Arvig to invest line extension grant funding in rural fiber projects
News | Published on May 14, 2024 at 11:38am EDT | Author: henningmaster
0Arvig has been awarded grant funding from the Minnesota Office of Broadband Development’s Broadband Line Extension Connection Program to construct last-mile fiber network infrastructure for high-speed internet to 69 unserved locations.
Arvig was awarded grants totaling $543,244 from the program after submitting successful lowest-cost bids to provide fiber to the locations. Total project funding is $612,244, with Arvig investing $69,000 to cover additional project costs.
The 69 unserved locations consist of seven projects in these areas:
• Rural Callaway along 260th Avenue
• Along State Highway 210 east of Henning in Otter Tail County
• Rural Rochert, including Cotton Lake and the west side of Height of Land Lake
• Along U.S. Highway 59 and Tee Lake Road south of Detroit Lakes
• Rural Frazee along 360th Avenue
Construction on some projects could begin as soon as May 2024, with work projected to finish by May 2025.
The program requires locations to be served with internet speeds of at least 100Mbps download and 100Mbps upload. Arvig expects to exceed that requirement, with plans to provide locations access to speeds of up to 1 Gig download and 100Mbps upload. A location is considered unserved if they lack access to a wired service of at least 25Mbps download and 3 Mbps upload.
“The Line Extension Connection Program is a tremendous help to rural internet providers,” said David Arvig, Vice President and COO at Arvig. “This funding not only helps us close the broadband gap in rural Minnesota, but it also helps offset the higher deployment costs that often come with providing internet service to unserved areas in our state.”
The latest grant was awarded as part of Round 2 of the Line Extension Connection program’s funding process. In late 2023, Arvig accepted a separate grant from the program to extend internet service in 118 locations in several lakes-area communities.
“We encourage unserved homes and businesses in the region to apply for this program,” Arvig said. “Interest from the local community is the first step in getting fiber expansion projects like these going.”