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$3.5M in Broadband Coming to High-Priority County Areas

A partnership with Verizon is expected to bring high-speed Internet to four townships in Pennslvania’s Westmoreland County. The areas of the state’s second most populous county currently lack service.

broadband tower at sunset
Shutterstock/PopTika
Construction is scheduled to begin in the spring to bring Internet service to four high priority areas of Westmoreland County.

Westmoreland County Commissioners have partnered with Verizon to bring broadband service to 400 locations in parts of Derry, Fairfield and Ligonier townships that currently have no service. The total cost of the project is $3.5 million, with the county picking up $1.7 million, or 48% of the total cost, and Verizon contributing $1.8 million or 52% of the cost.

Construction of the necessary infrastructure is expected to take a year, with county funding coming from Westmoreland's share of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act, economic stimulus legislation that was enacted in 2021.

The sites without internet access were identified in a 2023 feasibility report. The next step in the Westmoreland Broadband Program is a competitive bidding process to identify Internet service providers interested in partnering with the county to expand service to other places lacking adequate service.

Contract awards are expected to be announced in early spring. Residents can find out whether their home has adequate broadband service by referring to the county's new service area map.

(c)2024 the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.