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Lee County Commission Expands Broadband

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BY HANNAH GOLDFINGER
HGOLDFINGER@
OPELIKAOBSERVER.COM

LEE COUNTY —The Commission has moved forward with American Rescue Plan Act funding for broadband projects.
“We have been meeting over the last two months, we formulated a team,” said County Administrator Holly Leverette.
Leverette said the team has met with the ICA partners and the Sain and Associates partners.
“They have been guiding us through this process, through our application process for the four areas that you all identified as areas that are completely unserved, which means there is no internet or broadband there at all,” she said.
These four areas are Loachapoka, Salem, Waverly and the South Central Region
The commission voted to approve Broadband Expansion Grants to Point Broadband for over $345,100 for the Loachapoka area. It also approved grants to R.M. Greene doing business as Beam for over $169,500 for the Salem area. Finally, the commission approved grants R.M. Greene doing business as Beam for over $469,700 for the South Central Region.
While Waverly is the fourth area needing broadband, the commission packet said it did not receive any applications as an ISP Provider. Point Broadband said it recently completed a project in Waverly, according to the packet.
“Following completion of a broadband feasibility study performed to identifypriority unserved and underserved areas where the county should expand broadband fiber optic infrastructure, the Lee County Commission voted unanimously at its regular meeting on June 12, 2023, to allocate up to $4,392,071.00 of ARPA funds for the expansion of broadband fiber optic infrastructure in unserved and underserved portions of Lee County,” the commission’s packet said.
For the Loachapoka area, 11.72 miles and 394 addresses would be covered. The South Central project would cover 11.1 miles and 187 addresses. Finally, in Salem, it would cover 8.5 miles and 110 addresses.
This leaves over $3 million left in the funding for broadband, Leverette said.
“The last communication the team had when we met was moving forward,” Leverette said. “We’ve heard citizens come before us talking about roads, we have identified some areas where the county, it could be helpful, in areas, such as some of the parks, where there’s not internet, and the houses that are surrounding those parks … So, that was what the consensus was for the team was to go back to Sain, see other areas and other additional projects that we could look at spending some of this money.”
District 2 Commissioner Ross Morris said he is glad to move forward with the projects.
“I’m thankful that citizens of Loachapoka and Salem and … South Central are all finally getting [broadband] and that’s what we wanted, we want to help the people that don’t have any service first, so that’s what we ask for,” Morris said.
All projects will be completed within a two year time frame.
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