Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Brendan Carr yesterday introduced a declarative ruling that would reverse the decisions that enabled use of E-Rate funding to provide Wi-Fi on school buses. He also circulated an order for FCC reconsideration, which would end funding for Wi-Fi hotspots for children or library patrons for use outside of schools and libraries.
The press release announcing the moves says that the extension of the COVID-19 era rules exceeded the FCC’s authority. Carr also claimed the programs had a record of “poor stewardship of scarce funds, and invited waste, fraud, and abuse.”
Expansion of the Universal Service Fund (USF) Schools and Libraries program — also known as the E-Rate program — was approved by the FCC in July 2024.
Arvig promotes Lifeline Awareness Week
The Pilot Independent reports...
Digital Connectivity and Lifeline Awareness Week is right around the corner, and Arvig is joining the effort to spread the word about this federal program.
Lifeline provides discounts to help low-income residents connect to the nation’s broadband and phone networks to find jobs, access health care services, connect with family and call for help in an emergency. For some people, being connected can be the difference between social interaction and complete isolation.
Arvig is promoting national Digital Connectivity and Lifeline Awareness Week from Sept. 7 to 13 as part of its commitment to providing resources that make high-speed internet and phone service available to everyone.
Staying connected to local resources and emergency services can improve and possibly save lives; and access to local emergency services and community resources is vital to all residents.
Under the program, low-income residents who participate in certain public assistance programs, or qualify based on income, can receive a discount of up to $9.25 per month off their monthly broadband-qualifying service bill; up to $5.25 off their voice-qualifying service bill; and residents on Tribal lands can qualify for up to an additional $34.25 per month.
More information on program eligibility and rules are available at http://www.lifelinesup port.org
A video in American Sign Language about Lifeline is available at: https://youtu.be/wwkjVrd5xHc
Arvig encourages all eligible customers to sign up at any time by going to https://arvig.com/savings or by calling (888) 992-7844.
Lifeline is a government assistance program that is non-transferable and is limited to one discount per eligible household.
Healthcare associations urge Congress to extend the hospital-at-home program
A long list of healthcare stakeholders have signed a letter urging strong support for the Acute Hospital Care at Home waiver program in upcoming government funding decisions.
Writing to Congress this week, the organizations – including HIMSS (parent company of Healthcare IT News), AARP, American Telemedicine Association, Minnesota Hospital Association, Intermountain Health, Mass General Brigham, St. Luke’s Health System, UCAHealth and numerous others organized by Moving Health Home – said the evidence speaks for itself.
Patients, caregivers and providers are generally in strong support of at-home acute care, they said, and as such lawmakers should support the proposed five-year hospital-at-home waiver extension because the model has helped improve patient outcomes, lower healthcare costs and bolster older Americans’ access to medical care.
Moreover, it “will not lead to new costs” – they said in their letter on Wednesday.
They pointed to a 2022 study of patients at a New York City hospital, admitted to either hospital-at-home or inpatient care between September 2014 and August 2017, which found that one hospital-at-home program reduced costs by nearly $6,000 per patient compared with inpatient care.
Further, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has previously found that patients in hospital-at-home programs have lower mortality rates, readmissions and spending post-discharge, while resulting in positive patient and provider experiences, the 140 organizations pointed out.
These and other studies warrant the continued investment and innovation proposed in the Hospital Inpatient Services Modernization Act (S. 2237/H.R. 4313), they told the Democratic and Republican leaders.
Broadband Expansion Continues in Itasca and St. Louis Counties
Paul Bunyan Communicaitons sent me an update and press release, for folks outside of Minnesota, I want to share the email intro to the press release sent during the first week or September!
The weather has turned quickly, a sure sign that the end of construction season is on the horizon. We continue to make great progress on our broadband network expansion construction and, if mother nature cooperates, we anticipate each project will be built before freeze-out.
And today does feel like winter is coming, even in the Twin Cities, three hours from Paul Bunyan…
As the end of construction season approaches, Paul Bunyan Communications is on track to complete its planned broadband expansion projects across parts of Itasca and St. Louis Counties before freeze out.
