Wright County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 65 of 87

Rank: 65
Code: Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Wright County: still stalled at 80 percent coverage

Wright County ranks 65 (down 16 points) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 75.43 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 2708 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $25.1 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Wright 72.4 51,720 75.43 2708 25,184,400

Last year’s report from the Institute for Local Self Reliance looked at broadband in Monticello and Buffalo in Wright County.

In December 2022, the Office of Broadband Development (OBD) awarded Border to Border grants that will benefit Wright County

  • Spectrum received $2.8 million to cover 626 households and 12 businesses
  • Meeker Cooperative received $104,337 to serve 86 unserved rural households, 16 underserved rural households and 5 farms in central Minnesota.
  • Spectrum received $1 million to provide reliable high speed internet to 387 homes and 25 business in portions of the City of St. Michaels and the Township of Rockford in Wright County

Wright County is a code yellow community in part because their percentage of access has been stalled and the reporting is inconsistent.

In 2023, OBD awarded Border to Border grants that will benefit Wright County

  • Arvig received $879,747 to build to 256 households, farms and businesses throughout parts of rural Wright County
  • Frontier received $829,800 to provide 5 Gbps symmetrical service to 316 households, businesses, community anchor institutions and farms
  • Meeker Cooperative received $1.2 million to serve 525 households, businesses and the French Lake Township Hall in central Minnesota

Also, Meeker and Midco have applications in to the latest (still open) round of Border to Border funding; results should be available in early 2024.

Wright County has a lot going on for broadband right now. That will help them increase coverage and prepare them to take advantage of federal (BEAD) funds. The retain their yellow ranking.

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 75.43 78.02 86.15 82.51 81.02 80.61 29.26
25/3 (2022 goal) 80.54 83.58 92.71 89.69 91.07 87.89 81.17

Grant:

  • 2023: Frontier – Wright County – City of Clearwater – GRANT $829,800
  • 2023 Arvig (Tekstar) – Wright County Area Fiber Extension – GRANT $879,747
  • 2023: Meeker Coop Light & Power – French Lake Township – Wright County – GRANT $1,270,132
  • 2022: Spectrum Mid-America, LLC managed by Charter Communications Inc., $2,832,155.00 (Learn more)
  • 2022: Meeker Cooperative Light & Power Association (Vibrant Broadband) – Collinwood Lake – GRANT $104,337
  • Spectrum Mid-America, LLC managed by Charter Communications Inc. – Wright County Project 4 – GRANT $1,008,146
  • 2017 – Midco (Midcontinent Communications) – Annandale East – GRANT $537,050
  • Meeker Coop. Light & Power Assoc. (Vibrant Broadband) – Lake Louisa/Lake Marie Project – GRANT $297,940

Find more article on Wright County https://blandinonbroadband.org/?s=%22wright+county%22&submit=Search

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Yellow Medicine County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking 79 of 87

Rank: 79
Code: Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Yellow Medicine County: improvement but too slow

Yellow Medicine County ranks 79 (down one point) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They 61.09 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 1695 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $15.7 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Yellow Medicine 5.7 4,354 61.09 1695 15763500

Yellow Medicine has steadily increased broadband coverage, unfortunately they are far away from the goal. They will need a concerted effort to get closer to the goal. In 2023, Interstate Telecom was awarded almost $5 million in Border to Border funding to construct a 100% fiber-to-the-premises broadband network with speeds capable of up to 1 Gbps download and 1 Gbps upload. The project will serve 483 locations in Yellow Medicine County. ITC has another application in to the latest (still open) round of Border to Border funding; results should be available in early 2024.

They may also be concerned about being in a potentially precarious position because looking at access in the County using the FCC National Map there is a big discrepancy between wireline access (56.69 percent coverage) and wireline with fixed wireless (99.5 percent). Minnesota doesn’t currently take fixed wireless into consideration when defining areas eligible for grants; the federal government does include access to fixed wireless. That could make a big difference to who is eligible for BEAD funding.

It seems as if Yellow Medicine has an engaged provider that might be able to help them reach the broadband goal with state or upcoming federal (BEAD) funding.

