New broadband project to serve rural South Georgia

ATLANTA – Satilla Rural Electric Membership Corp. will partner with Kansas City-based Conexon Connect to offer high-speed broadband service to nine counties in southeastern Georgia.

The $150 million project will serve more than 57,000 rural homes and businesses in Appling, Atkinson, Bacon, Brantley, Coffee, Jeff Davis, Pierce, Ware and Wayne counties.

The project is expected to be completed within four to five years, with service available to some customers during the first quarter of next year.

“The promise of high-speed internet is a game changer for the homes and businesses in our service area,” said Romeo Reyes, president and CEO of Satilla REMC. “Our members have waited patiently for access to broadband, now considered an essential service in today’s digital world.

“It’s vital that rural Georgia remain competitive and offer the same online choices to its residents – whether it’s working and learning from home, running a home-based business, visiting a doctor online, or shopping for goods and services.”

The lack of high-speed internet connectivity in rural Georgia, long a concern among the region’s political and business leaders, has had an even greater impact during the coronavirus pandemic. With schools closing their doors to avoid spreading the virus, students in homes without internet have been forced to go to great lengths to keep up with their lessons.

While a couple of Georgia EMCs have been providing broadband service for years, the business began to take off in earnest after the General Assembly passed legislation two years ago authorizing EMCs to attach broadband technology to utility poles.

Lawmakers followed that up last year with a bill giving the Georgia Public Service Commission (PSC) the task of deciding how much EMCs could charge telecom providers for pole attachments. The commission approved an offer by the EMCs to provide steep discounts to providers willing to offer broadband to unserved rural communities.

“EMCs have taken a leadership role and offered tangible solutions to provide high-speed internet to unserved areas,” said Commissioner Jason Shaw, who represents South Georgia on the PSC. “This partnership is the latest example of how EMCs are stepping up to serve rural Georgia and further improve the quality of life for their members.”

Conexon Connect has been an active player in extending broadband service to rural communities across Georgia. The company announced two projects last month that will expand broadband connectivity to EMC customers in Middle Georgia and 10 counties in eastern Georgia stretching from Laurens County to Washington County.

The company unveiled an even larger project last February to serve 80,000 utility customers in 18 rural counties.

Satilla REMC’s fiber-optic network will offer customers access to symmetrical Gigabit internet service – among the fastest and most robust in the nation. It also will provide reliable, clear phone service and improved power outage response times, better load balancing, and more efficient electricity delivery.

High-speed internet provider, South Georgia EMC unveil broadband project

ATLANTA – A new partnership between a South Georgia utility and an internet services provider will invest $49 million to serve 8,400 customers with high-speed broadband.

Irwin EMC and Conexon Connect announced plans Tuesday to deploy a 1,900-mile fiber-to-the-home network providing high-speed internet access to all of the EMC’s customers in largely rural Ben Hill, Berrien, Coffee, Irwin, Tift, Turner, Wilcox, and Worth counties.

The project is expected to be completed within two to three years, with the first customers due to be connected next summer.

“Rural broadband is a critical issue for Georgia and across the nation,” said Jason Shaw, who represents South Georgia on the five-member state Public Service Commission (PSC). “This is another example of how EMCs are stepping up to serve rural Georgia and further improve the quality of life for their members.”

Kansas City-based Conexon Connect has been active in recent months in working with Georgia EMCs to extend broadband service to rural communities. The company and Satilla Rural Electric Membership Corp. announced a $150 million project last month that will serve more than 57,000 rural homes and businesses in nine counties in southeastern Georgia.

Before that, Conexon Connect rolled out four partnerships with other EMCs to bring broadband to large stretches of Middle and eastern Georgia.

“The digital divide is very real in many communities across rural Georgia,” said Randy Klindt, a partner with Conexon. “Conexon Connect has formed multiple relationships with Georgia EMCs, and we are excited for the opportunity to make a difference for those served by Irwin EMC.”

While a couple of Georgia EMCs have been providing broadband service for years, the business began to take off in earnest after the General Assembly passed a bill two years ago authorizing EMCs to attach broadband technology to utility poles.

Lawmakers followed that up last year with legislation tasking the PSC with deciding how much EMCs could charge telecom providers for pole attachments. The commission approved an offer by the EMCs to provide steep discounts to providers willing to offer broadband to unserved rural communities.