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City's Broadband Project Could Total $10M

Leaders discussed planning at a recent council meeting in which funding came into question.

After months of planning, officials in Harlingen are searching for nearly $10 million in grant money to bridge the “digital divide” leaving about 34 percent of the city's households without Internet access.

Last week, consultants presented city commissioners with a study projecting the cost of extending fiber-optic lines connecting homes and city buildings to the Internet at $9.7 million.

“We're trying to figure out our scope and find funding,” Assistant City Manager Craig Cook said Thursday. “We're trying to identify our options and formulate the model — where we put the fiber and who potentially will be served.”

To help fund the project, officials are considering entering into agreements with partners that could include the Harlingen school district, Cameron County or an Internet service provider, Assistant City Manager Josh Ramirez said.

“We want to make sure the students have access to high-speed connectivity,” he said. “We're looking at connecting our municipal buildings.”

Last year, city officials teamed up with the Harlingen school district to split the cost of paying Houston-based Cobb Fendley and Associates $100,000 to conduct a feasibility study focused on providing high-speed Internet across town.

“The plan will aim to bridge the digital divide in the community and provide communication access to government entities, educational facilities, partners and unserved-undeserved communities,” the study states.

During a meeting, consultants said many of the city's households lacked Internet access.

“Getting connectivity across the city is the ultimate goal,” project manager Melissa Beaudry told commissioners. “We really are looking at building a fiber network for you all as a part of this design.”

In response to questions, Beaudry said she believed there was a “high probability” of landing grant money to fund the entire $9.7 million project.

Beaudry said possible funding sources include the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), offering a total of $3.75 billion and the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA), offering a total of $10 billion.

Officials have not set a timetable for the project's completion, Ramirez said.

Last year, commissioners earmarked $4 million of the city's $21 million share of ARPA to help fund the project.

Since then, commissioners have reconsidered the project, agreeing to tap the money to fund other projects, Ramirez said.

In Harlingen, 7,887 homes, or 34.4 percent of a total of 22,901 households, lack broadband connection, ranking the city second to the bottom, ahead of only Pharr, according to the 2019 Census' American Community Survey of 185 large and mid-sized cities.

Meanwhile, the Census survey ranked the city as fifth to the bottom based on its number of households lacking access to wireless connections.

At City Hall, Sergio Mujica, the city's technology director, said many residents cannot afford high-speed Internet service.

(c)2022 Valley Morning Star. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.