2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 61.09 58.17 48.81 37.71 38.86 37.72 19.28
25/3 (2022 goal) 68.63 68.7 64.65 59.83 68.31 46.91 20.42

Grants:

  • 2023: Interstate Telecommunications Company – Yellow Medicine County West Fiber-To-The-Home Project – GRANT $4,988,174
  • 2016 – MIDCO CANBY TO MARSHALL MIDDLE MILE AND LAST MILE – GRANT AMOUNT: $623,000
  • 2015 – MVTV Wireless Middle Mile – Grant award: $808,080

Find more articles on broadband in Yellow Medicine County (http://tinyurl.com/zhsj3ke)

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Winona County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 39 of 87

Rank: 39
Code: Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Winona County: pretty good access and needs a push for ubiquitous

Winona County ranks 39 (down 9 points) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 85.33 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 2525 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $23 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Winona 26.8 17,214 85.33 2525 2343600

Winona County has been focused on broadband for years; they were part of the Minnesota Intelligent Rural Communities (MIRC) starting in 2010, a Blandin-led and federal (ARRA) funded broadband adoption project.

In 2022, HBC announced 10 Gig residential service in the City of Winona. Two months later they announced expansion in rural parts of the county.

In December 2022, Ace Telephone received $3.2 million to serve 486 underserved households, 34 underserved businesses, and 88 underserved farms in Winona County.  Broadband-leaning conversations were happening in Winona in 2023, the was an active Digital Connection Committee that shared their views with the Digital Equity Report that the Office of Broadband Development (OBD) submitted to the NTIA as part of the federal funding (BEAD) application and OBD hosted a discussion about the Equity Plan in draft form.

Winona County residents were awarded 35 line extension funding requests, which means state funding will subsidize last mile broadband extension to their homes.

Winona has been hovering around 85 percent coverage for a long time but recent conversations and grants in the area should help prepare Winona to take advantage of federal (BEAD) funding so they retain their yellow ranking.

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 85.33 85.62 87.59 87.47 86.43 86.31 81.17
25/3 (2022 goal) 87.55 88.88 91.65 88.09 86.58 86.48 92.13

Grants:

  • 2022: Ace Telephone Association, Inc., $3,218,201.00
  • 2016 – WINONA COUNTY PICKWICK AREA – GRANT: $416,640
  • 2015 – Hiawatha Broadband Communications – Winona County Whitewater Area – Grant Award: $247,000
  • 2015 – Winona County Hiawatha Broadband Communications – Cedar Valley Area – Grant award: $314,450
  • 2019: AcenTek – Rural Houston Exchange FTTH – GRANT $2,895,318
  • MN State Grant awarded in 2021: AcenTek – Rural Peterson Exchange FTTH – GRANT $1,492,096 This last mile project will serve 214 unserved households, 18 unserved businesses, 88 unserved farms, and two unserved community anchor institutions as well as 47 underserved households and five underserved businesses in areas of Fillmore and Winona counties.

Find more articles on broadband in Winona County (http://tinyurl.com/hqsckxg)

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Wilkin County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 49 of 87

Rank: 49
Code:  Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Wilkin County: going the wrong way – need to focus

Wilkin County ranks 49 for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 81.97 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 464 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $4.3 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Wilkin 3.4 2,574 81.97 464 4315200

They have hovered around 77 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up since 2020 but recent grants may change that.

In December 2022, Red River Rural Telephone received $2.1 million to upgrade approximately 315 underserved locations near the Breckenridge, Doran and Foxhome area of Wilkin County. In 2023, Red River got two more grants: one for $2.2 million to  serve 128 locations in North Wilkin County, located near Breckenridge and Foxhome and $2 million to upgrade approximately 86 unserved locations near the rural Doran and Campbell areas of Wilkin County.

The recent grants help Wilkin County shift from red to yellow ranking.

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 81.97 77.48 77.06 77.06 80.84 82.08 80.84
25/3 (2022 goal) 87.33 83.56 83.01 83.1 88.01 86.53 80.84

Grant:

  • 2023: Red River Rural Telephone Association – Rural Campbell – GRANT $2,035,500
  • 2023 Red River Rural Telephone Association – North Wilkin County – GRANT $2,227,363
  • 2022 Red River Rural Telephone Association, $2,157,663
  • 2017 – Advantenon – Rural Grant, Stevens and Wilkin Counties – Grant $316,554

Find more articles on broadband in Wilkin County (http://tinyurl.com/zh64v29)

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Traverse County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 52 of 87

Rank: 52
Code: Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Traverse County: a nice increase this year

Traverse County ranks 52 (up 18 points) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 80 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 326 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $3 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Traverse 2.8 1,630 80 326 3031800

Broadband in Traverse County has been increasing at a good clip in the last two years. I don’t hear much about what’s happening there but something is. In December 2022, Runestone Telephone received $2.5 million to expand broadband in Grant, Stevens, and Traverse Counties.

