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Westmorland County, Pa., Taps Consultant for Broadband Study

Officials in Westmorland County will use $600,000 of ARPA funding to help identify areas without adequate Internet access, develop a broadband plan for the county, and partnerships with private companies to expand service.

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(TNS) — Westmoreland County, Pa., is joining other counties in the region in assessing broadband needs for residents and businesses with an eye toward acquiring federal grant funding to help pay for service expansion.

Westmoreland County Commissioners have contracted with Downtown-based Michael Baker International for $600,000 to identify areas without adequate Internet access, develop a broadband plan for the county, and partnerships with private companies to expand service.

The contract is for one year. Funding will come from the American Rescue Plan Act. The county has the option of extending the contract up to five years, according to Jason Rigone, director, Westmoreland County Department of Planning and Development.

Michael Baker is also helping Washington, Beaver and other counties assess broadband needs, identifying areas of slow or no service.

Some 36,000 homes and 15,000 businesses in Pittsburgh and surrounding 10-county region were underserved or unserved by broadband while 12% of the population relied on cell phones for Internet access, according to a study issued in April by a Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission-led coalition of nonprofits. Some connection speeds were slower than the federal government's definition of high speed broadband.

The Westmoreland County study will help determine the federal grant money available to increase download/upload connectivity speeds to 100/20 megabits per second, much faster than the 25/3 megabit per second speed the Federal Communications Commission now uses to define high-speed broadband.

In addition to American Rescue Plan funds, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that was passed in 2021 makes available some $65 billion for broadband installation and expansion, with priority given to poorly served and impoverished areas.

©2022 the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.