FCC: Thousands Of West Virginians Will Have Ultra-Fast Broadband Over Next Decade

More than 119,000 additional West Virginia homes and businesses will have access to high-speed broadband internet over a 10-year period.

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) announced this week that an estimated 218,000 people living and working in West Virginia will gain access to high-speed broadband through an auction that was held by the commission called the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund Phase I.

“This historic auction is great news for the residents of so many rural West Virginia communities, who will get access to high-quality broadband service in areas that for too long have been on the wrong side of the digital divide,” said FCC Chairman Ajit Pai in a press release.

In West Virginia, the auction allocated $362 million in support of expanding broadband to unserved homes and businesses over the next decade.

Nearly all locations in West Virginia that were eligible for the auction will be receiving access to broadband with speeds of at least 100/20 Mbps (megabits per second), and 91 percent will have access to gigabit-speed internet, which, according to companies like Verizon and Comcast, is internet “in a league of its own.”

Gigabit broadband is one of the fastest internet speeds available and allows consumers to download large video files like an hour-long, high definition online class or webinar in seconds.

All 55 counties will experience some of this expansion, the FCC said.

“We structured this innovative and groundbreaking auction to prioritize bids for high-speed, low-latency services to deliver the best results for rural Americans, and the results show that this strategy worked,” Pai said. “This auction was the Commission’s single largest step ever taken toward delivering digital opportunity to every American and is another key success in our ongoing commitment to universal service.”

The Rural Digital Opportunity Fund Phase I auction is part of a broader effort by the FCC to close the digital divide in rural America. In October 2020, the commission adopted rules creating the 5G Fund for Rural America, which will distribute up to $9 billion over the next decade to bring 5G wireless broadband connectivity to rural America.

See below for a list of winning bidders, number of homes and businesses to be served, and total support for 10 years in West Virginia by county:

County Bidder Locations Support
Barbour Citynet West Virginia, LLC 43 $262,152
Barbour Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 687 $3,575,497
Barbour Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 218 $248,686
Barbour, WV Total 948 $4,086,335
Berkeley Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,309 $1,757,670
Berkeley Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 234 $357,751
Berkeley, WV Total 1,543 $2,115,421
Boone Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 121 $365,100
Boone Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 28 $42,808
Boone, WV Total 149 $407,908
Braxton Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,323 $6,317,011
Braxton Micrologic Inc. 662 $2,665,408
Braxton Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 391 $934,816
Braxton, WV Total 2,376 $9,917,234
Brooke Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 464 $1,097,310
Brooke Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 111 $169,702
Brooke, WV Total 575 $1,267,012
Cabell Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,257 $3,416,929
Cabell Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 125 $191,106
Cabell, WV Total 1,382 $3,608,035
Calhoun Citynet West Virginia, LLC 685 $1,433,970
Calhoun Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,199 $3,124,831
Calhoun Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 591 $424,071
Calhoun, WV Total 2,475 $4,982,872
Clay Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 2,614 $8,093,511
Clay Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 11 $19,698
Clay, WV Total 2,625 $8,113,209
Doddridge Citynet West Virginia, LLC 1,272 $5,066,358
Doddridge, WV Total 1,272 $5,066,358
Fayette Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 860 $2,381,586
Fayette Shenandoah Cable Television, LLC 419 $91,867
Fayette Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 2,058 $2,533,544
Fayette, WV Total 3,337 $5,006,997
Gilmer Citynet West Virginia, LLC 1,975 $12,327,245
Gilmer, WV Total 1,975 $12,327,245
Grant Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,717 $6,464,328
Grant Micrologic Inc. 931 $3,698,934
Grant, WV Total 2,648 $10,163,262
Greenbrier Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 2,372 $7,422,265
Greenbrier GigaBeam Networks, LLC 643 $1,178,080
Greenbrier Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 1,534 $2,693,754
Greenbrier, WV Total 4,549 $11,294,098
Hampshire Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 8,960 $27,177,927
Hampshire, WV Total 8,960 $27,177,927
Hancock Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 629 $884,464
Hancock Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 30 $45,865
Hancock, WV Total 659 $930,330
Hardy Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 240 $771,379
Hardy Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 3 $4,587
Hardy, WV Total 243 $775,966
Harrison Citynet West Virginia, LLC 115 $491,250
Harrison Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 504 $1,508,026
Harrison Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 115 $107,058
Harrison, WV Total 734 $2,106,334
Jackson Commnet Wireless, LLC 206 $196,952
Jackson Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 3,097 $12,976,070
Jackson Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 317 $394,961
Jackson, WV Total 3,620 $13,567,983
Jefferson Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 250 $359,970
Jefferson Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 122 $186,520
Jefferson, WV Total 372 $546,490
Kanawha Altice USA, Inc. 536 $125,528
Kanawha Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 956 $3,598,900
Kanawha Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 876 $1,339,271
Kanawha, WV Total 2,368 $5,063,699
Lewis Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,433 $6,787,610
Lewis Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 14 $21,404
Lewis, WV Total 1,447 $6,809,014
Lincoln Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,590 $6,742,714
Lincoln Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 5 $7,644
Lincoln, WV Total 1,595 $6,750,358
Logan GigaBeam Networks, LLC 497 $740,565
Logan, WV Total 497 $740,565
Marion Citynet West Virginia, LLC 940 $3,353,513
Marion Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 577 $1,318,035
Marion, WV Total 1,517 $4,671,548
Marshall Citynet West Virginia, LLC 39 $102,048
Marshall Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 2,131 $9,038,010
Marshall, WV Total 2,170 $9,140,058
Mason Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 5,253 $15,083,241
Mason Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 5 $7,644
Mason, WV Total 5,258 $15,090,885
McDowell Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 553 $3,145,554
McDowell Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 285 $435,722
McDowell, WV Total 838 $3,581,276
Mercer Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,653 $7,024,422
Mercer Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 388 $605,448
Mercer, WV Total 2,041 $7,629,870
Mineral Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 2,580 $8,990,083
Mineral, WV Total 2,580 $8,990,083
Mingo GigaBeam Networks, LLC 1,137 $869,882
Mingo, WV Total 1,137 $869,882
Monongalia Citynet West Virginia, LLC 674 $1,014,588
Monongalia Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 4,554 $7,188,549
Monongalia, WV Total 5,228 $8,203,137
Monroe GigaBeam Networks, LLC 4,733 $18,446,130
Monroe Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 37 $73,332
Monroe, WV Total 4,770 $18,519,462
Morgan Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 2,910 $6,377,781
Morgan, WV Total 2,910 $6,377,781
Nicholas Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 4,632 $6,339,390
Nicholas Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 276 $311,493
Nicholas, WV Total 4,908 $6,650,883
Ohio Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 276 $1,016,145
Ohio Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 250 $382,212
Ohio, WV Total 526 $1,398,358
Pendleton Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,011 $7,446,186
Pendleton Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 13 $19,875
Pendleton, WV Total 1,024 $7,466,061
Pleasants Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,070 $5,290,686
Pleasants, WV Total 1,070 $5,290,686
Pocahontas Citynet West Virginia, LLC 747 $1,791,105
Pocahontas Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 2,139 $6,290,076
Pocahontas, WV Total 2,886 $8,081,181
Preston Digital Connections Inc. dba PRODIGI 4,771 $8,583,001
Preston, WV Total 4,771 $8,583,001
Putnam Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 2,607 $8,649,259
Putnam Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 133 $162,311
Putnam, WV Total 2,740 $8,811,570
Raleigh Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 367 $1,471,210
Raleigh Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 148 $226,270
Raleigh, WV Total 515 $1,697,480
Randolph Citynet West Virginia, LLC 99 $411,870
Randolph Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,963 $6,122,338
Randolph Micrologic Inc. 483 $3,671,706
Randolph Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 51 $218,474
Randolph, WV Total 2,596 $10,424,388
Ritchie Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 381 $1,758,723
Ritchie Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 16 $77,068
Ritchie, WV Total 397 $1,835,790
Roane Citynet West Virginia, LLC 2,937 $12,042,244
Roane Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,036 $2,151,926
Roane, WV Total 3,973 $14,194,170
Summers Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 966 $3,334,366
Summers GigaBeam Networks, LLC 2,061 $6,833,133
Summers Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 161 $434,660
Summers, WV Total 3,188 $10,602,159
Taylor Citynet West Virginia, LLC 442 $1,297,396
Taylor Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 36 $58,818
Taylor, WV Total 478 $1,356,214
Tucker Citynet West Virginia, LLC 71 $227,082
Tucker Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 2,228 $3,143,133
Tucker, WV Total 2,299 $3,370,215
Tyler Citynet West Virginia, LLC 660 $1,309,788
Tyler Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,624 $5,585,738
Tyler, WV Total 2,284 $6,895,526
Upshur Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,626 $6,070,519
Upshur Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 49 $90,158
Upshur, WV Total 1,675 $6,160,677
Wayne Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,509 $6,216,773
Wayne Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 648 $906,818
Wayne, WV Total 2,157 $7,123,591
Webster Citynet West Virginia, LLC 166 $426,630
Webster Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,631 $3,788,028
Webster, WV Total 1,797 $4,214,658
Wetzel Citynet West Virginia, LLC 250 $1,208,436
Wetzel Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 1,345 $3,988,175
Wetzel, WV Total 1,595 $5,196,611
Wirt Citynet West Virginia, LLC 527 $3,950,754
Wirt Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 700 $3,728,292
Wirt, WV Total 1,227 $7,679,046
Wood Citynet West Virginia, LLC 1,818 $6,800,430
Wood, WV Total 1,818 $6,800,430
Wyoming Frontier Communications Corporation, DIP 487 $2,246,659
Wyoming Space Exploration Technologies Corp. 58 $88,673
Wyoming, WV Total 545 $2,335,333
TOTAL 119,267 $362,066,660