They retain their yellow ranking.

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 80 67.5 50.97 50.97 49.39 45.62 45.37
25/3 (2022 goal) 80.55 71.12 67.87 67.25 67.25 66.14 45.37

Grants

  • 2022: Runestone Telephone Association – Herman-Dumont – GRANT $2,493,637

Checklist:

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Steele County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 32 of 87

Rank: 32
Code: Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Steele County: Decent coverage but not much community engagement

Steele County ranks 32 (down six points) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 87.59 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 1661households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $15.4 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Steele 31.0 13,384 87.59 1661 15447300

Steele County has not worked with the Blandin Foundation. They have never received a MN Border to Border grant. They were home to a local provider (Jaguar), which was acquired two years ago.

LTD Broadband was awarded the opportunity to submit a long form to get federal funding (RDOF) to deploy FTTH throughout much of Minnesota, including parts of Steele County. The potential RDOF award meant Le Sueur’s state grant application was no longer eligible for other funding. In 2023, the federal funders disqualifies LTD Broadband from receiving funding and the MN Public Utilities Commission is looking at revoking the ETC designation they needed to qualify for funding.  Steele mourns the lost opportunity of being eligible for funding during the LTD Broadband saga.

In December 2022, Spectrum received $158,052 to cover 56 households in Steele County. Steele County retains a yellow ranking but with some concern given the stagnant ranking since 2019.

 

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 87.59 88.28 88.95 87.05 86.86 56.16 95.64
25/3 (2022 goal) 88.38 89 93.26 88.29 88.44 87.79 99.86

Grant

  • Spectrum Mid-America, LLC managed by Charter Communications Inc., $158,052.00

Find more articles on broadband in Steele County (http://tinyurl.com/zd4qhbu)

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

St Louis County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 68 of 87

Rank: 68
Code: Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

St Louis County: Gearing up for a big push?

St Louis County ranks 68 (down 11 points) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 73.14 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 23734 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $227 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
St. Louis 13.1 88,360 73.14 23734 22726200

They have hovered from 75-79 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. There was a slight dip in access last year but may simply reflect a more granular look at access.

In December 2022, several Border to Border grants were awarded that would/will benefit St, Louis County

  • Mediacom received $7.4 million to serve 863 unserved households, 796 underserved households, 7 underserved businesses, 10 unserved businesses, 1 unserved community anchor and 1 underserved community anchor in the unincorporated community of Esko, primarily in the Saint Louis County
  • Mediacom received $821,758 to serve 306 unserved households, 62 underserved households, 3 unserved community anchors, and 4 unserved businesses in the Biwabik Township of the St. Louis County
  • Mediacom received $4.4 million to serve 863 unserved households, 796 underserved households, 7 underserved businesses, 10 unserved businesses, 1 unserved community anchor and 1 underserved community anchor in the unincorporated community of Esko, primarily in the Saint Louis County area
  • Mediacom received $2.1 million to serve 444 unserved households, 7 unserved businesses, 1 unserved community anchor, 116 underserved households and 5 underserved businesses in the city of Hibbing of the Saint Louis County
  • Paul Bunyan received $3 million to implement the Northern Minnesota GigaZone Fiber Project to bring high-speed broadband to at least 1,035 homes, businesses, farms, and community anchor institutions in rural portions of Aitkin, Itasca, and St. Louis counties.

In 2023, Paul Bunyan Rural Telephone received $5,569,281 to implement the St. Louis County GigaZone Fiber Expansion Project to bring high-speed, last-mile fiber-to-the-premises to at least 646 homes, businesses, farms, and community anchor institutions in two non-contiguous areas in rural St. Louis County.  Several providers (SCI, CTC, Mediacom and Treehouse) have applications in to the latest (still open) round of Border to Border funding; results should be available in early 2024.

St Louis County has been stuck but the volume of successful and hopeful grants in the area heps them hold their yellow ranking.

