North Star and Pequaywan Townships are excited for BEAD funding for broadband (St Louis County)

The folks in St Louis County are clearly excited about the promise of broadband. They are getting a lot of local press. WDIO reports

An early Christmas present for North Star and Pequaywan Townships. Leaders found out they are getting federal funding to pay for broadband for about 550 locations.

Minnesota’s broadband funding proposal has been approved, and that means Mediacom will get money to bring a fiber optic network to the rural townships.

This has been in the works since 2009. Janet Keough was a township supervisor then. “I teared up when I heard the news,” she shared. “I was jumping up and down. I can’t believe it’s actually happening.”

Rod Saline is a current supervisor, and told us everyone is very excited. “We got a lot of help from other townships that have gotten broadband.”

Mediacom will be putting in about 38 miles of cable. Saline told us they have already been doing some site prep work. So the hope is that they’ll break ground this spring.

More on the Broadband in rural St. Louis County

I wrote about the good news in St Louis County earlier, but always nice to see more mainstream media sources pick up on it. Fox21 also tells the story, with video…

After more than a decade of planning and persistence, broadband internet is finally expanding to four of St. Louis County’s most rural townships.

In an era where internet access is often taken for granted, many families in rural parts of the county have long struggled with limited or unreliable service. Leaders say geography and distance have made it difficult for providers to justify the costly infrastructure needed to reach these areas.

That reality is now changing.

“I started crying. I couldn’t believe it after all this time,” said retired township supervisor Jan Keough, who has been involved in the effort since 2009.

“The main lesson is, persistence pays off,” Keough said.

Another key figure in the project is Rod Saline, a supervisor for North Star Township, one of the four townships slated to receive broadband service. Saline said approximately 548 residents will now have the opportunity to connect.

He says the benefits go far beyond faster internet speeds.

Rural St Louis County is getting better broadband through BEAD and Mediacom

News from North Star Township and Pequaywan Township in St Louis County..

Minnesota broadband grants, funded by the Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program in the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), will include funding to Mediacom to bring a fiber optic network to rural North Star and Pequaywan Townships and adjacent areas. On December 22, 2025, Senator Klobuchar announced that the Minnesota grant program had been approved by NTIA. “I’m thrilled to announce that Minnesota’s broadband funding
proposal has been approved, which will bring fast, affordable, reliable internet to families in every
corner of our state, especially in North Star, Pequaywan, and other rural townships,” said Senator
Klobuchar. “This funding is available thanks to my bipartisan legislation that I fought to pass so that
Minnesota families—regardless of their ZIP code—have access to high-speed internet.”
“For more than a decade, the residents and leaders of North Star and Pequaywan Townships have done everything right—planning, organizing, and advocating for better connectivity—and this investment finally delivers on that work,” said Bree Maki, Executive Director of The Office of
Broadband Development “BEAD funding is designed to reach exactly these kinds of rural communities
that the market alone has not served, and this project will help to ensure families, businesses, and first responders in St. Louis County have access to reliable, affordable, high-speed internet that meets today’s needs and tomorrow’s opportunities.”
North Star and Pequaywan Townships along with a handful of other rural townships in St Louis County,
have been working to bring reliable, affordable and fast internet access to their communities since 2009. Townships have lobbied providers, conducted feasibility studies, satisfaction surveys, and outreach. More populous townships have attracted broadband providers, but the more rural and less populous townships including North Star and Pequaywan have had no success until now.
In St. Louis County, Mediacom, in recent years, began building a fiber optic network in Lakewood Township and later, into Normanna Township, bringing their network to the North Star Township border. This gave township officials new incentive to convince Mediacom to extend north. Mediacom successfully applied for BEAD funding for North Star and Pequaywan Townships and adjacent areas.
“We are thrilled to have recently been awarded grants through the state’s BEAD program,” said Christopher Lord, Mediacom’s Senior Director of Government Partnership Opportunities. “We have long enjoyed a highly collaborative relationship with the amazing team at Minnesota DEED, and NorthStar Township, Pequaywan Township, Ault Township, and Unorganized Township 54-13, have been great local partners throughout this process. We look forward to delivering fiber-to-the-home broadband services to these communities and seeing the great impact these services will have on the residents and businesses in these townships.”

