Chattanooga Times Free Press

Volunteer, Bledsoe Telephone move ahead on broadband projects in selected areas

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

In the shadow of Gig City, rural telephone and power suppliers are taking steps to broaden their broadband coverage to give Gig service to more rural parts of the state.

Volunteer Energy Corp., the state’s second biggest electric co-op which added natural gas and propane service seven years ago, began this month to offer high-speed broadband and television to a limited area just south of Hopewell, Tenn., in Bradley County. Based upon the success of the $200,000 pilot program to about 140 homes, Volunteer Energy spokesman David Murphy said the co-op hopes to expand its broadband service, working with Twin Lakes Telephone Cooperativ­e in Baxter, Tenn.

“We wanted the cost to be as low as possible for the pilot, so we selected the area around the Hopewell Electrical Substation,” Murphy said. “The Hopewell Substation already had a fiber connection for our SCADA control.”

In nearby Sequatchie and Bledsoe counties,

the Bledsoe Telephone Cooperativ­e (BTC) is also using nearly $7.9 million of USDA Rural Developmen­t loans to provide broadband fiber service to nearly 2,000 subscriber­s in and around Dunlap and Pikeville. The upgrades will improve traffic routing, overall functional­ity and network security, BTC engineer Matthew Boynton said.

“We anticipate doing our fiber optic build-out with this loan money, probably over the next couple of years,” Boynton said. “We already have a contract to build 54.8 miles of fiber that will pass just over 1,900 customers.”

Boynton said Bledsoe Telephone has had a long history with the USDA loan program and is sharing in a total of $207 million in loans and grants the agency announced earlier this month through USDA’s Telecommun­ications Program, which has provided financial assistance to more than 500 telecommun­ications providers nationwide.

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission estimates 34 million Americans in rural communitie­s lack access to broadband connection­s, including 34 percent of Tennessee’s rural residents.

The American Recovery Act, the stimulus bill adopted in 2009, provided some money for broadband investment­s and the FCC’s Connect America Fund and the USDA’s Rural Utility Service provides both grants and loans for telecom investment­s in underserve­d areas.

But to supplement those programs in Tennessee, the General Assembly created a $30 million fund to support rural broadband initiative­s with grants to aid broadband providers over the next three years. The bill was spearheade­d by the legislator­s who represent Bradley County — state Reps. Kevin Brooks and Dan Howell along with state Sens. Mike Bell and Todd Gardenhire.

Volunteer and other electric co-ops and phone co-ops without existing services have applied for the grants, which are now being reviewed by the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t (ECD).

“Addressing broadband infrastruc­ture gaps is a top priority for the department,” ECD spokesman Scott Harrison said earlier this year. “It’s critically important for our residents and small businesses to be able to compete in an increasing­ly digital economy.”

Volunteer moved ahead with the Hopewell project ahead of any of the state grants to help assess the costs and interest in highspeed broadband in areas where such service is now lacking.

“VEC wanted to execute a broadband pilot in an area with a served and an underserve­d population (to help determine the relative interests and costs), Murphy said. “Bigsby Creek had no prior broadband service options. Camelot had at least one prior broadband service option. The uptake from the new service area will help VEC determine the feasibilit­y of providing broadband to additional areas.”

Despite such initiative­s, high-speed, fiber optic connection­s remain the exception more than the rule in most rural parts of Tennessee, primarily because of the higher costs of serving less populated areas.

By contrast in Chattanoog­a, EPB since 2010 has extended fiber optic connecctio­ns to all of its more than 160,000 customers, allowing up to 10-gig internet service to all homes and businesses in Chattanoog­a.

Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@timesfree press.com or at 423-757-630.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY BEN BENTON ?? Bledsoe Telephone Cooperativ­e technician Houston Thomas checks the connection­s at a test home for digital internet, television and phone service in Pikeville, Tenn. BTC is working to complete the first phase of the project in Bledsoe and Sequatchie...
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY BEN BENTON Bledsoe Telephone Cooperativ­e technician Houston Thomas checks the connection­s at a test home for digital internet, television and phone service in Pikeville, Tenn. BTC is working to complete the first phase of the project in Bledsoe and Sequatchie...

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