Status of Paul Bunyan Communications Broadband Expansion projects:
• Itasca County:
City of Coleraine- Construction is completed with fiber splicing taking place. Services should become available in October
City of Bovey- Construction has started and is over 50% completed. Services should become available this winter.
Bearville(s) Township- Construction is done. Fiber splicing is in progress. Services should become available this winter.
• St. Louis County:
Sandy, Pike, & Wuori Township- Construction is done, fiber splicing is 75% done. Services should be available by the end of September
Alango & Owens Township- Construction is done and fiber splicing has started. Services should become available this winter.
Angora Township- Construction is done and fiber splicing has started. Services should become available this winter.
Balkan Township- Construction has started and is expected to be completed by mid-October. Services should become available this winter.
French Township- Construction is done. Fiber splicing has started. Services should become available this winter.
Great Scott Township & unorganized township north of Great Scott- Construction will start later this month and is expected to be completed by mid-November. Services should be available by end of winter.
Once the network is operational in an area, customers who signed up will be contacted to schedule service installations.
Sign Up Now to Ensure Fiber Optic Connection Residents and businesses in these expansion areas are encouraged to sign up for service now, before construction crews move on to ensure the fiber optic connection is brought up to the location. That can be done online at http://www.gigazone.com, by phone, or in person at our Grand Rapids Customer Service & Technology Center.
Services Available Upon Completion Once the network is live, customers will have access to Paul Bunyan’s GigaZone® services, including high-speed fiber-optic Internet with speeds up to 10 Gig and dependable, low-cost unlimited local and long-distance GigaZone® voice services.
The Broadband Equity Project: Minneapolis gap between broadband availability and adoption
The Broadband Equity Project highlights the rate of internet/broadband adoption across different zip codes in many major cities and metropolitan areas, and uses census data to find key factors. Unfortunately, they tool only looks at the 7-county metro area, but it is searchable by city and county.
Here’s what they found about Minneapolis:

It’s interesting to scroll over the map, especially if you are focus on the 7-county metro area or part of that area
Rural Broadband Cooperatives ask US Congress to rethink the Universal Service Fund
Rural broadband executives told lawmakers Wednesday that Congress must modernize the Universal Service Fund to keep small town networks affordable and sustainable.
“USF doesn’t just cover network construction, but also ongoing operations, maintenance, and upgrades,” said witness Karen Jackson-Furman, CEO of West Kentucky and Tennessee Telecommunications Cooperative. For a rural co-op like WK&T, she added, the program was often “the difference between operating and not operating.”
Her testimony came during a hearing of the House Committee on Small Business centered on how expanding broadband may revitalize rural, small businesses. Lawmakers and witnesses also discussed permitting delays, flawed federal mapping, and the Trump administration’s changes to the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment program that removed its emphasis on fiber technology.
US House Approves Undersea Cable Control Act
Broadband Breakfast reports...
The House on Tuesday passed legislation to tighten U.S. control over critical fiber optic undersea cable equipment.
The Undersea Cable Control Act would require the Commerce and State Departments to develop a strategy to prevent foreign adversaries like China from acquiring technologies used in undersea cables. The bill passed by voice vote under suspension of the rules and now heads to the Senate.
Some details…
If enacted, the legislation would direct the Commerce and State Departments to identify key items in the cable supply chain, evaluate whether they belong on the federal Commerce Control List, and pursue bilateral and multilateral agreements with allies to prevent their sale to adversaries.
“Over 99 percent of the world’s data that crosses the oceans travels through the fiber optic cables that sit on the sea floor. This bill requires the U.S. to develop and execute a strategy to protect this critical infrastructure,” said Rep. Michael Baumgartner, R-Wash., managing the bill on the floor.
The law also requires annual reporting to Congress and mandates U.S. engagement at international standards bodies that set technical rules for cable systems. …
The bill would require the Bureau of Industry and Security in the Commerce Department to deliver a relevant study. Thirty days after that report, the president would be required to begin briefing congressional committees on negotiations with allies, continuing every 180 days until agreements are reached.
