With Broadband Grant Process Set to Ramp Up, County Prepared to “Advocate” for Municipalities

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CLEARFIELD – More information will soon be available on broadband infrastructure grants, announced Clearfield County Commissioner Dave Glass on Tuesday.

Four fiber-optic projects that will improve the county’s broadband access and high-speed internet were approved April 18 by the Pennsylvania Broadband Development Authority.

The $204 million Broadband Infrastructure Program (BIP) funded by the ARPA Capital Projects Fund resulted in 53 project awards, affecting 42 counties state-wide.

The four awards affecting Clearfield County were submitted by Verizon Pennsylvania LLC and supported by the Clearfield County Commissioners.

A majority of project work will take place in Clearfield County, but will also include work in Blair, Centre, Huntingdon, Indiana and Cambria counties.

The total estimated cost of the projects is $47.1 million, with grants totaling $21.4 million awarded, and Verizon has pledged to pay the remaining $25 million.

BIP projects are required by statute to be complete by Dec. 31, 2026. The PBDA anticipates project work to begin later this summer in many cases.

The next round though is a “much bigger pot,” said Glass of the $1.4 billion ‘BEAD’ grant program, which will “ramp up quickly” in the coming months with the grant application process likely to start in late summer or early fall.

The county wants to meet with municipalities because state officials want to ensure all municipalities—but particularly smaller municipalities—have an “advocate,” he said.

“And, we are willing to be their advocate—if that’s what they want—and be that front-line point of contact with internet service providers (ISPs).”

Glass hopes to have enough municipalities “broadband ready” that it will set the county apart and give it a competitive advantage over other grant applicants.

In other business, the commissioners:

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