Millions in rural America lack reliable internet. How Massachusetts towns got online.

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For Kirsten Paulson, who lives part time in Otis, Massachusetts, the town’s two-lane mountain roads, dense woods, and placid ponds are a selling point. Another one: Her internet is better here than at her home outside Washington, D.C.

It hasn’t always been this way. When the pandemic moved learning online, Sandisfield parents parked outside the local public library so their kids could use the building’s Wi-Fi to do schoolwork from the car. “It was … a heartbreak,” says Craig Storms, a Sandisfield resident. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

In today’s world, access to fast, reliable broadband internet can be key to education and employment. Communities — especially rural ones — are finding innovative ways to use state, federal, and municipal funds to connect.

Insistent they could improve, the town of 1,500 people built its own network to fill gaps left by private providers. Now, after decades of slow, unreliable service, nearly every house in town connects to a state-of-the-art fiber-optic network.

Versions of that story echo across western Massachusetts, where dozens of towns have used public funds to get residents online. It points a way forward for others. Last week, Maine announced it would offer free Starlink dishes to 9,000 residents in remote areas without reliable internet.

Studies estimate that up to 50% of rural America lacks reliable internet access, which can generate economic growth, boost school performance, and improve emergency services.

“It connects everything,” says Christopher Ali, a telecommunications professor at Penn State. 

Otis, Massachusetts, isn’t the sort of place you expect to spend a lot of time online. A few two-lane mountain roads snake through dense woods and around placid ponds. Quaint houses peek out from the thickets. Main Road is dotted by a few small businesses, a modest town hall, and a diner or two. It’s the sort of place you might go to escape the hustle and bustle.

For Kirsten Paulson, who lives part time in Otis, that’s all a selling point. Another major one: Her internet service is better here than at her home outside Washington, D.C.

That’s because the town of 1,500 people built its own network to fill in the gaps left by private providers, which don’t offer high-speed internet in Otis. Now, after decades of slow and unreliable service, nearly every house in town is connected to a state-of-the-art fiber-optic network.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

In today’s world, access to fast, reliable broadband internet can be key to education and employment. Communities — especially rural ones — are finding innovative ways to use state, federal, and municipal funds to connect.

Versions of that story repeat themselves across western Massachusetts, where dozens of rural communities have used state, federal, and municipal funds to get their residents online. Some, like Otis, have built their own networks, treating internet access like a public utility. Others, like neighboring Sandisfield, have formed public-private partnerships to entice companies to provide service. 

The Massachusetts Broadband Institute, a state agency tasked with making affordable internet widely available, says that 99% of the commonwealth now has high-speed internet. 

It’s a success story that is already pointing a way forward for rural municipalities nationwide. Last week, Maine announced it would offer free Starlink dishes to about 9,000 residents living in the state’s most remote areas who currently have no access to reliable broadband. The technology from SpaceX works by delivering internet service via satellites rather than ground-based cables or cell towers, making it well-suited for users in rural and remote areas.

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