Funding from the BEAD program will also greatly expand broadband availability across in St Louis County. Commissioner Paul McDonald noted “This is fantastic news for these townships who have been working diligently for over 15 years to get quality broadband”.
Officials from North Star and Pequaywan Townships have been working to prepare their property owners to get the Mediacom fiber optic service through hosting town hall meetings and newsletters.
Rod Saline, North Star Supervisor, noted “Our citizens, small businesses, and especially our Fire/EMS Department, are looking forward to having access to reliable, affordable, and really fast broadband!”
Doug Nelson, Pequaywan Supervisor, added “This announcement from Sen Klobuchar is welcome news for all the residents in our area as this broadband service is greatly needed.”
Information on the Minnesota BEAD broadband program can be found at:
https://mn.gov/deed/programs-services/broadband/bead/

Happy New Year! 2026 MN County Profiles – how is your county doing?

The MN Broadband County Profiles were posted in late December. Click on your county below to learn more about your community or see how your county compares to others for access to 100 Mbps down and 20 up, the 2026 MN State speed goal. After a year of waiting and at the same time the profiles were posted, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) approved Minnesota’s BEAD proposal for federal funding. The profiles and the proposal are tools you can use to highlight broadband needs and/or successes in your community or to reach out to local leaders.

Here’s hoping better broadband for us all in 2026!

Senators introduce the SUCCESS for BEAD Act authorizing BEAD funds for broadband enhancement

Senator Wicker reports

U.S. Senator Roger Wicker, R-Miss. and Senator Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.V. introduced the Supporting U.S. Critical Connectivity and Economic Strategy and Security for BEAD Act (SUCCESS for BEAD Act). This legislation would authorize states to use remaining funds from the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program for projects that support state’s deployment plan by enhancing public safety, improving network resiliency, strengthening national security, and developing a qualified workforce for emerging technologies. The overarching goal is to advance digital infrastructure readiness and sustain U.S. leadership in innovation by providing clear guardrails for the eligible uses of the remaining funds.

Minnesota receives federal approval on their final BEAD (Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment) proposal

Broadband Breakfast reports

Five more states have received federal approval on their final spending plans under the $42.45 billion Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment program.

Idaho, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, and Utah now have the green light from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, according to the agency’s BEAD progress tracker. That brings the total to 34 states and three territories.

Here’s what they said about Minnesota…

Idaho and Minnesota’s plans saw few changes. The other plans approved by NTIA have for the most part also not significantly changed from public drafts.

Just Thursday (Dec 18), the Office of Broadband Development told the Task Force that the approval was coming soon.

I started the MN Broadband County Profiles after that meeting – hoping the status wouldn’t change or at least wouldn’t change until after I posted. I try to write reports for 87 counties over 3-4 days. I’m halfway through that list and hope to post Monday or Tuesday. ANd really, the approval doesn’t change much to the reports.

How many locations in your county get BEAD funding in the latest proposal? And for what level of broadband?

I’ll start with an important caveat; the Minnesota BEAD Final Proposal has not yet been approved. Subsequently, the information based on that latest proposal is subject to change. The Office of Broadband Development (OBD) gave a nice overview of what’s happening with BEAD and more yesterday. It sounds as if approval is expected any day now.

OBD has posted a spreadsheet of locations slated to get BEAD funding by county and by provider/mode of broadband. Below is the highest-level look at how many locations will be served in each county. (Or you can visit the OBD site for more information or check out the spreadsheet I have downloaded on Dec 18, 2025.) I was tempted to rank the counties but because not all options are the same, it’s not a apples-to-apples comparison. When you look at your own county, you want to see what types of broadband and what companies are proposed to serve your area.