WVDE Floats Plan To Collect Student Data To Address Broadband Disparities

The West Virginia Department of Education wants to gather data on K-12 students across the state, hoping to pinpoint where digital and broadband access is lacking. The hope is to use the data to highlight specific students’ needs when they are learning from home.

As more students must study online in the ongoing pandemic, such access is crucial and impacts families who live in areas without connectivity. The WVDE wants to assist this effort to find gaps and fix them.

“The broadband issues across the state, in regard to education, became glaringly aware to us in March when we had to go to remote learning,” said Tim Conzett, senior administrator with the Office of Data Management and Information Systems Directory at the state Department of Education.

West Virginia Board of Education members Wednesday heard an update on broadband in the state including on the new Kids Connect Initiative that created more than 1,000 WiFi hotspots statewide for K-12 and higher education students.

Officials discussed how they hope to expand this service as well as broadband as a whole. New technology, like high-flying balloons and satellites, and new partnerships, such as with Facebook, are coming, according to the agency. But officials also noted expanding is expensive and that point is exacerbated due to West Virginia’s geography.

“Most of our schools are fairly well suited for equity when they’re in the school,” Conzett said. “But it’s when they’re out of the schools that is the problem.”

Conzett told board members of a new proposal on data collection for digital equity. The proposal would collect data on all K-12 students in West Virginia to identify technology needs in homes and could guide future internet expansion in the state.

“One of the things that this could do for us is to help plot areas where we can see an impact and help perhaps direct some of the deployment of broadband moving in the future,” Conzett said.

This data would be tied to individual students, he explained, and would highlight which homes need more support – whether that’s with a device like an iPad or for broadband needs.

“If we have that kind of information, we can help in counties that are not yet quite to a one-to-one device situation that they provide for their students,” he said.

The data, according to Conzett, would be placed as dots on a map that would show where there are the greatest broadband challenges.

“If I’ve got students that don’t have internet access at home, and they show as dots, and that’s basically all it’s going to be is a dot, then I can see clusters, and where those clusters are, I can perhaps then provide that information to a provider to say, ‘hey, look, you’ve got 50 within X mile radius,’” Conzett said. “So, as far as equity is concerned, it’s more about the inequity that a student is seeing from a home use or a home perspective.”

One board member asked if the data collection could compromise individuals’ privacy.

