Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Service providers team up to bring internet to Waynesburg University and 2,000 homes,

- By Kris B. Mamula

A nonprofit outfit in Pennsylvan­ia and a private company from West Virginia — both in the broadband business — are partnering to bring high-speed internet access to a poorly served area of southwest Pennsylvan­ia.

Harrisburg nonprofit Keystone Initiative for Network Based Education and Research and Morgantown, W.Va.-based ClearFiber Communicat­ions are planning to string an 81mile broadband cable through parts of Washington and

Greene counties and Waynesburg University.

That cable, which is expected to serve more than 2,000 homes, will offer 100 gigabit capability and is scheduled to be ready by early 2021, according to Nathan Flood, Kinber’s interim director and CEO.

The 81-mile cable will end near California, Pa., where Kinber already provides service to California University of Pennsylvan­ia.

“Other organizati­ons have expressed interest in connecting,” Mr. Flood said. “There are

other opportunit­ies that we haven’t finalized yet.”

Greene and Washington counties are rural or semirural parts of southwest Pennsylvan­ia with spotty or slow internet speeds, according to a study last year by the Center for Rural Pennsylvan­ia, a Harrisburg-based nonprofit.

Although Kinber doesn’t serve residentia­l customers, its maximum speed of 100 gigabit of data transfer per second — or 100,000 megabits — is exponentia­lly faster than the average internet speed in Greene County, 7.2 megabits per second, or Washington County, 10.3 megabits per second.

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission­s defines 25 megabits per second as broadband access. Slower speeds can mean extended time downloadin­g informatio­n or images from the internet, making research difficult for students and reducing the quality of Netflix movies.

The public-private partnershi­p was made possible by a $200,000 grant organized through the office of state Rep. Pam Snyder, D-Greene County, who said she’d been working on pulling together the project for well over a year.

“When it finally came together, I had tears rolling down my cheeks,” said Ms. Snyder, an outspoken advocate for expanding broadband services to rural Pennsylvan­ia. “We must find solutions to these problems. This is every bit as important as water, sewer, electricit­y.”

Kinber, which was establishe­d in 2010 with a $99.6 million grant from the National Telecommun­ications and Informatio­n Administra­tion, is a nonprofit membership organizati­on that’s dedicated to expanding digital access for research and education. The University of Pittsburgh, Carnegie Mellon University, Duquesne University and Community College of Allegheny County are among Kinber clients.

Although Waynesburg University “already has excellent broadband service,” Stacey Brodak, vice president for institutio­nal advancemen­t and university relations, said in an email that the new line will be a fiber backbone necessary to bring broadband to businesses beyond the university.

The cable will stretch from California University of Pennsylvan­ia through Washington, Pa.; continue south through Waynesburg; and eventually end in Morgantown. ClearFiber will construct the mostly overhead cable, with Kinber sharing line capacity.

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