Tim Walker
AMR Reporter
At the February 8 Pocahontas County Broadband Council Meeting, Melissa O’Brien, of the firm Thompson and Litton (T&L), announced that their Line Extension and Deployment 2 Broadband Grant (LEAD 2) award will provide about 50 miles of fiber to 601 addresses, mostly in the county between Mace and the Scenic Highway. Citynet will be the Internet Service Provider for that grant. LEAD is part of the West Virginia Broadband Investment Plan using funds provided by the West Virginia Legislature
The second grant, a LEAD 3 grant, was awarded to Spruce Knob Seneca Rocks Telephone Company – SKSRT – and will cover areas in northern Pocahontas County, including Durbin, Green Bank and Arbovale. This grant will provide nine miles of fiber to 117 addresses.
Also at this meeting, 911 Director Mike O’Brien told the council members that his counterparts in Bath, Highland and Allegheny counties in Virginia have told him they have experienced recent growth in populations which they believe is directly related to the recent increase in good Internet service in those counties. Sarah Riley added that she has heard the same thing from her contacts in Richwood.
Regarding the ARC Pocahontas Broadband Project, Brien Tew, also from T&L, said the project’s Mon Pow-er pole agreements are progressing, with only three proposals outstanding. He added there “is a well-defined path forward.” Tew explained the Special Use Permit and the Environmental studies have been completed and approved, and as soon as the pole agreements are complete, they will be ready to start construction. Regarding the Frontier pole agreements, Citynet is in the process of assuming what had been the county’s role in those, and they should be able to wrap up those agreements more quickly than the county could.
The BEAD NTIA grant was discussed. Ruthana Beezley told the members that the state is in the process of challenging the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC’s) maps for BEAD funding. Mike O’Brien added that the NTIA–FCC’s National Tele-communications and Information Administration – in- volves very complicated processes, and the registration to receive funding through this program begins February 10 to March 10. John Tuggle, of Region 4, said NTIA had better get information out about this very quickly.
O’Brien described how the Pocahontas 911 Center is working with both Highland and Bath counties on a joint emergency communications system, and the Green Bank Observatory is willing to make concessions to make that system happen.
O’Brien also said that the Director of the Observatory has told him it might be possible to actually get cell phone service into the Green Bank area without interference to the radio telescope, if cell towers switched from using Ultra High Frequencies (UHF) down to using Very High Frequencies (VHF,) since the lower frequencies of VHF are less harmful to the observatory’s equipment.