2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 73.14 74.89 79.49 79.22 78.2 41.2 38.78
25/3 (2022 goal) 78.35 79.7 85.5 86.72 86.23 83.47 82.72

Grants:

  • 2023: Paul Bunyan Rural Telephone Coop – Paul Bunyan Communications Rural GigaZone Fiber – GRANT $5,569,281
  • 2022: Mediacom Minnesota LLC, $7,363,624.53
  • 2022: Mediacom Minnesota LLC – Esko – GRANT $4,400,732
  • 2022: Mediacom Minnesota LLC – Project 19 – Hibbing – GRANT $2,141,135
  • 2022: Paul Bunyan Communications – Northern Minnesota GigaZone Fiber – GRANT $3,052,120
  • 2022: Savage Communications Inc., $562,098.00
  • 2022: Consolidated Telephone Company, $4,857,030.00 (serving St Louis and Cass)
  • 2022: Mediacom Minnesota LLC – Esquagama Lake – GRANT $821,758
  • 2017 – CenturyLink – Fredenberg Township FTTH Project – GRANT $1,809,312
    2017 – Paul Bunyan Communications – North Central Fiber – GRANT $802,620
  • 2017 – MEDIACOM FAYAL TOWNSHIP – GRANT: $263,345
  • 2014 – Mediacom, Pintar Road – Award: $137,848. Total project cost: $275,697.
  • 2014 – Northeast Service Cooperative – Frontier Communications Corp., Border to Border Phase I – Award: $1.96 million.
  • 2019: Paul Bunyan Communications – North Central Minnesota Fiber Project– GRANT $2,562,916
  • MN State Grants awarded in 2021: Charter Communications (Spectrum) – Getchell Road – GRANT $11,400 This middle and last mile project will provide broadband service to eight unserved households in northern Duluth in St. Louis County.
  • Mediacom Minnesota LLC – Field of Dreams Hermantown Project – GRANT $624,751 This last mile project will serve approximately 267 underserved households, six underserved businesses, and one underserved community anchor institution in Hermantown in St. Louis County.
  • Paul Bunyan Communications – City of Cook GigaZone Fiber – GRANT $311,254 This last mile project will improve high-speed broadband for 57 unserved and 254 underserved locations in the community of Cook in St. Louis County.

Checklist:

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Pipestone County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 35 of 87

Rank: 35
Code:  Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Pipestone County: stagnant at 80 percent

Pipestone County ranks 35 (up 7 points) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 86.35 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 490 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $4.5 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Pipestone 7.7 3,591 86.35 490 4557000

Pipestone has hovered at 80 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up since 2018. They have seen a small increase this year. Pipestone County is working with Hometown Fiber on better broadband plan.

Woodstock Telephone has applied for Border to Border funding in the latest (and open) round and should hear in early 2024 if they were successful. The Pipestone County Commission has supported the application with a match of $268,822.

They are also concerned about being in a potentially precarious position because looking at access in the County using the FCC National Map there is a big discrepancy between wireline access (78.99 percent coverage) and wireline with fixed wireless (98.5 percent). Minnesota doesn’t currently take fixed wireless into consideration when defining areas eligible for grants; the federal government does include access to fixed wireless. That could make a big difference to who is eligible for BEAD funding.

Pipestone seems to be building momentum, at a good time with federal (BEAD) funding coming in. But they retain their yellow ranking.

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 86.35 80.7 80.11 79.73 79.73 79.73 44.54
25/3 (2022 goal) 88.81 82.44 82.54 82.97 81.1 79.73 79.36

Past grants:

  • 2017 – Woodstock Telephone Company – Pipestone County Wireless – GRANT $363,851
  • 2015 – MVTV Wireless Middle Mile – Grant award: $808,080

Find more articles on broadband in Pipestone County (http://tinyurl.com/zhjm4pe)

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Otter Tail County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 56 of 87

Rank: 56
Code: Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Otter Tail County: recent progress but needs more

Otter Tail County ranks 56 (up 8 points) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 77.72 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 7564 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $70.3 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Otter Tail 15.2 33,796 77.72 7564 70345200

They have seen slow. incremental improvement since 2020 but have seen a nice bump up in the last year. In December 2022, East Otter Tail Telephone was awarded $1.1 million in Border to Border grant to reach 171 unserved and 100 underserved households, farms and businesses in the southeastern portion of Otter Tail County near the rural parts of Battle Lake, Henning, Parkers Prairie and Urbank and Otter Tail Telephone received $3.4 million to serve a total of 1,186 locations comprised of 495 unserved households; 334 underserved households; 245 unserved businesses, farms, and community anchor institutions; and 112 underserved businesses, farms, and community anchor institutions in the North Fergus Falls area. In 2023, Otter Tail Telecom received another $2.3 million to serve a total of 506 households, businesses, farms, and community anchor institutions in the South Battle Lake.

