbs. But Minnesota doesn’t need to wait. Minnesota knows how to help itself.

The path forward is community broadband. Cities like Willmar. Coalitions like Southwest Broadband. Counties like Dakota and Scott. These aren’t dreams. They are models, ready to be replicated across the state.

Because broadband is not just infrastructure—it’s opportunity. It’s fairness. It’s security. And it’s the foundation for the communities we dare to imagine.

If Minnesota communities want to close its digital divide once and for all, they can’t wait for Washington. They have to do it for themselves. And the good news is— they can.

Thank you.

MN Public Broadband Alliance meeting Sep 2025: Preparing for the future of BEAD in MN

About 50 people shows up for the MN Public Broadband Alliance meeting in Le Sueur County, including broadband industry folks, elected officials and interesting community members. They heard from experts in the field (ncluding Gigi Sogn from AAPB and Ry Marcattillo from ILSR) and folks on the front lines. Asked good questions. We all appreciated the work that has been done in Minnesota regarding broadband, including work from the Blandin Foundation. We rallied to prepare for whatever may come down the BEAD pipeline and get better broadband to all MN residents.

Broadband Story in Le Sueur County

  • Met at a local broadband event
  • Became a BBC partner and then COVID hit
  • Did the BBC program online
  • Used some COVID funds to deploy/extend broadband in the area
  • Joined MPBA; appreciated Diane Wells’ expertise at monthly meeting

Micah Myers

  • Built fiber network in 1997
  • Works with many partners
  • Supported by Blandin

Bree Maki, OBD

  • Has been managing MN response to BEAD
  • Manages state dollars for broadband
  • Will close 55 grants this fall
  • Doing Line Extension again in upcoming weeks
  • Glad to have $381M in BEAD requests
  • The difficulty in MN is that we’ve built to any of the easier to reach (less expensive) locations, which leaves us with the most expensive to serve
  • Maps are adjusting all of the time
  • What will we do with “leftover” money? We’d like to do fiber but we don’t know what will qualify as non-deployment projects. We’re looking a things like wireless towers or multi-unit dwelling locations.

Chuck Ackman reads a letter from Senator Klobuchar –

MN Municipal Sector BB investments in MN (Barbara Droher Kline, Perry Mulcrone, Jeff Dahna, Micah Myers)

COFFEE BREAK

Gigi Sohn, American Association for Public Broadband

  • https://www.aapb.us/
  • Federal efforts to closer the digital divide – have left MN behind. MN communities are still waiting. But MN has the power to build it’s own broadband.
  • RDOF defaults in MN were overwhelming and tragic. Now BEAD, part of the bipartisan bill. Originally the focus was to let locals make decisions. Biden’s Admin took too long. Trump Admin changed that focus.
  • In MN 27,000 locations were left without a BEAD bid because 10 fiber providers walked away from BEAD rather than work within the ever-changing rules. Fixed is a long term fix Satellite and fixed wireless is not a long term solution.
  • Originally the left over money was meant to help people use broadband – like permitting and towers but not the Department of Commerce has been clear that they want to get the money back.
  • The feds have show in the past that they cannot distribute broadband funding. We need to listen. Under different parties, the federal control has been to micromanage and that doesn’t work.
  • MN has a long history of self-help. There are examples of locals building broadband. Community-owned/built networks work.
  • Broadband is expensive for a community. But broadband is an investment is supporting the community but also in revenue from the broadband network based either on fees collected or fees no longer paid by local government. Also municipal apps that require broadband can save money.
  • In MN young people are more likely to stay or move to a rural area if there is broadband in the community.

Questions:

Politics are cyclical. When the winds change, do you think there will be more funding?
No. Broadband funds came (in part) from COVID so unless we see another life-changing event, it seems unlikely.

Please talk about Digital Equity funding loss?
There was $3 billion for 3 digital equity programs: planning for states (that went out), state’s own efforts to get people online and nonprofits that would help across state (that funding was awarded but not distributed). 22 State Attorneys General are looking into how to turn that around.

Ry Marcattillo, ILSR introduces a dashboard tracking local government spending with MN broadband grants over the years.

Glenn Fishbine, Breaking Point Solutions

  • Local needs need local maps and data.
  • BAT teams would be helpful to get data to map.

Senator Jeremy Miller will not run for reelection – helped with broadband in the past

Winona Journal reports

Five-term Senator Jeremy Miller of Winona will not seek re-election, he announced. Miller said he is looking forward to being home more with his family, growing his business, and volunteering. Miller, age 42, noted that he has not ruled out seeking public office in the future. In 2022 Miller was touted as a possible successor to MN-1 Congressman Jim Hagedorn, who died in office. Miller didn’t respond to the vibes. Instead, they went to Brad Finstad, a New Ulm farmer closely allied with Donald Trump.

He worked on broadband..

Miller characterized himself as “People First” while also favoring limited government. Priorities included quality schools and colleges. A related priority was economic development. He tried repeatedly to expand sports gambling as a tourism and economic development tool but couldn’t overcome arguments that that gambling was destructively addictive. He advocated exempting Social Security income from state taxation with limited success. He supported numerous southeast Minnesota infrastructure projects in including broadband expansion and hiking and bicycling trails.

