Marin Independent Journal

Lots of broadband money but expansion finds speed bumps

- By Wilson Ring and Mark Gillispie

In the remote Vermont community of Victory, Town Clerk Tracey Martel says she's regularly frustrated watching a spinning circle on her computer while she tries to complete even the most basic municipal chores online.

“Fast internet would be really good,” said Martel, whose community of about 70 was one of the last in Vermont to receive electricit­y almost 60 years ago. The DSL service she has now works for basic internet, but it can be spotty and it doesn't allow users to access all the benefits of the interconne­cted world.

About 5 miles (8 kilometers) away as the bird flies in the neighborin­g community along Miles Pond in the town of Concord, a new fiber optic line is beginning to bring truly high-speed internet to residents of the remote area known as the Northeast Kingdom.

“I'm looking forward to high-speed internet, streaming TV,” said Concord resident John Gilchrist, as a crew ran fiber optic cable to his home earlier this year.

The fiber optic cable that is beginning to serve the remote part of Concord and will one day serve Victory is being provided through NEK Broadband, a utility of nearly 50 Vermont towns working to bring high speed internet service to the most remote parts of the state.

NEK Broadband Executive Director Christa Shute said the group's business plan calls for offering services to all potential customers within five years, but given current supply constraint­s and the shortage of trained technician­s, she's beginning to think that goal isn't achievable.

“I think our build will take seven to 10 years,” she said.

Congress has appropriat­ed tens of billions of dollars for a variety of programs to help fill the digital gap exposed by the pandemic when millions of people were locked down in their homes with no way to study, work or get online medical care.

The first of those funds are reaching municipali­ties, businesses and other groups involved in the effort, but some say supply chain issues, labor shortages and geographic constraint­s will slow the rollout.

The demand for fiber optic cable goes beyond wired broadband to homes and businesses. The cable will help provide the 5G technology now being rolled out by wireless communicat­ions providers.

But there's a bottleneck in the supply. Michael Bell, of Corning Optical Communicat­ions based in Charlotte, North Carolina, said the issue lies with supply of the protective jacket that surrounds the hair-thin strands of glass that carry informatio­n on beams of light.

Currently, some working to expand broadband say delays in getting the fiber optic cable they need can exceed a year.

“Based on the capacity we're adding, and the capacity we see our competitor­s adding, wait times will start going down dramatical­ly as the year progresses and into next year,” Bell said. “And I think as we get into next year, the lead time for most customers is going to be well under a year.”

Meanwhile, there's a labor shortage for installing the cable. Many in the industry are setting up educationa­l programs to train people to work with the fiber, said Jim Hayes, of the Santa Monica, California­based Fiber Optic Associatio­n.

“It needs to be done now,” Hayes said. “We're going to need to train probably ten techs for every tech that we've got who's competent to lead them.”

The Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act, the $1.5 trillion infrastruc­ture bill passed last fall, says areas that receive broadband speeds of less than 25 megabit downloads and 3 megabit uploads are considered unserved. To qualify for different federal grants through the infrastruc­ture bill and other programs, most finished projects must offer speeds of at least 100 megabits per second for downloads. Upload speeds differ, but most federal grants have a minimum of 20 megabit uploads.

For comparison, it takes 80 seconds to download a 1 gigabyte video at the speed of 100 megabits per second. It takes four times as long — 320 seconds, or more than 5 minutes — at 25 megabits per second.

The National Telecommun­ications and Informatio­n Administra­tion — a part of the Agency of Commerce, which is funding broadband projects across the country through the infrastruc­ture law — is neutral about about how internet service providers reach the speed requiremen­ts. Many providers say the key to bringing true highspeed internet service to the entire country is to install fiber optic cable to every nook and cranny.

Deploying high-speed internet in tribal communitie­s and rural areas across the western United States where distances dwarf those of rural northern New England will be even more challengin­g.

Broadband access on the Navajo Nation — the largest reservatio­n in the U.S. at 27,000 square miles (69,930 square kilometers) in Arizona, New Mexico and Utah — is a mix of dial-up, satellite service, wireless, fiber and mobile data.

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