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Virginia
Related: About this forumVirginia is trying to get broadband to 162,000 locations without it. Old utility poles may get in the way.
ECONOMY
Virginia is trying to get broadband to 162,000 locations without it. Old utility poles may get in the way.
Virginia has $750 million in federal funding for expanding broadband. Delays in making hundreds of thousands of utility poles ready for high-speed fiber could threaten funding.
by Tad Dickens
January 3, 2024
Crews work on an expansion of Verizon's broadband network in Bedford County. Photo courtesy of John Putney.
Hundreds of thousands of utility poles, hundreds of millions in funding and increasingly tight deadlines are part of Virginias quest to bring broadband to far-flung rural locations. ... The commonwealth has been among the nations leaders in deploying internet, state leaders and observers say. But the goal of bringing universal high-speed access with lots of federal and state money in play is facing delays.
The latest delays center on stringing broadband fiber across electric utility poles, some of which are so out-of-date that they need to be replaced. Issues between internet service providers and pole owners include how much the work will cost and who will pay for it.
While the state supplies the money, funneling about $750 million to broadband in 2022 alone, it has no legal standing to play referee between the internet service providers (ISPs) and the pole owners. Heres the dichotomy: The ISPs primary task is to get the lines to the people, but electric utilities say their key focus is on providing safe and reliable power.
That difference is causing slowdowns with installing aerial wire, in particular. Throw the logistics of pole updates and workforce shortages into the mix, and Virginia officials are worried about whether theyll get broadband fiber to all of the estimated 162,000 still-unserved locations before the end of 2026, when federal COVID-19 relief funding will expire. Unspent money would go back to the federal government.
{snip}
Source: House of Delegates Appropriations Committee report.
{snip}
TAD DICKENS
tad@cardinalnews.org
Tad Dickens is technology reporter for Cardinal News. He previously worked for the Bristol Herald Courier... More by Tad Dickens
Virginia is trying to get broadband to 162,000 locations without it. Old utility poles may get in the way.
Virginia has $750 million in federal funding for expanding broadband. Delays in making hundreds of thousands of utility poles ready for high-speed fiber could threaten funding.
by Tad Dickens
January 3, 2024
Crews work on an expansion of Verizon's broadband network in Bedford County. Photo courtesy of John Putney.
Hundreds of thousands of utility poles, hundreds of millions in funding and increasingly tight deadlines are part of Virginias quest to bring broadband to far-flung rural locations. ... The commonwealth has been among the nations leaders in deploying internet, state leaders and observers say. But the goal of bringing universal high-speed access with lots of federal and state money in play is facing delays.
The latest delays center on stringing broadband fiber across electric utility poles, some of which are so out-of-date that they need to be replaced. Issues between internet service providers and pole owners include how much the work will cost and who will pay for it.
While the state supplies the money, funneling about $750 million to broadband in 2022 alone, it has no legal standing to play referee between the internet service providers (ISPs) and the pole owners. Heres the dichotomy: The ISPs primary task is to get the lines to the people, but electric utilities say their key focus is on providing safe and reliable power.
That difference is causing slowdowns with installing aerial wire, in particular. Throw the logistics of pole updates and workforce shortages into the mix, and Virginia officials are worried about whether theyll get broadband fiber to all of the estimated 162,000 still-unserved locations before the end of 2026, when federal COVID-19 relief funding will expire. Unspent money would go back to the federal government.
{snip}
Source: House of Delegates Appropriations Committee report.
{snip}
TAD DICKENS
tad@cardinalnews.org
Tad Dickens is technology reporter for Cardinal News. He previously worked for the Bristol Herald Courier... More by Tad Dickens
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Virginia is trying to get broadband to 162,000 locations without it. Old utility poles may get in the way. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Jan 2024
OP
bucolic_frolic
(46,764 posts)1. It ain't just Virginia
SWBTATTReg
(24,011 posts)2. You got that right. It is happening in MO too, where way out of the way locations still don't have
highspeed broadband, other similar services. I hadn't heard that the poles themselves were the issue, just that they were having issues, mainly funding. It seems like in MO, they have been doing this forever! I was very happy when they finally got my place and my parents' place finally wired for it. One issue, was the number of different telephone companies involved in these very rural areas. In parent's area, there are two very rural phone companies and Sprint too, just in that area alone, population probably under 20 people.
Chainfire
(17,757 posts)3. We need it in Florida in the rural areas. Our governor has other priorities.
Like restricting abortion and waging war against Mickey Mouse.
phylny
(8,572 posts)4. I live in Bedford County and we were damned lucky to get Broadband
right as the pandemic started. It was a nightmare before we got it.
Very grateful.