Locations         Grand Total County
   
                             1,255 Aitkin
                             1,437 Anoka
                             1,343 Becker
                                  361 Benton
                                     24 Big Stone
                                  782 Blue Earth
                                  943 Brown
                             3,339 Carlton
                                  460 Carver
                                     91 Cass
                                        4 Chippewa
                             1,278 Chisago
                                     30 Clay
                                        8 Clearwater
                                     83 Cook
                                  649 Cottonwood
                             1,174 Crow Wing
                                  928 Dakota
                                     94 Dodge
                                  484 Douglas
                                        7 Faribault
                                  765 Fillmore
                             2,302 Goodhue
                                        3 Grant
                             1,329 Hennepin
                             1,549 Houston
                                     74 Hubbard
                             1,886 Isanti
                                  266 Itasca
                                  197 Jackson
                             1,026 Kanabec
                                  617 Kandiyohi
                                     14 Kittson
                             1,689 Koochiching
                                        1 Lac qui Parle
                             1,360 Lake
                                  329 Lake of the Woods
                             1,129 Le Sueur
                                        2 Lincoln
                                     22 Lyon
                                  110 Mahnomen
                                     10 Marshall
                                     50 Martin
                                  625 McLeod
                                  554 Meeker
                                  453 Mille Lacs
                                  687 Morrison
                                  165 Mower
                                     13 Murray
                             1,130 Nicollet
                                     65 Nobles
                             2,329 Olmsted
                                  933 Otter Tail
                                     86 Pennington
                             2,587 Pine
                                     63 Pipestone
                                     37 Polk
                                     30 Pope
                                  323 Ramsey
                                  373 Redwood
                                  217 Renville
                             2,188 Rice
                                     48 Rock
                                     92 Roseau
                             1,866 Scott
                             1,601 Sherburne
                                  954 Sibley
                          11,678 St. Louis
                             1,651 Stearns
                                  178 Steele
                                        6 Stevens
                                     15 Swift
                             2,378 Todd
                             2,986 Wabasha
                                     19 Wadena
                                     17 Waseca
                             2,390 Washington
                                     11 Watonwan
                             1,463 Winona
                             5,024 Wright
                          74,739 Grand Total

 

Iron Range Resources & Rehabilitation (IRRR) invests $913,000 in Paul Bunyan Communications

The Iron Range Resources & Rehabilitation (IRRR) reports

At today’s Iron Range Resources & Rehabilitation (IRRR) Board meeting, approximately $18.8 million in projects were reviewed that expand an existing business, advance mining operations, support higher education offerings, extend broadband service, increase the housing inventory and modernize infrastructure and public facilities.

$913,000 went to broadband grants…

  • Paul Bunyan Rural Telephone Cooperative: $600,000 to construct fiber optics to serve 128 unserved and 18 underserved households in Field, Alango and Sturgeon Townships in rural Saint Louis County. This is Phase 2 of a larger fiber optic expansion initiative.
  • Paul Bunyan Rural Telephone Cooperative: $313,000 to construct fiber optics to serve 146 unserved and underserved households in the communities of Cook, Marble, Keewatin and northeast Hibbing in Saint Louis County and rural Itasca County.

Willmar Connect bids to build open-access broadband are coming in

The West Central Tribune reports

The West Central Tribune reports

The city of Willmar announced Wednesday that it opened bids for phase one of the city-wide, open-access broadband project known as Willmar Connect, with the apparent low bid coming in under the estimated costs for phase one construction.

Phase one involves constructing the network operations center and installing fiber throughout all the neighborhoods west of First Street South, between U.S. Highway 12 and 19th Avenue. Phase one may expand into areas within phase two of the project if there are clusters of residents and businesses who have completed the advance sign-up for the service.

The infrastructure will be owned by the city and the network will be managed by Hometown Fiber. Multiple internet service providers can contract with the city to offer services on the network for a fee, which will be used to pay the principal and interest on the bonds that will fund the construction of the project. Eventually, those fees are expected to generate revenue for the city, as well.

If approved by the Willmar City Council on Dec. 15, construction of phase one of the Willmar Connect project will begin in early 2026. The project has been a long time coming since it was first considered in 2022, with thorough vetting and research completed by the city to ensure its success.

BEAD Rollout: Next Steps & Insights: Meeting notes and video

Here’s a recording from the webinar yesterday from NRTC…

A description of the session from the hosts…

Join us for an in-depth session with state broadband office directors who will demystify the critical steps leading up to executing BEAD grant agreements, and how NEPA permitting and pre-award spending authorization fits into their state’s timeline. This webinar will provide a clear roadmap of the chain of events and required documentation to ensure compliance and timely execution.

Featured Panel:

  • Teresa Ferguson – (moderator) Senior Director, Broadband & Infrastructure Funding – NRTC
  • Dr. Tamara Holmes – PHD, Broadband Director – DHCD Office of Broadband, Virginia Department of Housing & Community Development
  • BJ Tanksley – Director, Office of Broadband Deployment – Missouri Department of Economic Development
  • Bree Maki – Executive Director – Minnesota Office of Broadband Deployment, MN Dept. of Employment & Economic Development

And some notes I took, mostly when Bree Maki spoke about the situation in Minnesota…

Guidance to awardees

  • Letter of credit
  • Supply Chain Rick Mgmt plan
  • Cybersecurity Risk Mgmt plan
  • Final BSL & CAI Count
  • PM Stamp for Network Design
  • Finalize Budget

For MN

  • Work on narrative
  • Work on budget
  • Don’t start anything
  • Wait on guidance – this will be different that former MN awards
  • Will have a meeting soon

Can affordable internet increase employment opportunities for low-income workers?