Otter Tail County residents were awarded 21 line extension funding requests, which means state funding will subsidize last mile broadband extension to their homes.

With all of recent activity, Otter Tail has shifted from red to yellow ranking.

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 77.72 70.54 67.02 65.55 35.34 2.36 1.75
25/3 (2022 goal) 94.48 92.69 90.97 75.02 92.93 89.56 59.34

Grants:

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

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

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Nobles County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 38 of 87

Rank: 38
Code:  Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Nobles County: ReConnect funding will help reach goals

Nobles County ranks 38 (up six points) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 85.35 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 1010 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $9.4 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload etainsSpeeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Nobles 9.5 6,893 85.35 1010 9393000

Nobles County has seen a nice jump in broadband coverage this year after a long time of stagnation. And they can expect more.

In 2023, Lismore Cooperative Telephone Company received a USDA ReConnect grant of $13.68 million, paired with a loan of $5.72 million, which could provide high-speed broadband to 3,839 people, 127 businesses, 679 farms. That will help them get much closer to their broadband goal.

Nobles County retains yellow ranking but a much more optimistic yellow ranking than previous years.

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 85.35 80.27 81.24 81.24 77.66 77.18 59.25
25/3 (2022 goal) 87.76 83.1 83.71 83.54 80.89 79.24 75.69

Grants

  • 2023: Lismore Cooperative Telephone Company ReConnect grant: $13,688,114 and loan: $5,723,996
  • 2016 LISMORE COOPERATIVE TELEPHONE NOBLES COUNTY BROADBAND – GRANT: $2,944,578
  • 2015 – MVTV Wireless Middle Mile – Grant award: $808,080

Checklist:

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Mower County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 46 of 87

Rank: 46
Code:  Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Mower County incremental improvement

Mower County ranks 46 (down 9) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 83.61 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 2455 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $22.8 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Mower 21.0 14,976 83.61 2455 22831500

Mower County has had steady, incremental growth for a few years. Then they ran into a road block.

LTD Broadband was awarded the opportunity to submit a long form to get federal funding (RDOF) to deploy FTTH throughout much of Minnesota, including parts of Mower County. The potential RDOF award meant Le Sueur’s state grant application was no longer eligible for other funding. In 2023, the federal funders disqualifies LTD Broadband from receiving funding and the MN Public Utilities Commission is looking at revoking the ETC designation they needed to qualify for funding.

Mower County has demonstrated an interest in engaging and investing in broadband so they maintain their yellow code. But Mower County has demonstrated an interest in engaging and investing in broadband so they maintain their yellow code. Both Arvig and Spectrum have applied for funds in the latest (open) round of Border to Border grants but won’t know the results until early 2024.

Broadband Access:

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 83.61 83.25 84.95 79.03 78.56 23.31 90.2
25/3 (2022 goal) 87.37 88.91 90.13 81.14 85.22 78.47 94.78

Grants:

  • MN State Grant awarded in 2021: KMTelecom – Rock Dell Southwest Fiber Build – GRANT $404,709 This last mile project will serve approximately 96 unserved households, 70 farms and five unserved businesses in rural Vernon Township in Dodge County and Sargeant Township in Mower County.

Find more articles on broadband in Mower County (http://tinyurl.com/j9sr5gf)

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Morrison County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 48 of 87

Rank: 48
Code: Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Morrison County: steady progress but recent grant might help

Morrison County ranks 48 (up three) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 82.53 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 2602 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $24.1 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Morrison 12.9 14,892 82.53 2602 24198600

Morrison County has seen steady but incremental improvement since we started tracking. They been actively engaged in seeking better broadband for several years, including as part of the Resilient Region as a Blandin Broadband Community and in 2022, Officials from Morrison County and the city of Little Falls met to talk about broadband options.

Benton Telephone has applied for funding in the latest (and open) round of Border to Border broadband funds. The seem organized enough to take advantage of federal (BEAD) funding coming in the next few years but until that starts to happen, they retain their yellow ranking.

