Minnesota Farm Towns Get Tired of Waiting, Form Broadband Cooperative With Neighbors
Wednesday, Aug 10, 2016, 12:31 pm
Minnesota Farm Towns Get Tired of Waiting, Form Broadband Cooperative With Neighbors
By Ben DeJarnette
Seven years ago, Winthrop, Minnesota, population 1,400, decided it needed an internet upgrade.
Most local residents were served by companies like Mediacom, which Consumer Reports consistently ranked among the countrys worst internet providers. Slow connection speeds made work difficult in local schools and businesses, but farmers outside of town, who increasingly rely on connectivity to do business, experienced the worst of it.
Fourteen miles from Winthrop, in Moltke Township, population 330, one soybean- and wheat-farming family reported its sluggish DSL connection often made it impossible to upload reports to business partners.
Organizers in Winthrop knew they were too small to fund a major internet infrastructure-building project on their own, so they reached out to other neighbors, the town of Gaylord, population 2,305. And the towns attracted 25 more municipal allies.
Today, in this sparsely populated swath of Minnesota, a grassroots, member-owned cooperative spanning more than 700 square miles and four counties is poised to expand high-speed broadband accesswithout relying on federal funding. After seven years of development led by local leaders and volunteers, RS Fiber, now in its first phase of construction, is expected to deliver high-speed broadband internet to more than 6,000 rural households by 2021. And unlike companies like Mediacom, the co-op is owned by local customers who have a say in rates and how its operated.
More:
http://inthesetimes.com/rural-america/entry/19376/rural-broadband-yes-magazine-minnesota-farm-towns-ben-dejarnette
SunSeeker
(51,698 posts)Festivito
(13,452 posts)If a business takes over and the business fails, that's okay. But, if a co-operative takes over and fails it means all co-operatives are bad.
Euphoria
(448 posts)This is what we all need to be reminded of - we are not helpless and we don't need to be beholden to Private, corporate self-interest.
it's the wave of the future. people everywhere are getting gouged
by today's service providers who are granted sanctioned monopoly status .
druidity33
(6,446 posts)The state of Massachusetts however decided they wouldn't help fund a Co-op, instead tried to push a provider like Comcast and Charter to run the lines and take over the management when complete. There are many angry people here in Mass who have worked for years to make this happen only to be shut down.
Hope they actually get theirs built in Minnesota...
K&R
AllyCat
(16,222 posts)If people want things, they should be able to do it as long as it provides a service to others, especially schools and business.