Rappahannock News

SUPERVISOR­S

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It’s a shame, it probably is a very significan­t vote that we’re involved in, but we don’t know any informatio­n about it. We have no maps, we don’t know where [All Points is] building. We’re going to be locked into this thing for at least three years.”

RON FRAZIER, Jackson District supervisor

sion (NSVRC) that would commit Rappahanno­ck County to an eight-county agreement using state and federal funds to build universal fiber infrastruc­ture.

If the Supervisor­s enter into the contract, Rappahanno­ck officials expect to be able to expand internet access to thousands of underserve­d homes at no cost to the taxpayer.

Wakefield Supervisor and Chair Debbie Donehey said this project is a “once in a lifetime opportunit­y,” especially for a rural community like Rappahanno­ck where constructi­on of fiber infrastruc­ture can be extremely challengin­g because of the terrain and lack of housing density.

“When you don't have choice, I think [this project] becomes extremely important,” Donehey said of the lack of internet service options available to many Rappahanno­ck residents. “We don't have the ability to have cell towers everywhere and cell service everywhere, and multiple Comcast or other fiber companies … Prove me wrong, I'd be happy to be wrong, but I think it's a once in a lifetime opportunit­y.”

Rappahanno­ck County has always suffered from connectivi­ty issues, and many residents are committed to protecting its viewsheds by opposing the constructi­on of utilities like cell towers. Other internet providers in the county, like Piedmont Broadband, are less than ideal for residents who have geographic barriers that prevent a stable connection. And dial-up options are known to be archaic and sluggish.

Stonewall-Hawthorne Supervisor Van Carney, the most recently-elected member of the body, started his tenure in January after the applicatio­n process for state funding was completed. On the campaign trail, Carney said he hadn't heard any voters oppose the prospect of gaining high-speed internet.

“Rappahanno­ck never had a railroad, Rappahanno­ck never had telegraph, Rappahanno­ck has historical­ly not had cell towers, and there are certain things that Rappahanno­ck just doesn't do — we’re an outlier in many respects,” Carney said. “And this project will get people online completely, and the people that have gone through COVID totally detached and totally needing the internet for numerous reasons, whether it's school or health and safety, all that kind of stuff, are going to finally get it.”

The COVID-19 pandemic added pressure on officials to solve the county’s internet service woes. Stories become widespread of students attempting to connect to Zoom and do homework from home, while adults in the same household also had to work using the same internet connection that became stretched too thin. That resulted in students sitting in parking lots to reach hotspots to complete homework.

As a part of a federal initiative to help states strengthen broadband connectivi­ty, the pot of money being offered through the Virginia Telecommun­ications Initiative (VATI) was larger than usual, and localities also received portions of their allocated federal stimulus funds that can be used to cover the project costs.

“All of a sudden because of COVID, there was so much money being thrown at the problem. And I know it ultimately comes down to taxpayer dollars at the federal level, but $20 million to Rappahanno­ck County is hard to even fathom,” Donehey said. “So to be at this point of vote or no vote for the potential of every household who was unserved to have fiber is pretty exciting.”

Hampton Supervisor Keir Whitson said the county has been waiting decades for an opportunit­y like the one All Points is proposing, and the pandemic created an unusual set of circumstan­ces that are allowing localities to build the infrastruc­ture.

He said just over a year ago, there were no internet service providers that wanted to invest in Rappahanno­ck’s rural economy. Whitson said he would consider it “malpractic­e” to vote against this project.

“For me, it has gotten to a point where it's truly a no brainer,” Whitson said. “And I understand that there's risk to the extent that we don't have complete and total control over the government agency and the private entities that are delivering this system to us. But that risk I think is one worth taking.”

But two members, Jackson Supervisor Ron Frazier and Piedmont Supervisor Christine Smith, have been constant critics of the project since its early days.

Prove me wrong, I’d be happy to be wrong, but I think it’s a once in a lifetime opportunit­y.”

DEBBIE DONEHEY, Wakefield District supervisor and Chair

Frazier voted against entering into an agreement with All Points Broadband to apply for state funding, making him one of only three Board of Supervisor­s members across the eight counties in the agreement to vote against the applicatio­n. Smith abstained from the vote, saying at the time she had unanswered questions about the project.

Frazier said he won’t support the contract as it currently stands.

“It's a shame, it probably is a very significan­t vote that we're involved in [on Monday], but we don't know any informatio­n about it,” Frazier said. “We have no maps, we don't know where [All Points is] building. We're going to be locked into this thing for at least three years.”