Connected Nation unveils their interactive BEAD Tracker

From Connected Nation:

Connected Nation unveiled its new interactive dashboard, the BEAD Tracker. The dashboard provides easy access to states’ plans for spending federal funds that were allocated through the federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment program’s Benefit of the Bargain round. The BEAD Tracker compiles and aggregates state BEAD final proposals, highlighting how each state and U.S. territory intends to use its allocated federal BEAD dollars. That includes the total number of locations that will be served in each state, the distribution of the kind of broadband technology being funded, and how many locations will be served by each internet service provider. In addition to seeing national statistics, the BEAD Tracker allows users to view information for individual states, as well as by broadband platform and even by individual ISPs.

And a few screenshots that might of interest to BoB readers…

Minnesota number:

Help grow the Telehealth Access Point map

Do you have public space where visitors can securely contact telehealth providers? The NRTRC ( National Consortium of Telehealth Resource Centers ) is trying to grow their publicly available map of places where folks can go to use Telehealth Access Points. The map could be valuable for folks who lack technology to do a telehealth call from home whether they are on vacation, experiencing homelessness or disaster or simply don’t have the technology or tech skills. Here’s more info from a recent post on the NDIA listserv…

In celebration of Telehealth Awareness Week and in anticipation of Digital Inclusion Week, the NRTRC needs your help reaching 250 Telehealth Access Points (TAPs) on the NRTRC Find Telehealth Map.

A TAP is a public-facing space that furnishes a device with working camera, speaker and microphone, an internet connection and privacy considerations in the form of a dedicated room or kiosk for the general public to access a telehealth appointment.  These have been found throughout the nation at community anchor institutions like libraries, social service agencies, community health centers and more.  The NRTRC began mapping public-facing TAPs in 2023 in hopes of creating awareness of the spaces that are available for telehealth appointments and also to help navigators, providers and telehealth participants to find the resources they are looking for to participate in access to telehealth services.

We are thrilled to announce that as of today, we have mapped over 200 TAPs in all around the country, from New York State, to the Marshall Islands!  But we know there are more out there!  We are striving to map 250 or more of these by the time Digital Inclusion Week rolls out on October 6th and we need your help to accomplish this.  If your organization or any organization you know of is providing a TAP in your community, please fill out this form to get it on the map.  TAPs continue to be self-enrolling so you can do this at any time.

We appreciate your participation in this journey and look forward to celebrating this milestone with you all in October. If you have questions about the NRTRC find telehealth map, feel free to reference this user guide, or reach out to us directly.

Arvig turns 75: from phones to fiber

Finance & Commerce has a nice article about Arvig for their 75th anniversary…

That makes it even more impressive that Arvig, a Perham, Minnesota-based telecommunications company with roots dating to 1950, is not only surviving as it celebrates its 75th anniversary, it’s thriving.

It’s interesting to hear about the layers of technology the company has gone through and catch up with most recent updates…

In recent years, Arvig has helped spearhead efforts to expand high-speed fiber internet access across rural Minnesota through programs such as the federally funded Alternative Connect America Model (A-CAM) and the state-funded Border to Border Broadband Program. This past year, the company announced it would use a $708,790 grant from the state on a fiber network expansion project to bring gigabit internet speeds to 113 structures in Wakefield and Luxemburg townships, south of Cold Spring.

“It’s becoming increasingly important for homes and businesses in rural Minnesota to have access to fiber with gig-level speeds,” said David Arvig, the company’s vice president and COO. “This grant funding helps Arvig close the connectivity gap and put underserved areas on a level playing field.”

OBD Updates Sep 8: BEAD final draft is in and comment period is closed

From the Office of Broadband Development…

Office of Broadband Development BEAD Updates

  • Minnesota’s BEAD Final Proposal Submitted to NTIA
  • BEAD Public Comment Period Summary
  • BEAD Infrastructure Investment and Technology Distribution

Minnesota’s BEAD Final Proposal Submitted to NTIA

As required by the Broadband, Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program, the Minnesota Office of Broadband Development (OBD) submitted its Final Draft Proposal to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), including the Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Department of Commerce, on September 4, 2025. NTIA has committed to review and approve plans in 90 days.

OBD will continue to revise and update the documents as required by NTIA and necessary to ensure all BEAD eligible locations are served as defined by the policy notice.

The Final Proposal and its attachments are available now on the OBD BEAD webpage.

BEAD Public Comment Period Summary

The public comment period for Minnesota’s Draft Final Proposal was open from August 28 to September 3, 2025, in accordance with NTIA guidance.

OBD welcomed public input through multiple channels – online, by phone, and via email, in addition to hosting five in-person listening sessions across the state, along with a virtual event for Tribal partners.

OBD extends its sincere appreciation to everyone who submitted comments or joined the in-person sessions held in Hutchinson, Owatonna, Bemidji, Fergus Falls, and Duluth. Your ongoing support and engagement are truly valued.

A special thank you to the host sites for their collaboration: Southwest Initiative Foundation, Southern Minnesota Initiative Foundation, Northwest Minnesota Foundation, West Central Initiative Foundation, and Northspan.

BEAD Infrastructure Investment and Technology Distribution

Deployment and Technology-Type Results
As published in Minnesota’s Draft Final Proposal submitted to NTIA on September 4, 2025:

  • Infrastructure/Broadband Deployment: $391,611,699 (an increase from the previously reported posted draft of $381 million)
  • Technology Breakdown by Percentage and Location Count:
    • Fiber/Coax: 57.7% – 43,339 location
    • Satellite: 24.8% – 18,651 locations
    • Fixed Wireless: 17.5% – 13,031 locations

Minnesota’s Draft of the Final Proposal and attachments can be found on the OBD BEAD webpage.