EVENT Sep 10: New Research Getting to Broadband Adoption for All
From the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society…
Join us on September 10 at 2:00 p.m. ET for a webinar on broadband affordability and policy. Available via the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society’s YouTube page, the webinar will feature new research about broadband affordability and state legislative approaches to ensure the availability of affordable high-speed internet access. The discussion will highlight how broadband affordability, availability, and adoption relate to each other and present current and future opportunities to improve universal access.
Current federal investment in broadband infrastructure will go a long way to improve broadband availability, but it must be accompanied by affordability support if all Americans are to adopt broadband service. The expiration of the Affordable Connectivity Program in 2024, recent changes to the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program’s requirements for a low-cost service option, and possible reforms to the Universal Service Fund have all influenced the current landscape.
Dr. Caroline Stratton, Research Director of the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society, will moderate a discussion with:
- Dr. John Horrigan, Benton Senior Fellow and national expert on technology adoption, digital inclusion, and evaluating the outcomes and impacts of programs designed to promote communications technology adoption and use. Horrigan will share insights from his recent research reports, Budgeting for Broadband and Marking Progress, Targeting Gaps: Lessons from Broadband Adoption Trends, and his past research on the Lifeline Program.
- Jordan Arnold, Master of Public Affairs candidate at Princeton University. She previously served as a Senior Policy Advisor in the Biden-Harris White House, where she led work on broadband and economic development in the Office of the Chief of Staff. Arnold will present lessons from her new Benton research report about how states are approaching affordability in the absence of federal policy action.
- Ambika Nair, Community Development Research Analyst at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, conducts research and data analysis on the financial well-being of low- and moderate-income communities. Nair will share findings from a forthcoming publication about the relative affordability of broadband in low- and moderate-income neighborhoods in U.S. cities.
Tune in to learn more about what the practitioner and policymaking communities can do to ensure that low-income households can afford reliable, sustainable access to broadband internet service.
Satellite is a sticky wicket in state BEAD plans
State broadband offices confront mounting uncertainty over whether to accept low-cost satellite internet bids as part of the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment program.
Some industry experts, speaking at a Broadband Breakfast Live Online event on Wednesday, warned that SpaceX’s Starlink and Amazon’s Project Kuiper cannot deliver the service quality required under the $42.45 billion federal broadband program.
The challenge has shifted dramatically as eligible locations may have dropped as much as 65 percent, from 11.9 million in 2023 to 4.2 million today, according to a study by the New York Law School. That has transformed BEAD’s program from being one of funding shortages to a potential too much money. Randy Leuning, founder of BroadbandToolkit.com, said: “Three years ago, we approached this as there’s not going to be enough money, and now we’re approaching [it] like there’s too much money, and so how do we adapt?”
In Minnesota, Amazon Kuiper has applied for $11,083,293.95 in funding and is offering $3,552,614.48 in match to serve 18295 Locations. And just yesterday, satellite service came up in OBD BEAD Final Proposal meeting in Hutchinson MN.
T-Mobile and KKR acquire US Internet and Metronet
Telecom Lead has an interesting perspective on the US Internet acquisition…
Metronet announced the acquisition of US Internet, a fiber company providing internet services to residential and business customers in Minneapolis, following Metronet’s acquisition by a joint venture between T-Mobile and KKR. Financial details of the deal were not disclosed. US Internet operates a fiber network offering symmetrical speeds up to 10 Gbps and currently reaches more than 140,000 homes and businesses in the Minneapolis area. With this acquisition, Metronet strengthens its fiber presence in Minnesota, adding to its existing markets that include Lakeville, Waconia, Shakopee, Owatonna, Faribault, and Rochester.
EVENT Sep 3: ILSR and AAPB Community Broadband Film Series II – Rocketeers: The UTOPIA Fiber Story
From ILSR and AAPB…
Slated for Tomorrow, September 3rd from 4 to 5:00 pm ET, the livestream event will feature the film “Rocketeers: The UTOPIA Fiber Story” – an eye-opening documentary about how a publicly-owned fiber network has ignited local Internet choice and competition across dozens of cities, delivering connectivity at the speed of light.