I can only access the abstract for this report – but sometimes the abstract can get you the info you need. (Not that I wouldn’t like to read the full article.) The research article (Can affordable internet increase employment opportunities for low-income workers? Evidence from the Affordable Connectivity Program) looks at the impact of the ACP…

This study investigates the labor market impacts of the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), the largest U.S. initiative to date aimed at reducing income-based disparities in Internet access. We assess ACP’s effects on labor force participation and employment and test the hypothesis that a key impact mechanism is the expansion of remote work opportunities for program recipients. Using large-scale national datasets, we also explore heterogeneity in program effects by gender, occupation, and connection type (fixed vs. mobile).

They found that…

The results provide robust evidence that ACP participation is associated with improved labor market outcomes, particularly among women and individuals with high-speed residential connections. These gains appear to be driven, in part, by increases in both the incidence and intensity of remote work. The findings suggest that a narrow focus on first-level adoption outcomes underestimates the broader socioeconomic benefits of affordable broadband initiatives. Theoretically, they indicate that the so-called Matthew effect – whereby digitization amplifies existing social inequalities – is not inevitable and can be partially offset by well-designed, targeted policy interventions.

EVENT DEC 2: NRTC BEAD Rollout: Next Steps & Insights Webinar

The NRTC is holding a webinar tomorrow that comes highly recommended. Bree Maki, director of the MN Office of Broadband Development is on the panel…

BEAD Rollout: Next Steps & Insights

Join us for an in-depth session with state broadband office directors who will demystify the critical steps leading up to executing BEAD grant agreements, and how NEPA permitting and pre-award spending authorization fits into their state’s timeline. This webinar will provide a clear roadmap of the chain of events and required documentation to ensure compliance and timely execution. Our Host and Panelists Teresa Ferguson – Senior Director, Broadband and Infrastructure Funding – NRTC Dr. Tamara Holmes – PHD, Broadband Director – DHCD Office of Broadband, Virginia Department of Housing & Community Development BJ Tanksley – Director, Office of Broadband Development – Missouri Department of Economic Development Bree Maki – Executive Director – Minnesota Office of Broadband Deployment, MN Dept. of Employment & Economic Development We hope to see you there!

House Commerce Democrats tell Administration to implement BEAD Congress intended

The Benton Institute of Broadband & Society reports on a letter from the House Commerce Committee

We write to express our significant concerns with the National Telecommunications and Information Administration’s (NTIA) implementation of the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program under the Trump Administration. It is evident that NTIA’s implementation of the BEAD Program violates the letter of the [Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act] and ignores the intent of Congress, jeopardizing the bipartisan goal of delivering fast, reliable, and affordable internet to everyone in America. We also remind you that any executive order issued by the President cannot override existing laws passed by Congress. This willful departure from the [Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act’s] requirement to consider each technology’s performance and scalability raises serious concerns for multiple reasons. First, neither NTIA nor any Administration official has the authority to ignore the plain language of the statute, let alone Congressional intent. Second, the Trump BEAD Program now resembles the failed 2020 Trump Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) program. Third, neither the law nor a directive from the President through an executive order empowers NTIA to impound tens of billions of dollars that Congress authorized and appropriated in full to achieve specific policy outcomes, including universal connectivity, affordability, scalable infrastructure, and broadband adoption. We request that you respond to the following questions in writing by December 12, 2025:

1. Secretary Lutnick promised speed and efficiency in approving states and territories’ final proposals and promised BEAD program funding would be released by the end of 2025. a. Will all states and territories have access to all of their funding by the end of this year?

2. It has been reported that NTIA is using a cost model to determine cost estimates for buildout within each state.

a. Please explain in detail the date and source of data for these models.

b. What exactly is being modeled by this data? For example, is it modeling cost estimates for greenfield fiber builds?

c. How are these data models being applied to each state and territory’s final proposals? Is there a percentage of total cost against which NTIA is benchmarking a state and territory’s final results? Does the benchmark vary by state? Do the benchmarks take into account variations within each state and, if so, how?

d. Cost models are generally used to make predictions about outcomes when actual cost data does not exist. Why does NTIA believe that these cost models are better indicators of costs than the actual competitive bidding processes already conducted by every state?