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 82.53 77.57 73.96 70.03 69.64 42.74 28.83
25/3 (2022 goal) 85.16 79.08 79 82.7% 70.9% 65.1% 82.7%

Grants:

  • 2022: Morrison County will benefit from a ReConnect grant through Upsala Cooperative.
  • 2017 – Benton Cooperative Telephone Company – Rice Ramey – GRANT $765,015
  • 2016 – BENTON COOPERATIVE TELEPHONE COMPANY BUCKMAN – GRANT: $276,230
  • 2014 – Consolidated Telephone Cooperative, Region 5 Virtual Highway Project – Amount $2 million
  • 2019: CTC (Consolidated Telephone Company) – Fort Ripley/Executive Acres Project – GRANT $830,587
  • 2019: Benton Cooperative Telephone Company – Ramey Phase I – GRANT $936,759
  • MN State Grants awarded in 2021: Benton Cooperative Telephone Company – Ramey Phase 2 Project – GRANT $338,011 This last mile project will serve 119 unserved locations in the Ramey telephone exchange located in portions of Lakin and Mount Morris townships in Morrison County and a small portion of Dailey and Page townships located in Mille Lacs County.
  • Sytek Communications – Morrison/Todd/Stearns County FTTP Project – GRANT $1,048,668 This last mile project will bring service to 130 locations in Southwest Morrison, Southeastern Todd and Northeastern Stearns counties.

Find more articles on broadband in Morrison County (http://tinyurl.com/hxkk5ur)

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Meeker County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 55 of 87

Rank: 55
Code: Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Meeker County: building momentum with state grants

Meeker County ranks 55 (up six) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 78.04 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 2100 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $19.5 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Meeker 14.8 9,565 78.04 2100 19530000

They have had steady, incremental increase in access since 2017. In December 2022, Meeker Cooperative were awarded five successful Border to Border grants totaling $327,000 to expand broadband in the county.  In June, ReConnect announced $19,039,348 in funding for Meeker Cooperative Light & Power Association tl connect nearly 500 people, 124 farms, 16 businesses, and one educational facility to high-speed internet in Kandiyohi, Meeker and Stearns counties.

Meeker County is making good progress. They have several providers interested in the area, they will benefit from both Border to Border and a ReConnect grant, yet with less than 80 percent coverage, they retain their yellow ranking.

Broadband Access:

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 78.04 72.85   53.86 45.08 45.08 38.13
25/3 (2022 goal) 81.27 75.01   62.46 71.72 71.45 98.58

Grants:

  • 2023: ReConnect grant connecting nearly 500 people, 124 farms, 16 businesses, and one educational facility to high-speed internet in Kandiyohi, Meeker and Stearns counties.
  • 2022: Meeker Cooperative Light & Power Association (Vibrant Broadband) – Big Swan Lake – GRANT $94,182
  • 2022: Meeker Cooperative Light & Power Association (Vibrant Broadband) – Collinwood Lake – GRANT $104,337
  • 2022: Meeker Cooperative Light & Power Association (Vibrant Broadband) – Dunns & Richardson Lakes – GRANT $80,202
  • 2022: Meeker Cooperative Light & Power Association (Vibrant Broadband) – Lake Erie – GRANT $19,093
  • 2022: Meeker Cooperative Light & Power Association (Vibrant Broadband) – Long Lake – GRANT $29,702 (Learn more)
  • MN State Grant awarded in 2021: Meeker Cooperative Light & Power Association (Vibrant Broadband) – Lake Koronis – GRANT $41,927 This last mile project will serve approximately 28 unserved and seven underserved locations in Union Grove Township in Meeker County.
  • 2019: Nuvera Communications, Inc. – Hutchinson W Project – GRANT $346,282

Checklist:

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

McLeod County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 58 of 87

Rank: 58
Code: Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

McLeod County: maybe the tide has turned

McLeod County ranks 58 (down 4 points) for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 77.21 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 2903 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $27 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
McLeod 25.2 12,736 77.21 2903 26997900

McLeod County has seen steady but incremental improvement in broadband access through the years. In December 2022, Nuvera Communications was awarded $1.8 million to serve 300 unserved and 154 underserved locations in the Belle Lake and Hutchinson area and Media got $99,156 to serve 87 unserved households and 2 unserved businesses in the Hale Township.

They retain their yellow ranking.

