11/13/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/13/2024 12:30
Schumer And Hochul Say Funding Will Help Connect Over 60,000 Homes & Businesses In Chautauqua, Orleans, Schoharie, Cayuga, Cortland, Franklin & Sullivan Counties To Build Stronger Broadband Infrastructure
Funding For ConnectAll Grants Will Build 1,200+ Miles Of New Public Broadband Infrastructure - Funded Through American Rescue Plan Which Schumer Led To Passage In The Senate
Schumer: Fed $$ Is On The Way To Help Close NY's Digital Divide!
U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Governor Hochul today announced $140+ million to expand access to high-speed internet to over 60,000 homes and businesses throughout Upstate NY.
"Access to high-speed internet is not luxury, but a necessity, a utility as vital as electricity for everyday life. Today, Upstate NY takes a major step towards closing the digital divide. I'm proud to deliver a whopping $140+ million to help expand broadband infrastructure to boost affordable, high-quality internet access for 60,000 homes and businesses across Upstate NY," said Senator Schumer. "This will help communities in every corner of Upstate NY from the City of Jamestown to rural parts of Schoharie, Orleans and Sullivan County. It will help families stay connected to education, to healthcare, economic opportunity, and each other. When I led the American Rescue Plan and Bipartisan Infrastructure & Jobs Law to passage, I made sure there was funding for long term investments like this that would create good paying jobs helping build the 21st century infrastructure needed to make high-speed internet reach every corner of the state regardless of zip code. I'm grateful for Governor Hochul's work putting these federal dollars to work to ensure all New Yorkers get the equitable access to the internet that they deserve."
"Today marks a transformative step forward in our mission to connect every New Yorker to affordable, high-speed internet," Governor Hochul said. "By investing over 140 million dollars in public broadband infrastructure across six regions, we're not just laying fiber optic cables - we're building bridges to education, healthcare, economic opportunity, and prosperity. With our new interactive dashboard, New Yorkers can now track our progress as we work to ensure that no community is left behind in our digital future."
Schumer and Hochul explained these grants are funded primarily through the U.S. Department of the Treasury Capital Projects Fund funded via the American Rescue Plan which Schumer led to passage in the Senate. Broadband infrastructure boosted through this program will be either owned by a public entity or publicly controlled. These six new grants - for Orleans County, Schoharie County, the Central New York Regional Planning and Development Board, Franklin County, Sullivan County, and the City of Jamestown - build on previous awards, bringing the program's total to $214.7 million. NY's ConnectAll program now supports over 2,000 miles of broadband infrastructure and reaches more than 87,000 homes and businesses statewide.
A complete list of awards can be found below:
Recipient |
Allocated Funding |
Description |
City of Jamestown |
$29.9 million |
The City of Jamestown is partnering with EntryPoint Networks and Quanta Telecommunication Services to build an open-access fiber network to serve all 14,447 homes and businesses served by the Jamestown public utility. The Jamestown Board of Public Utilities will own and operate the infrastructure, with EntryPoint Networks providing telecom equipment and software and Quanta managing design and construction. This project will address longstanding concerns in the community over broadband reliability and affordability. Along with lowering consumer costs and enhancing network performance and reliability, the network will drive economic opportunity, improve education outcomes for children in Jamestown, and advance healthcare and general well-being for the entire town. |
Orleans County |
$11 million |
Orleans County will utilize $11 million in MIP funds to extend its wireless internet network to serve more than 11,000 locations with 100/100 Mbps speed. In 2020, thanks to American Rescue Plan funding that Schumer provided to Orleans County, the County was able to realize a decade-long dream to expand high speed internet access across the County. This new $11 million project will build on that successful 2020 wireless internet project the County launched with RTO Wireless, by installing 21 wireless hubs on existing and new towers. The County will own the network, which RTO Wireless will design, construct, maintain, and operate. The towers will be open for lease to other ISPs. The County will also extend its partnership with the United Way to provide digital literacy training and community outreach, addressing the adoption barrier among low-income households. The project addresses the challenge of providing high-speed internet in rural areas with a low population density of 103 people per square mile. The County's cutting-edge wireless solution, combined with strong community partnerships, provides a cost-effective alternative to fiber networks, promoting digital equity and enhancing connectivity for residents, businesses, education, and the agricultural community. |
Broadband for Schoharie County |
$30 million |
The Broadband for Schoharie County project will construct 298 miles of fiber to connect more than 4,000 locations, including substantially all of the unserved locations in the county. The new infrastructure will reach the most rural and hard to reach areas of the county. The County will partner with MIDTEL, which has been serving customers in the County for over 125 years. The County will own the infrastructure and will leverage MIDTEL's expertise to construct and operate the network. The network will be open-access, with interconnection points at MIDTEL's central office and at two aggregation points distributed across the county. This initiative will make service available at prices well below the county average with the goal of improving educational, health, and work outcomes particularly in low-income areas of the county like Central Bridge, birthplace of engineer and inventor George Westinghouse. |
Central New York Regional Planning and Development Board |
$26 million |
The Central New York Regional Planning and Development Board will establish CNYNET, a regional open-access fiber network to serve 6,671 locations in the Counties of Cayuga and Cortland. The Board conducted a Broadband Infrastructure Study in 2021 to develop the network design, which provides the optimum opportunity to expand consumer choice to unserved locations and surrounding areas in the two counties. The Board will form CNYNET, Inc., as a non-profit local development corporation to own and manage the network. Empire Access will operate the network and deliver residential internet service over the network. Cayuga and Cortland Counties will contribute $7 Million and $3 Million respectively to the total project budget of $36.2Million. |
Franklin County |
$13.1 million |
Franklin County will connect unserved locations using Fiber-to-Home and Next Generation Fixed-Wireless solutions. The County is partnering with Airosmith Development for design and LayerEight for construction and operation, building 144 miles of fiber and installing four poles for wireless links and coverage. The County will own and operate one part of the new infrastructure with Hudson Valley Wireless serving as the internet service provider. In Area 2 adjacent to the St. Regis Mohawk territory, the County will transfer the infrastructure to Mohawk Networks acting on behalf of the Tribal Council after substantial network completion and Mohawk Networks will be the service provider in that area. In total, this project will connect 1567 locations, including 46 Community Anchor Institutions. |
Sullivan County |
$29.9 million |
Sullivan County is partnering with Archtop Fiber LLC to serve over 22,000 homes and businesses, leveraging the County's existing towers and Archtop's capabilities in fiber optic construction. Sullivan County will own the infrastructure, while Archtop Fiber and Hudson Valley Wireless will serve as internet service providers. The County will build 253 miles of fiber and one new communication tower, in addition to 11 towers it already owns, extending broadband service to unserved and underserved locations. Sullivan County faces unique challenges due to its rural, mountainous terrain, low population density, and status as the most distressed of the seven counties represented by the Hudson Valley Regional Council that have long deterred broadband deployment in the county. This initiative reverses that trend for many of the unserved homes in the county and creates new opportunities in health, education, and economic well-being. |
Schumer has championed expanding access to high-speed internet in New York State and last year announced a record-breaking $670 million for New York State's ConnectAll program from the Bipartisan Infrastructure & Jobs Law he led to passage in the Senate. Earlier this year, Schumer announced over $228 million via the American Rescue Plan's Capital Projects Fund, which is on top of an additional $100 million award for the ConnectAll program through the same program last year. As majority leader, Schumer has delivered a record $65 billion in federal funding to expand access to high-speed internet in underserved rural and urban communities across America.
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