3. NTIA has overruled states and territories on a granular level by rejecting individual grant awards, forcing states to rebid projects at unreasonably cheap cost thresholds. Please provide a list of all states and territories from which NTIA has rejected project awards or otherwise forced to rebid locations, and for each state or territory provide:

a. A list of all BEAD projects or awards NTIA required to be rebid and the total number of broadband serviceable locations (BSL) in each such award.

b. Each award winner rejected by NTIA, the technology proposed, and cost per passing for each BSL in the rejected award.

c. Each rebid project award winner, the technology proposed, and cost per passing for each BSL in the rebid award.

4. LEO satellite providers face challenges to deliver high-quality connections envisioned by BEAD due to capacity limits, the need for user-end obstructions to be clear, and the potential for performance degradation as more users join a network. Based on final proposals submitted to NTIA to date, reports suggest that more than 750,000 BEAD awards will fund LEO capacity reservation subgrants.

a. For provisionally selected LEO priority broadband projects, what evidence did you require states and territories to show that LEO service can easily scale speeds over time to meet the evolving connectivity needs of households and businesses and support the deployment of 5G, successor wireless technologies, and other advanced services as required by the statute?

b. What, if any, obligation does a LEO provider receiving BEAD funds have to sign up customers for the BEAD funded service? Is the LEO provider entitled to its full BEAD award, even if no BEAD households subscribe?

c. How will NTIA and the state or territory monitor, measure, and ensure LEO subrecipients’ compliance with the BEAD capacity reservation requirements?

d. BEAD subgrants for terrestrial networks will support infrastructure that will be capable of providing high-speed internet service to households in the project area long after those grants are closed out. How will the BEAD capacity reservation grants to LEO providers ensure that households in LEO project areas receive high-speed internet service after those grants close out?

5. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law specifically authorizes states and territories, after achieving full deployment, to spend remaining funds on other statutorily authorized priorities.

a. When will NTIA provide guidance on the use of non-deployment funds?

b. Has NTIA authorized any state or territory to conduct workforce activities in connection with deployment projects? Given the expected demand for a skilled workforce, has NTIA authorized the use of non-deployment funds to develop a skilled workforce?

c. Is NTIA considering clawing back non-deployment funding, or otherwise withholding allocated funds from states and territories? d. Under what legal authority is NTIA or the Department of Commerce granted the ability to impound BEAD funds, including non-deployment funds?

6. NTIA generally includes special award conditions in its grants, which can cover specific project requirements, financial management, reporting, and other terms that go beyond the general grant conditions.

a. Is NTIA considering any revisions or additions to the special award conditions attached to the state and territory grants in connection with approving final proposals? If so, what are those revisions?

b. Please provide a copy of the final proposal’s general terms and conditions and special award conditions, highlighting any new or revised conditions.

7. The Federal Communications Commission has disclaimed its authority to regulate broadband service, and Congress made clear that nothing in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law authorizes NTIA to regulate broadband rates. The courts have specifically held that states can regulate the provision of broadband service absent federal authority to do so. You recently stated that, “any state receiving BEAD funds must exempt BEAD providers throughout their state footprint, from broadband-specific economic regulations, such as price regulation and net neutrality.”

a. What is the source of NTIA’s authority to effectively preempt the application of state laws to a provider’s entire state footprint, including locations that are not a part of the BEAD program?

8. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law specifically requires states and territories to determine the low-cost broadband service definition. Yet, the Policy Notice specifically prohibits states and territories from setting the low-cost service option and instead requires the state or territory to accept any definition established by the subgrantee.

a. How is the Policy Notice’s requirement for subgrantees to determine the low-cost service option consistent with the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law?

b. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law requires that, upon final proposal approval, you must publish the state’s low-cost broadband definition. It also requires that you establish a website allowing customers to determine whether they are eligible for the BEAD low-cost offer. Will you be making that information available and, if so, when?

Benton looks at WISPs’ place in BEAD

The Benton Institute for Broadband & Society took a look at whether WISPs are sufficient for BEAD funds

Sue Marek, Editorial Director of Ookla, has been looking at the speed performance of a variety of broadband technologies over time, including Low-Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite providers. This week, Marek analyzed the performance of eight of the largest U.S. wireless internet service providers (WISPs) over several quarters from Q1 2021 until Q2 2025.

