Customers Might be Able to Sign Up For ARC Broadband By End of 2026

During the February 12th Pocahontas County Broadband Council Meeting, Amanda Smarr of Region 4 and Melissa O’Brien of Citynet concurred that customers along the route of the Pocahontas County Broadband ARC Project should actually be able to sign-up for broadband service by the end of 2026. O’Brien added that once the fiber lines are installed, Citynet will be ready to hook up customers. Smarr said that since the make-ready issues with Frontier and Mon Power have now basically been worked out, their contractor -Quanta- will be back at work next week stringing fiber for the project. She said that contractually they will have the project “substantially complete” by early October with final completion by Mid-November of 2026.

O’Brien said that Citynet’s Line Extension Advancement and Development (LEAD) and its Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) projects in the county are under construction too, although they have been paused due to recent weather. According to O’Brien, it is anticipated that those will be signing up customers for service by the end of the year as well.

O’Brien also told the council that Citynet has just received word that their application for the Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program has been approved. She said that state-wide in West Virginia, Citynet was awarded 26,255 locations for BEAD, which is not only the largest BEAD grant in the state, but also the largest in the US. She said the build out of their BEAD projects have 4 years to be completed.

When asked if the problems experienced with having the utilities making their poles ready to receive fiber for the ARC Project will also affect the BEAD project, O’Brien said they should not, since those problems will very likely have been worked out by the time construction on BEAD begins several years from now. She added that another reason they won’t be a problem is that while the Pocahontas County Commission is the applicant for the ARC Broadband Grant, City net is the applicant for the BEAD project as well as for their RDOF and LEAD projects, and since Citynet is an Internet Service Provider, it will be a simpler and shorter process for them.

Mike Holstine said they are also looking at the potential for workforce development with the broadband building taking place. This will provide ways to train the next generation of skilled workers to build and use broadband.

Holstine also pointed out that the Spruce Knob Seneca Rock Telephone company (SKSRT) has received $15 million dollars for 7 broadband projects in the area, several of which will be in parts of Pocahontas County.

Sam Felton, the Mayor of Marlinton, remarked that the town has received 2 million dollars to complete its Monday Lick Trailhead and is also looking at possibly providing WIFI to cover it.

Story By

Tim Walker

Tim is the WVMR News Reporter. Tim is a native of Maryland who started coming to Pocahontas County in the 1970’s as a caver. He bought land on Droop Mountain off Jacox Road in 1976 and built a small house there in the early 80’s. While still working in Maryland, Tim spent much time at his place which is located on the Friars Hole Cave Preserve. Retiring in 2011 as a Lieutenant with the Anne Arundel County Police Department in Maryland, Tim finally took the plunge and moved from Maryland to his real home on Droop Mountain. He began working as the Pocahontas County Reporter for Allegheny Mountain Radio in January of 2015.

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