“That is a good question,” Conzett answered. “Part of that has to be in the language and the communication that we provide. As far as the collection is concerned, again, it’s not a matter of ‘Student A does and Student B doesn’t,’ it’s a matter of being able to help provide guidance to provide the services for those students.”

Under the Student Data Accessibility Transparency and Accountability Act of 2014, the proposal is required to have a 60 day public comment period.

Residents can submit comments on the proposal on the West Virginia Department of Education’s website.

Facebook to Help Expand Broadband Internet Service in West Virginia

Facebook says it’s going to help expand broadband internet in West Virginia.

The social media company announced a plan Monday, March 4, to build a high-capacity fiber optic cable network in the state that internet providers will then be able to access.

“It’s almost like an interstate for the internet,” Kevin Salvadori, Facebook’s director of network investments, said of the cable system.

Work on the roughly 275-mile cable route is scheduled to start this year and is expected to take about 18 to 24 months to finish, according to the company. The idea is for the cable to start in the western part of the state, move through the Kanawha Valley, then turn northwest into the Appalachia region. Salvadori said the company is confident it will be able to install the cable through the state’s mountainous terrain.

West Virginia officials cheered the deal as a way to move the state’s economy forward.

“We absolutely have got something here that will open us up, will be the beginning of something that’s really, really significant,” said Gov. Jim Justice, a Republican.

U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, a West Virginia Republican, said the move will give rural parts of the state better internet access.

“Today’s announcement with Facebook is an important step toward ensuring our state has the critical infrastructure to support broadband deployment, and I know it will help so many in our state, especially the rural communities that are unserved,” she said in a statement.

The Federal Communications Commission says 82 percent of West Virginians have access to fixed broadband internet speeds.

Justice: Broadband Route to Cross Through West Virginia

West Virginia’s governor says broadband network operator Zayo Group will build a fiber network crossing 200 miles of the state.

Gov. Jim Justice said Thursday that the broadband route will link Columbus, Ohio, with Ashburn, Virginia, which is near Dulles International Airport. New media outlets report that details of the agreement were not available.

Jack Waters, chief technology officer for the Colorado-based company, says construction of the network will begin early next year and will take two to three years to complete.

Justice says the state will be exchanging access to right-of-ways for a “significant amount of high-quality fiber.”

The governor announced in September that West Virginia would provide broadband developers with free access to state right-of-ways as a way to encourage construction of broadband networks in the state.

FCC Chief to Attend Ohio-West Virginia Broadband Summit

The commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission is slated to attend a broadband summit next month in Ohio.

The Parkersburg News and Sentinel reports that Mignon Clyburn will attend the Appalachian Ohio-West Virginia Connectivity Summit and Town Hall on July 18 in Marietta.

The commissioner is attending as part of a nationwide listening tour about limited Internet access in rural areas.

The event targets broadband access in southeast Ohio and northern West Virginia.

The town hall with Clyburn will take place at Marietta High School and will be open to the public. Guests must register to attend.

The summit’s workshop will take place at Washington State Community College.

Broadband Expansion Passes in House

Thirty percent of West Virginians do not have access to basic broadband services as defined by federal law, according to the Federal Communications Commission.

When you look at just the rural parts of West Virginia, that percent increases to 48.

House Bill 3093 aims to change that.

One of the biggest parts of the bill is it allows communities to form ‘internet co-opts.” These ‘co-opts,’ or cooperatives, would work together with a service provider to become their community’s own provider – thus reaching areas that may not have access to broadband.

Republican Delegate Roger Hanshaw of Clay County is the bill’s lead sponsor. While the bill has seen wide bi-partisan support, those who have voiced some concerns over the bill have mainly been internet service providers, which Hanshaw addressed in his floor speech.

“This is a bill that’s intended to promote competition, there’s no doubt about that,” Hanshaw noted, “but it’s a bill intended to do so in places where competition doesn’t exist. The formation of cooperatives; the formation of cooperatives is intended to happen and will happen in places where there is not service. People who are receiving service now have no motivation to avail themselves of this process and are unlikely to do so.”

Only one other delegate spoke to the bill on the floor today. It passed 97 to 2 and now heads to the Senate for further consideration.

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