All eight WISPs studied by Ookla improved their speed offerings over the observed period. But are their current speed offerings enough for BEAD?

They take a look at 8 providers representing a variety of WISP setups. You can check out the article for specifics; I’ll just share the results…

Using Speedtest data collected in Q2 2025, Ookla compared the median download and upload speeds of the eight WISPs to determine what percentage of their Speedtest users were receiving the Federal Communications Commission’s minimum standard for fixed broadband speeds (100/20 Mbps).

Ookla found that Starry is able to provide the FCC’s minimum standard for broadband to the highest percentage of users at 66.9 percent. Resound Networks, the second-highest of the eight WISPs and one of those receiving BEAD funds, still only comes in at 41.5 percent of Speedtest users achieving wireless broadband speeds of 100/20 Mbps. Wisper and Nextlink, the other two WISPs to receive BEAD funding, have users achieving 100/20 Mbps speeds at rates of 26.0 percent and 24.4 percent, respectively. The rest of the WISPs have lower percentages, with Rise Broadband being the lowest at just 6.7 percent.

So, according to Ookla’s analysis, most broadband consumers who will receive BEAD-funded fixed-wireless internet access service will not achieve the minimum speeds of 100/20 Mbps.

Of the providers mentioned only one is poised to get BEAD funding in Minnesota:

NextLink BEAD awards: Minnesota: $1,541,073 for 2,401 locations

Did your county get any of the $20 million in MN Line Extension grants in the last three rounds?

Congrats to the counties who have done well getting Line Extension grants. Congrats to the counties who don’t need them. For counties who need help getting better broadband and haven’t been getting Line Extension funding, here’s more information.

The numbers for Line Extension awards by county are now available for the three rounds that have been awarded. For those you don’t wake up Monday looking for the latest updates on MN broadband, I’ll start with a little reminder. Line Extension is a broadband support managed by the Office of Broadband Development. Info on how it works from the Office of Broadband Development

Residential and business locations that are unserved (lack access to speeds of at least 25Mbps download and 3Mbps upload) can apply by entering their information into the Line Extension Connection portal*. This will initiate their interest in receiving broadband internet service and make their location available for consideration. By submitting your address into the Line Extension Connection portal, internet service providers will have the opportunity to review the location and submit a bid based on the cost to bring service to your location. The Office of Broadband Development will evaluate these bids and required provider documentation and make awards to the providers whose bid proposes the lowest cost to the State for extension of the service.

It helps fill in holes in a community where there’s one household that two miles off the road or maybe the six houses on the “other side” of the lake. In light of promise of federal BEAD funding, Line Extension has been the only focus of state funding for broadband this year.

The Office of Broadband has recently shared updated number of how much each county has received. (You can download the spreadsheet for more information.)

Over three rounds, $20,314,363.07 has been awarded. Below are the grant total awards in order of the amount received by county. A few quick notes: not every county has received awards, because not every county needs the help. (At least 10 MN counties have more than 99 percent broadband coverage, as of last year.) Even in this list, the need is variable. You can learn more about the next round of Line Extension grants from the Office of Broadband Development.

County Grand Total (Dollars)
Becker 2850601.5
St. Louis 2619282.61
Crow Wing 2455450.17
Todd 1943261.7
Wabasha 1182818
Morrison 946640
Pine 735691.19
Mahnomen 722588.48
Aitkin 689620.88
Washington 680789
Wright 603805.31
Winona 472220
Scott 410871.52
Otter Tail 384714.84
Kandiyohi 378273.28
Meeker 318997.39
Dakota 283639.8
Hubbard 265000.94
Anoka 246223
Jackson 200561.6
Clay 200522.72
Hennepin 198769
Stearns 144480
Le Sueur 127288.13
Itasca 126357.54
Cass 97449
Rice 85860.66
Carlton 75958.79
Lyon 75474.94
Yellow Medicine 75474.94
Dodge 73944.5
Renville 72395.54
Mower 71966.49
Carver 65664
Swift 59800
Goodhue 59393.27
Douglas 46361.52
Redwood 41853.6
Lake of the Woods 41427
Big Stone 35000
Lac qui Parle 29000
Chippewa 25500
Martin 23220.72
Sherburne 22482.03
Stevens 20000
Kittson 16375.07
Cottonwood 11292.4