Brightspeed to Bring Broadband to 100,000 Addresses in Arkansas

2022-09-17 16:19:00 By : Mr. Gangjin Zhao

Home » Brightspeed to Bring Broadband to 100,000 Addresses in Arkansas

Brightspeed has continued its steady stream of announcements with a pledge to deploy a fiber broadband network to more than 100,000 addresses in Arkansas.

The company, which is awaiting the closing of its acquisition of properties from Lumen Technologies, says that it will pass 10 counties in Arkansas, adding 40,000 fiber passings by the end of next year. It will add 60,000 passings in subsequent years.

The first phase will provide broadband fiber to Arkansas, Benton, Desha, Lonoke, Monroe, Poinsett, Pope, Pulaski, Randolph and Yell counties.

 Brightspeed says its deployments will be based on XGS-PON technology capable of symmetrical speeds of more than 1 Gbps and that the services offered will include Wi-Fi 6. 

“Households and businesses, especially in our rural communities, need high-quality internet connectivity they can rely on, whether for working, learning, accessing healthcare, or growing their businesses,” Brightspeed Chief Administrator Chris Creager said in a press release. Customers will be delighted with our simple, intuitive user experience and state-of-the-art internet services achievable only through an all-fiber network.”

Creager said that Brightspeed will work with the Arkansas Rural Connect program and broadband initiatives to extend the build beyond the initial estimates.

According to Telecompetitor calculations, Brightspeed so far has committed to broadband builds in 11 states. It has announced plans to pass approximately 1.08 million addresses by the end of next year and 1.554 million addresses in subsequent years.

In addition to Arkansas, the states in which Brightspeed has announced projects are North Carolina, Virginia, Texas, Alabama, Ohio, Louisiana, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Tennessee.

In all, Brightspeed says that it will spend $2 billion during the next five years to reach 3 million addresses. Those deployments will start in earnest once Apollo managed funds and Lumen Technologies receive all approvals on their deal. The deal will give Brightspeed Lumen assets in 20 states.

State approvals have been secured. Signoff from the FCC is expected this quarter and finalization of the transaction is expected in the fourth quarter, Brightspeed says. 

Earlier this month, Brightspeed said it would bring its network to 130,000 addresses in Tennessee. The first phase would cover 60,000 addresses, with subsequent service to 70,000 addresses.

I am thrilled to hear broad band is coming to Pulaski county. I live in Pulaski county but out side of Little Rock, our options for internet and Wi-Fi are DSL or satellite. DSL is slow and sitelite is unreliable. None of the internet options available to me offer unlimited data so they are cost prohibitive if we want to watch our “smart TV”. Will I be able to get broad band or will I be bypassed again?

Hopefully we will be able to receive this broadband in our area. We live outside city limits of Conway. With very poor internet service.

I live 2 miles out of Dover arkansas. I will never believe any of this until fiber optic internet is inside my home. We have been on a 1.5 internet speed for the last 20 years. CenturyLink is a horrible internet provider. Hopefully brightspeed will be better?

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