$9.1M Grant To Maple Broadband / Waitsfield and Champlain Valley Telecom Partnership To Fund Broadband Expansion In Parts of Addison County
Public Private Partnership Project Will Accelerate Fiber-Optic Broadband Build To Some Rural Addison County Communities
The Vermont Community Broadband Board (VCBB) recently approved a $9.1 million grant to Waitsfield and Champlain Valley Telecom (WCVT), in partnership with Maple Broadband, to expand fiber-optic broadband in parts of Addison, Bridport, Ferrisburgh, New Haven, Panton, Waltham, and Weybridge. The source of the grant funding is the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA).
This project will extend WCVT’s fiber-to-the-home network to approximately 2,000 additional
customers in parts of Addison County in the Waitsfield and Champlain Valley Telecom service area.
The network is capable of delivering broadband speeds of up to 1 Gigabyte.
In August 2021, Maple Broadband and WCVT entered into a public private partnership to bring high-speed fiber-optic services to unserved and underserved residents in Maple Broadband’s twenty
member towns, some of which overlap with WCVT’s existing service area.
In terms of the partnership, WCVT will extend its fiber-optic network to customers in its service area,
and Maple Broadband will build a fiber-to-the-home network across the rest of the twenty towns.
WCVT will operate the Maple Broadband network, bringing its track record of service excellence to
Maple Broadband customers. This arrangement will decrease the cost and accelerate the speed of
broadband availability as both entities will build concurrently.
The first phase of the newly funded project began in spring of 2022. Engineering, design, and
preliminary field work are currently in progress. The next phase of this project is the permitting, make
ready and material procurement to allow construction to begin as soon as the weather allows in the
spring of 2023. Customer cutovers will follow later that year.
Says Eric Haskin, president and CEO of WCVT, “This grant money will go a long way to accelerate
building our fiber-optic network to additional customers in parts of our Addison County service area.
We are appreciative of the opportunity to work with Maple Broadband and grateful to the VCBB
which helped us secure this grant funding to continue the evolution of our network and get more of our
customers converted to fiber-optics. This grant will definitely help bend the high cost associated with
building broadband to some of our most rural communities and customers.”
“We are excited to start bringing services to our member areas in Addison County and are confident
that this partnership with WCVT will help us to roll out fiber faster at a price that benefits residents in
the area. We’d like to thank the VCBB for the opportunity to bring the benefits of high-speed
broadband to our underserved and unserved residents and look forward to working with WCVT to roll
this out,” says Steve Huffaker, Chair of Maple Broadband.
“WCVT has been a great partner in terms of getting Vermonters connected to fiber-optic broadband.
The Maple Broadband relationship with WCVT is an example of the public-private partnerships that
will result in every Vermonter getting the opportunity to connect to reliable high-speed Internet. The
VCBB is excited about the forward progress that Vermont is making in terms of Universal Service.
This progress is made possible by the partnerships like this one,” added Christine Hallquist, Executive
Director of the Vermont Community Broadband Board.
Maple Broadband broke ground on its fiber optic network on October 3rd, following on its recent award of $8.7 million to cover the first phase of fiber-optic broadband rollout to portions of Cornwall, Leicester, Middlebury, Orwell, Salisbury, Shoreham, and Whiting over the next 12 months. Service launch is expected in the initial areas in early 2023.