Registration is free here.
OBD BEAD Final Proposal meeting in Hutchinson MN: detailed questions on the process and possibilities
Today I attended an in-person version of the MN Office of Broadband Development Update: BEAD Final Proposal held last week. For the PPTs and great detail, I recommend you check that post. Last week, I went to the in person meeting in Hutchinson; today I went to Owatonna. Mostly I took note of updates and questions from the attendees. There were about a dozen people in the room including both providers and community folks.
One big note: Public Comments deadline is September 3.

There are three more meetings this week:
- Tuesday Sept. 2, 3:30—4:30pm, Northwest Minnesota Foundation (NWMF), Bemidji, 201 3rd Street NW Bemidji, MN.
- Note: Attendees, please plan to find street parking.
- Wednesday Sept. 3, 9—10am, West Central Initiative Foundation (WCIF), Fergus Falls, 1000 Western Ave, Fergus Falls, MN.
- Note: Attendees, please park in the part of the lot on the south side of the building.
- Wednesday Sept. 3, 3—4pm, Northspan, Duluth, 202 West Superior Street, Suite 600, Duluth, MN.
- Note: Attendees, this is located in the in the WesternBank building. Parking can be found on the street, the Holiday Center, or in the Duluth Transit
Questions:
- Is everything public now?
Essentially, but we’re still working on some aspects like awards by county. - Is the provider negation still confidential?
Yes. - How many homes are as expensive as the most expensive ($32,000)?
Maybe 10 in a given area. And some areas were even more expensive $72,000 and a million dollars. - Rumor has it some providers low-bid areas to call dibs on those areas. Is that true? That could leave us in a RDOF situation again.
Yes. - Did some providers choose not to participate?
Yes. - Were there satellite applications in the original round of grant apps?
No. - Why do we have LEO satellite?
There are 2 providers Starlink and Amazon Kuiper Starlink claims to reach everyone. Amazon is asking for money for infrastructure. We do understand that satellite is very different from fiber. - Why has the amount of funding seemingly gone down?
There’s non-deployment funds. We didn’t build in a contingency for deployment in the original funds because we wanted it to go to infrastructure. With the changes we have changed out plans. We have plans to spend the money on other things such as upgrading or adding towers. - Will that money stay in MN?
We hope so. But the money may just go away. It’s likely to be state-to-state. - Where does line extension fit with BEAD?
There will be another Line Extension program opening in the next two weeks. We are trying to maximize funding to areas that don’t qualify for BEAD. They went through direct negotiations. - What percent of applications were fiber/satellite/wireless?
We will work on that. 110 applications 5-6 were fixed wireless; the rest were fiber. Satellite got through direct negotiations. We lost 20 applications from the first round. Mostly of the fixed wireless were for areas without a fiber bid. - Is there going to be accountability with providers who have been dishonest about the maps?
OBD is not regulatory. OBD tries to do the best maps possible. Please continue to ask the regulators. - The maps online do not all make a ton of sense to the regular reader.
NTIA required some very technical expertise and software. - It would be nice to have a statewide broadband conference. Would OBD think about something like that?
We have been asked for that – but the pieces are moving too quickly. We will try again next year. Also, it would be nice to have our federal partners in the room. - Maybe the Initiative Founds could take up gauntlet for a conference?
Folks have seemed interest. The MN Broadband Task Force is a good place to get information. There is a need for digital inclusion information and resources too. - 40,000 locations will benefit from broadband asis. Are they unserved or underserved?
Most communities already have better than 25/3 because MN had been doing this for a long time. We have 70,000 that don’t qualify for BEAD - We are in a RDOF areas that didn’t get the actual funding (LTD Broadband) . Do you know if we qualify for BEAD? I have DSL. I get 2.4Mbps down and 1.6 up. (Goodhue County)
OBD used data from Line Extension to make decisions on BEAD. We are working on an interactive map by county and location. - I see fiber going to towers. Much of it is unused. Can we find which areas have unused fiber and use it?
Beyond the purview of OBD. - We have talked to different providers about leasing fiber to other providers who might want to finish broadband to the location.