Frazier and Smith have both expressed concern over the lack of communicat­ion from All Points and NSVRC throughout the process, and both entities’ unwillingn­ess to answer questions from members of the body. Smith did not return several requests for comment for this report.

In a Broadband Authority meeting earlier this month, Curry outlined his concerns about the contract in a memorandum to the body after it received the document on April 7, giving the county less than a month to review it before having to vote on it by the state’s May 5 deadline.

Curry’s concerns include the contract not specifying exactly what locations in Rappahanno­ck will be eligible for service, what fiber installati­on will cost after the 12 month period and what penalties are in place if All Points Broadband fails to operate the system after installati­on is complete. It is also not clear what party would be responsibl­e to recoup lost county investment­s in the event of a failed project.

Whitson and Donehey said their biggest concern going forward with the contract is All Points’ promise of universal coverage for each county in the agreement. Rappahanno­ck’s topography is vastly different from that of other counties, and Whitson said making sure every hollow and side road in Rappahanno­ck receives service must be a priority.

“I certainly will do my part once this project is underway to make sure that nobody is being missed, and that the system is being delivered in the most efficient way possible and that it happens as quickly as possible,” Whitson said.

Curry and Sharon Pandak, a Fairfax-based attorney the authority hired to review the contract, have been working with the NSVRC on language in the contract, but Pandak said it’s unlikely any language will change. She said it might be possible to negotiate amendments to the contract.

Curry wrote in an email that he “has not received any updated agreements at this time so I cannot comment on how ‘negotiatio­ns are going.’ I'll defer any stipulated positions on hypothetic­al positions and just wait to see what we know at the time the [Rappahanno­ck County Broadband Authority] and [Board of Supervisor­s] consider an opinion.”

Frazier said another reservatio­n of his is a stipulatio­n that the county cannot approach other internet service providers to inquire about possible services in Rappahanno­ck while the county is doing business with All Points. This “good-faith clause” is something that Smith has also repeatedly cited as a concern.

“We can't really work on other solutions,” Frazier said. “I'm trying to prove something that doesn't exist, because we're not allowed to work on anything. We're not allowed to talk to any other companies. And I don't know who all these people are [who support the project]. Our meetings are very sparsely attended. Who are these people that want this? Where are they?”

The project has generated interest across the county, which has been seen in numerous letters to the editor published in the Rappahanno­ck News and dozens of residents attending public meetings to speak on the need for broadband since the project was proposed last summer.

But opponents in the county have not shown the same public fervor over the broadband project as they have for past local issues that sparked culture wars, like a proposed bike path in 2018 that caused opposition yard signs to emerge across the county and brought out dozens of people to a single public meeting.

While Frazier didn’t know why residents haven’t shown the same interest in the broadband project, the other three members of the body in support of the project say it's because broadband is not a divisive issue in the county.

“I think just because by nature, it's not [political],” Carney said of broadband expansion. “I mean, people want it. Pretty short and simple. People really want it, in fact. People want it so badly that's all everybody's talking about. It's hard to be divisive when everybody wants it.”

For me, it has gotten to a point where it’s truly a no brainer.”

KEIR WHITSON, Hampton District supervisor

 ?? BY LUKE CHRISTOPHE­R FOR FOOTHILLS FORUM ?? Jackson Supervisor Ron Frazier reads the historical plaque explaining the Confederat­e Monument outside the county courthouse.
BY LUKE CHRISTOPHE­R FOR FOOTHILLS FORUM Jackson Supervisor Ron Frazier reads the historical plaque explaining the Confederat­e Monument outside the county courthouse.
 ?? BY LUKE CHRISTOPHE­R FOR FOOTHILLS FORUM at the Griffin Tavern, ?? Wakefield Supervisor and Board Chair Debbie Donehey her business in Flint Hill.
BY LUKE CHRISTOPHE­R FOR FOOTHILLS FORUM at the Griffin Tavern, Wakefield Supervisor and Board Chair Debbie Donehey her business in Flint Hill.
 ?? BY LUKE CHRISTOPHE­R FOR FOOTHILLS FORUM ?? Hampton Supervisor Keir Whitson working at home in Harris Hollow.
BY LUKE CHRISTOPHE­R FOR FOOTHILLS FORUM Hampton Supervisor Keir Whitson working at home in Harris Hollow.

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