Rural broadband leaders from the Tennessee Telecommunications Association (TTA) met with members of the Tennessee Assembly in Nashville Tuesday to discuss the progress being made in advancing broadband connectivity in rural Tennessee.
The annual Day on the Hill started with a breakfast during which TTA members answered questions from state officials and shared the rural broadband story. Lawmakers witnessed a presentation of how optical fiber, a key to expanding broadband in rural Tennessee, is spliced together during a network build.
"The governor and the legislature have put an emphasis on building broadband to rural Tennesseans and are using state grants to help us reach the most remote residents of the state," said Knowles. "It's counterproductive to then impose a new tax on the projects our members are funding in part with those grants."
Throughout the day, TTA members shared the story of how cooperative and independent telcos are working to build fiber networks to connect rural Tennessee, and the importance of the state's partnership and support of those efforts. Members met with various senators to thank them for their support of the Broadband Accessibility Grants program. This year, eight TTA cooperatives and commercial telcos received more than $8 million in state broadband grants, earning a majority of the grants awarded by the Department of Economic and Community Development.
Those present for the Day on the Hill included more than 20 TTA representatives from Bledsoe Telephone Cooperative, Ben Lomand Connect, DTC Communications, Highland Telephone Cooperative, KGPCo, Loretto Telecom, North Central Telephone Cooperative, TDS Telecom, Twin Lakes and United Communications.