- Can we get earmarks for broadband in the future?
Not earmarks have been for broadband. Infrastructure works well there, but it’s usually focused on money to local government – not a private provider. You need a community network if you’re going to go for an earmark. - Does the State know if there are RDOF funds that have yet to default? If that’s the case, maybe BEAD could pick up the slack.
We did build a 10 percent contingency in all of the projects. So we hope that will help. If there’s something specific, please let us know and we can find out what we can. - Do you work with the DNR?
Yes.
I talked to DNR about working around a river in our community and they said it would take an act of god.
It’s hard to find a solution. - What mechanisms are being set up to monitor the satellite connections?
Good question. We need receipts and deliverables. Also hard to track new subscriptions. For those who have nothing, satellite will be an upgrade. - Will we see movement on December 4?
You will see as soon as we see. It could be quicker. - Could OBD help create development services like Blandin used to provide? So many of us got started with Blandin.
We don’t have money for development now that the digital inclusion funds are gone. But we would support something.
MN eNews September 2025: BEAD proposal deadline looms
Comment on OBD’s Draft of Minnesota’s Final Proposal
The Office of Broadband Development released their Draft Final BEAD Proposal last week. They held an online meeting to discuss the draft before it was released and have planned a series of meetings this week around the state to talk to folks about the proposal. (See dates and times below.) The first meeting was in Hutchinson last Friday. OBD is looking for public comment on the draft on or before September 3 before they make changes and resubmit the draft to NTIA.
The MN Broadband Task Force met at Farmfest
The MN Broadband Task Force met at Farmfest. They heard from folks who have been (or still are) living on the slow end of the broadband divide. There was an interesting push-pull conversation about precision agriculture and the growing need for data and the ability to process it with the energy it requires and the possible impact on local water. One of the benefits of holding the meeting at Farmfest was the interest from local media.
State News
- MN Office of Broadband Development speaks with Broadband Breakfast
- Impact of BEAD changes on the states depends on the state – in MN 22,000 locations didn’t get bids
- Good news, bad news: An update of broadband in Tribal Areas including some in Minnesota
- “Digital literacy isn’t a luxury. It’s health care access…” Op Ed in Star Tribune
- MN Star Tribune says experts predict MN will miss 2026 goal for total broadband access
Federal
- AI applications for rural broadband providers
- AARP collects stories on how seniors are using broadband and the impact of losing ACP funds
- Reports comparing social media use and mental health in rural youth vs suburban and urban youth
- Economist Paul Krugman recognizes the tension between data needs and energy limitations
- American Society of Civil Engineers grade US broadband and offers recommendations for improvement
- Computer ownership is top priority for “successful internet access”
- Broadband advocates urge the FCC to continue assessing broadband affordability and adoption
Vendor/Technology News
- AT&T acquires wireless spectrum licenses from EchoStar for $23 billion
- Essentia Health asks Congress to extend Medicare coverage for telehealth services
- Vibrant Broadband chooses Ribbon Communications for middle-mile network solution
- Charter execs face class action after $9 billion stock drop linked to loss of ACP for subscribers
- Conversation on T-Mobile buying US Internet on Connect This
- AOL is unplugging its dialup service on Sep 30, 2025
- T-Mobile is set to acquire US Internet
- Lumen Reports more than $900 million in Q2 2025 losses
Office of Broadband Development Updates and News:
- MN Office of Broadband Development Update: BEAD Final Proposal and upcoming meetings (Aug 28)
- From Office of Broadband Development: Minnesota Releases Draft Proposed for Federal Broadband Funding Package
- Office of Broadband Development Updates: Upcoming events and BEAD & Line Extension updates (Aug 13)
- NTIA tells states not to lower broadband costs or risk BEAD funding
- Latest BEAD “Benefit of the Bargain” grant round left 22,000 of the 76,000 eligible locations without a first-round bid
- Office of Broadband Development Update: Direct negotiation for the restructured BEAD round, open until Aug 8 (Aug 5)
Local Broadband News
Cottage Grove
The FCC is looking for comments about Cottage Grove’s rights-of-way contract with one provider
Fairmont County
Fairmont County Commission looks at 2026 budget – broadband is discussed as an investment
Itasca and St Louis Counties
Broadband Communities reports on progress of Paul Bunyan Communications in Itasca and St. Louis counties
McLeod County
Mediacom Communications launches multi-gig service in Howard Lake and Winsted, Minnesota (McLeod County)
Nobles County
Lismore Telephone and Nobles County kick of FTTP project funded by ReConnect and MN State Grants
North St Paul
North St Paul experiences cyberattack
Pine City
Office of Broadband Development visits ECE in Pine City (Pine County)
Superior (WI)
Publicly-owned ConnectSuperior now open for business in Superior WI
Upcoming Events, Opportunities and Resources
- EVENT Sep 2, 9—10am, Southern Minnesota Initiative Foundation (SMIF), Owatonna, 525 Florence Ave, Owatonna, MN.
