MONTPELIER — Vermont Community Broadband Board (VCBB) has announced the release of the Vermont Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (VT-BEAD) Draft Final Proposal, which is the state’s plan to accomplish the goal of enabling all Vermonters to have access to high-speed reliable broadband. BEAD is a federal program that provides $42.45 billion to expand access by funding planning, infrastructure deployment, and adoption programs in all states and territories.
Vermont’s allocation of those funds is almost $229 million. The VT-BEAD Draft Final Proposal lists the provisional grantees of those funds and what technology they plan to use to serve all remaining unserved and underserved addresses in their project areas. The bids included in the Draft Final Proposal total $179,426,004.96. Provisional subgrantee providers are Comcast, Consolidated Communications, DVFiber, Maple Broadband, NEK Broadband, SpaceX, and Vermont Telephone. Almost 90% of the federal BEAD funds will go to build out fiber, about 6% will go to satellite, and the remaining 4% will go to hybrid fiber coaxial cable.
“We are so proud of reaching this milestone and all the hard work that has gone into the VT-BEAD Program so far. The BEAD program enables service to be available to the remaining unserved and underserved addresses in our state. We are thrilled to be able to say that more than 97% of Vermonters will have access to fiber-optic broadband and all the opportunities it provides, from education to telehealth to jobs and economic development,” said VCBB Executive Director Christine Hallquist.
The VT-BEAD Draft Final Proposal is posted on our website along with a public comment form. It will be open for public comment until September 4, when it will be submitted to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA). NTIA will then have 90 days to review, work with VCBB and provisional subgrantees to make any required changes, and finally to approve or reject the proposal.