Vt. Posts Final Draft of 10-Year Telecom Plan; Touts $67 Monthly Subsidy
Vermont should expand mobile wireless coverage, the state’s Public Service department said in the final draft of a proposed 10-year plan released Tuesday. The department plans three public hearings on the draft this month and will present it to the Joint Information Technology Oversight Committee June 21. With an influx of federal money from the broadband, equity, access and deployment (BEAD) program, Capital Projects Fund and American Rescue Plan Act, Vermont “is in the process of facilitating approximately $670.8 million in broadband grants, which will result in every on-grid Vermonter having access to 100/100 megabits per second (Mbps) service by January 2029,” the draft plan said. While fiber broadband is expanding quickly, mobile broadband hasn’t “meaningfully increased in coverage,” though speeds have increased, said the draft: Prioritizing small wireless facilities would be the cheapest way to expand mobile broadband. The draft would suggest a $2 million-$3 million pilot grant program for small-cell deployments. In addition, noting the end of the federal affordable connectivity program, the draft plan recommends “a state-run subsidy program to provide $67 per month to low-income Vermonters for both a wireline and wireless broadband subscription. Also, Vermont should prioritize workforce development, strengthening emergency communications systems and ensuring that BEAD fiber deployments are resilient and redundant,” the draft said.