- EVENT Sep 2, 3:30—4:30pm, Northwest Minnesota Foundation (NWMF), Bemidji, 201 3rd Street NW Bemidji, MN.
- EVENT Sep 3, 9—10am, West Central Initiative Foundation (WCIF), Fergus Falls, 1000 Western Ave, Fergus Falls, MN.
- EVENT Sep 3, 3—4pm, Northspan, Duluth, 202 West Superior Street, Suite 600, Duluth, MN.
- EVENT SEP 10: What’s Next for Broadband in MN with Gigi Sohn and Christopher Mitchell
- EVENT Sep 10: Webinar: Sustainable Computer Ownership Strategies for Rural Communities
- EVENT Sep 17: Rural Assembly Everywhere 2025
- September 17 MN Broadband Task Force Monthly Meeting
- October 15 MN Broadband Task Force Monthly Meeting
- November 13 MN Broadband Task Force Monthly Meeting
- December 18 MN Broadband Task Force Monthly Meeting
- OPPORTUNITY: Presidential AI Challenge – a sort of hackfest for students
A look at the Draft of Minnesota’s Final BEAD Proposal: Providers, projects, grants and matches
I finally took a deep dive into the Draft of Minnesota’s Final Proposal. It is a series of answers to very specific questions that help NTIA decide whether Minnesota (Office of Broadband Development (OBD) and subgrantees) will be able to adhere to the application requirements – despite changes made to the original requirements. OBD has been distributing finds for many years. In some ways, I’m sure that made it easier for them to create a proposal compared to other states. In some ways, the requirements do not assume the experience and expertise of local team, especially in understanding the needs and expectations of residents, communities and providers and that had to be frustrating. Below, I’ve selected lines in the proposals that jumped out for me. (I have also highlighted these sections in a PDF of the full draft proposal.
The attachments from the proposal were more interesting in terms of what we could see on the ground here once the application is approved. I’ve look at this further below.
Comments on the changes made to comply with NTIA’.., (Just a helpful reminder of what the proposal needed to address.)
- The NTIA’s Benefit of the Bargain grant application round took a technology neutral approach and prioritized the lowest cost technology. Minnesota conducted a technology neutral, transparent, and competitive Benefit of the Bargain grant application round that minimized BEAD outlay while prioritizing the lowest cost technology.
- 14 applicants submitted letters of interest including three new applicants.
- Minnesota only completed one round of subgrantee selection prior to the restructuring of the program which was focused on fiber projects only but estimates the restructured round lowered costs per BSL by at least $2,000 per BSL. Additionally, all awards included a 10% contingency to ensure all projects can complete should any barriers or delays occur. Reimbursement payment will be based on actual costs incurred and match requirements must meet a minimum 25% requirement (unless a match waiver is in place) or the amount proposed in its application if higher.
Info on Priority Broadband Projects… (Helpful again to get a reminder of definitions and see the impact of changes.)
- OBD applied the BEAD June 6 Restructuring Policy Notice definition of Priority Broadband Project: one that provides broadband service at speeds of no less than 100 megabits per second for downloads and 20 megabits per second for uploads, has a latency less than or equal to 100 milliseconds, and 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. The above applied was in accordance with the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the BEAD Restructuring Policy Notice. This definition required Minnesota to embrace technology neutrality and fully realize the benefit of the bargain.