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 77.21 75.48 58.09 56.13 58.59 58.57 56.92
25/3 (2022 goal) 78.91 81.07 82.86 87.32 81.01 83.53 98.58

Grants:

  • 2022: Nuvera Communications, Inc. – Belle Lake and Hutchinson East FTTP – GRANT $1,840,250
  • 2022: Mediacom Minnesota LLC – Swan Lake – GRANT $99,156 (Learn more)
  • MN State Grants awarded in 2021: Nuvera Communications, Inc. – Hutchinson SE FTTP – GRANT $169,369 This last mile project will serve 42 unserved and five underserved locations in the Hutchinson area of McLeod County.
  • Winthrop Telephone Company, Inc. – Bismarck & Transit Township FTTP Project – GRANT $716,000 This last mile project will serve 148 unserved and six underserved locations, including homes, businesses and farms, in Bismarck, Transit and Round Grove townships in Sibley and McLeod counties.

Find more articles on broadband in McLeod County (http://tinyurl.com/hx65gqh)

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.

Martin County Broadband Profile 2023: Yellow rating: Ranking out 69 of 87

Rank: 69
Code:  Yellow
(See Blandin Foundation interactive map)

Martin County: hoping new engagement spurs investment

Martin County ranks 69 for broadband access out of 87 counties. They have 72.6 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up. They have 2398 households without access to broadband at that speed. Estimates indicate that it will cost $22.3 million to get to ubiquitous broadband in the county.

County Residential Location Density number of residential locations ≥ 100 Mbps Download/20 Mbps Upload Speeds unserved households Cost to close gap
Martin 12.0 8,751 72.6 2398 22301400

Martin County hovered around 67 percent coverage to broadband of 100 Mbps down and 20 up since 2020 but they had a big of jump this year. In December 2022, Bevcomm was awarded a $1.4 million Border to Border grant to serve 371 underserved and 2 unserved homes, businesses, and farms in the rural areas of Bricelyn, Elmore and Guckeen within Faribault and Martin Counties. Federated Rural Electric Association has applied for a grant in the latest Border to Border grant round but they won’t hear the results until early 2024. Martin County supported both grant applications with financing from ARPA funds.

The engagement with broadband providers, financial buy-in and latest increase in broadband coverage has bumped Martin from red to yellow ranking.

They may be concerned about being in a potentially precarious position because looking at access in the County using the FCC National Map there is a big discrepancy between wireline access (69.95 percent coverage) and wireline with fixed wireless (96.72 percent). Minnesota doesn’t currently take fixed wireless into consideration when defining areas eligible for grants; the federal government does include access to fixed wireless. That could make a big difference to who is eligible for BEAD funding.

 

Martin County

  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
100/20 (2026 goal) 72.6 67.03 66.71 68.24 55.22 54.8 54.06
25/3 (2022 goal) 78.92 83.59 81.51 71.81 80.29 56.38 55.64
  • 2022: Grants: Bevcomm – Rural Faribault and Martin Counties Fiber Expansion Project – Phase Three – GRANT $1,444,030 (serving Faribault and Martin Counties)
  • MN State Grant awarded in 2021: BEVCOMM (Blue Earth Valley Telephone Company, Easton Telephone Company & Cannon Valley Telecom) – Rural Faribault County and Martin County Fiber Expansion Phase 2 Project – GRANT $1,182,818 This last mile project will serve approximately two unserved households, 203 underserved households, 46 underserved businesses, and 181 underserved farms in portions of Faribault and Martin counties.
  • 2017- BEVCOMM (Granada Telephone Company) — Granada Rural Final – GRANT: $202,410
  • 2016 – GRANADA TELEPHONE COMPANY (DBA BEVCOMM) SOUTH RURAL GRANADA – GRANT:  $157,920
  • 2016 – MARTIN COUNTY (WITH FRONTIER) RURAL BROADBAND INITIATIVE – GRANT: $1,677,823
  • BEVCOMM (Blue Earth Valley Telephone Company & Easton Telephone Company) – Rural Faribault County Project – GRANT: $579,781

Checklist:

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

  • Red (yikes)
  • Yellow (warning)
  • Green (good shape)

The maps below on the left comes from the Office of Broadband Development interactive map, reflecting data updated on Oct 31, 2023. Red dots represent locations unserved with wireline broadband; the Orange dots represent underserved locations. The map on the right comes from the FCC National Broadband map showing access to wired and licensed fixed wireless access, the darker the color, the greater percentage of broadband coverage.