- In partnership with its engineering consultants, OBD applied a principled evaluation process— assessing applications on speed, latency, and scalability—to certify the Restructured BEAD Round supports current and future connectivity needs of Minnesotans.
As a result of the Restructured BEAD Round, Minnesota benefited from:- Over $200 million reduction in original estimated deployment costs
- All Minnesota BSLs served using all available technologies and recommended awards including fiber-optic, LEO satellite services, hybrid fiber-coaxial, and terrestrial fixed wireless technology.
- Projects with capacity to meet today’s demand challenges as well as easily scale for future needs of residents, thriving businesses and tourism.
- Technology-neutral solutions that perform at the required speeds across diverse terrain, including dense tree coverage, undulating slopes, and varying altitudes, to meet unique needs of each BSL.
On Scalability… (Shows OBD’s experiential learning with 10+ years of distributing funds.)
- Minnesota’s technical review team also took into consideration the applicant’s track record of meeting comparable levels of demand relative to the number of BSLs applied to. If a direct example could not be reviewed, OBD looked for examples of the applicants scaling their technology at the required pace.
Finally, if the performance history did not have an example of the level of scale needed for the BEAD program, Minnesota considered if future scalability would depend on emerging technologies. Emerging technology could require additional regulatory approvals, such as zoning, spectrum, or orbital clearances, which may introduce uncertainty. Additionally, technologies with shorter operational lifespans may pose replacement risks that could impact long-term reliability and cost-effectiveness.
On reliability… (Explains to folks in other states some of the challenges unique to MN.)
- Additionally, Minnesota evaluated reliability of projects to apply the Priority Broadband Project definition based on the geography. Minnesota’s project areas span from bluffs and hills to farmland to glacier formed topography. Minnesota is also home to 60 dense state forest lands and two national forests with over 14.7 billion trees on 18 million acres of forest in eligible areas. These areas represent over 35% of the state.
Through the Minnesota Office of Broadband Development’s over 12 years of experience in broadband infrastructure projects, past grant-funded implementations revealed that tree canopy, rugged terrain, and slope can complicate installation and/or obstruct line-of-sight (LOS) paths. Broadband technologies with obstructed line-of-sight, specifically wireless and LEO technologies, can have signal degradation, increased latency, and reduced reliability.
To apply a Priority Broadband Project definition from a reliability perspective, OBD looked at topography by evaluating the change in elevation between neighboring areas (i.e., calculated an average slope). A higher average slope indicates that there are various changes of terrain impacting technologies needing line-of-sight. Average slope was calculated using elevation models from the US Geological Survey averaged per application area. Specifically, OBD applied analysis of average slope when reviewing wireless projects given past experience with State projects where varying slope impacted line-of-sight and service levels.
Besides elevation change, other common line-of-sight barriers are trees. Given approximately 63% of Minnesota is forest, and applications referenced tree canopy coverage, OBD factored tree canopy coverage in the Priority Broadband Project application and reliability of wireless and LEO proposed projects. Tree canopy impacts the deployment of broadband technology requiring direct line-of-sight. LEO performance is more reliable with an unobstructed sky view, while fixed wireless signals degrade when traveling through vegetation. As discovered through OBD’s
For over 12 years of experience in broadband infrastructure projects, past infrastructure projects using state grant funds have struggled due to these line-of- sight limitations.
As I mentioned above, the attachments were even more interesting:
- Draft BEAD Program Monitoring Plan Summary (PDF)
- Attachment 1 – Final Proposal Subgrantees (CSV)
- Attachment 2 – Final Proposal Deployment Projects* (XLSX)
- Attachment 3 – Final Proposal Locations* (CSV)
- Attachment 4 – Final Proposal No BEAD Locations (CSV)
- Attachment 14.1 EHP PEIS Memo Minnesota (PDF)
- Attachment 14.1 EHP Requirements (PDF)
In recent presentations, OBD had given some very high, interesting stats:

I’ve pulled out a few details from the spreadsheets on the providers and projects to dive on layer down. It sounds like information will be available by county soon.
| Provider | Number of Projects | BEAD support | Local Match |
| Ace Telephone Association | 3 | $3,251,767.01 | $12,114,069.09 |
| Amazon Kuiper Commercial Services LLC | 1 | $11,083,293.95 | $3,552,614.48 |
| AMG Technology Investment Group, LLC | 3 | $1,541,072.74 | $513,691.24 |
| Citizens Telecommunications Company of Minnesota, LLC | 1 | $4,120,986.57 | $1,359,925.57 |
| Comcast Cable Communications Management, LLC | 3 | $31,849,085.18 | $23,892,462.90 |
| Consolidated Telephone Co | 3 | $19,612,571.50 | $3,158,120.10 |
| East Central Energy | 4 | $38,197,738.19 | $32,779,933.28 |
| Federated Rural Electric Association | 2 | $13,181,452.05 | $4,393,821.38 |
| Gardonville Coop Telephone | 3 | $2,105,768.38 | $2,510,434.35 |
| IBT Group USA, LLC | 5 | $20,145,555.95 | $6,715,186.48 |
| Johnson Telephone Company | 1 | $2,458,152.40 | $819,384.13 |
| Mediacom LLC | 12 | $36,966,580.02 | $14,844,432.44 |
| Meeker Cooperative Light & Power Association | 2 | $18,393,142.72 | $7,431,489.46 |
| Midcontinent Communications | 15 | $79,433,616.68 | $40,045,300.04 |
| MiEnergy Cooperative | 4 | $19,961,129.83 | $6,647,082.52 |
| Mille Lacs Energy | 1 | $2,342,065.44 | $839,224.42 |
| Nuvera Communications, Inc | 7 | $27,310,211.96 | $9,306,946.76 |
| Paul Bunyan Rural Telephone Cooperative | 3 | $8,228,260.54 | $2,283,613.46 |
| Red River Rural Telephone Association | 1 | $7,040,810.70 | $11,000.00 |
| Space Exploration Technologies Corp. | 1 | $2,717,837.08 | $2,489,248.84 |
| Spectrum Mid-America, LLC | 5 | $8,483,460.52 | $3,328,352.12 |
| Tekstar Communications Inc. | 6 | $2,311,068.00 | $184,297.19 |
| Wikstrom Telephone Company, Incorporated | 3 | $4,221,779.43 | $1,407,261.28 |
| Woodstock Telephone Company | 1 | $1,440,000.00 | $475,200.00 |
Lismore Telephone and Nobles County kick of FTTP project funded by ReConnect and MN State Grants
Many local companies are working together to bring enhanced broadband services to underserved, rural Nobles County residents, using approximately 637 miles of fiber to provide high-speed internet to 1,550 households and sites.
Bill Loonan, general manager of Lismore Cooperative Telephone Company, met with Nobles County commissioners and other project stakeholders Wednesday morning in Bigelow to kick off the Fiber-to-the-Premises (FTTP) project.
They are working on a project in the area…
[Nobles County Board Chairman Gene] Metz said Nobles County invested $4 million into this project — money set aside from wind production tax revenues the county received.
“Our counties decided to spend their production tax to bring that service to everybody in the rural area,” Metz said.
Total project costs amount to $27.4 million. Funding for the project consists of 50% loan and 50% grant, with $13.7 million requested through grants and $5.7 million requested through loans. An additional $8 million is a cash substitution amount for the loan portion.
Lismore Cooperative applied for and received a grant of $19.4 million from the Rural Development Broadband ReConnect Program through the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Another grant was received through the Border-to-Border Broadband Development Grant program. In all, $208,598 was awarded specifically for the FTTP project in Bigelow.
More details…
The total FTTP project cost for Bigelow alone adds up to $695,328. The project area encompasses about 4.16 miles of buried fiber that will serve 113 locations, of which 19 are unserved and 94 are underserved.
Nobles County has awarded $35,000 toward the Bigelow project and the City of Bigelow has funded $15,000. The FTTP network is aimed at bridging the digital divide in the rural city of Bigelow.
