Overview
The Montague County Broadband Team has completed its community technology assessment. The results of the assessment can be found by clicking the symbol for each of the sections below. The Recommended Actions section includes steps the community can implement to improve the broadband and technology ecosystem at a local level.
It should be noted that the assessment was conducted during the global COVID-19 pandemic. This worldwide event likely impacted many of the metrics included in this assessment.
Connected Infrastructure in Montague County, Texas
Broadband access refers to the infrastructure that enables a high-speed internet connection. There are two primary types of broadband connections: fixed and mobile.
Fixed broadband is delivered to a user via several technology platforms including cable, digital subscriber line (DSL) over phone lines, fiber optics, and fixed wireless. Fixed broadband is designed for stationary use at a fixed location such as a home, business, or institution. From one location, however, fixed broadband service is often broadcast as a Wi-Fi network to connect nearby devices.
The following map shows where broadband is available in the community.
Recommended Actions
Objective
Establish broadband leadership and increase buy-in among community stakeholders.
In Montague County, 90.37% of Montague County is served at 100 Mbps download and 10 Mbps upload, leaving 770 households unserved at 100/10, the internet speed needed to run most modern applications.
Montague County households reported an average download speed of 109.23 Mbps, with 47% satisfied and 53% unsatisfied with their current service. Of those dissatisfied, 82% think speeds are too slow, 59% find connection unreliable, and 48% find the price to be too high, 91.8% would like to have improved or additional options.
In the county, where fiber optic internet exists, speeds are good, but access to high-speed internet is not uniform throughout the county. Where access is limited, it does have an impact across all sectors.
While lack of internet access is not a countywide problem, there are areas of great need in the county. Community feedback indicates that there are areas of the county that are suffering from lack of access and residents would like to see improvement. Residents mention that slow internet affects their ability to do their jobs or stay in contact with work, or finish work or school assignments. Additionally, residents mention service unreliability necessitates having a backup ISP. Others have complaints of slow speeds, not having other internet options, and the price being too high. We list the full community feedback in the appendix of this report.
This shows that residents would like to see change and that in areas where the internet is unsatisfactory, it does have large consequences to residents and businesses.
The county should focus broadband expansion efforts on areas that do not have equitable access and work with ISPs to address the areas with greatest need. To address this, we recommend the following actions.
Actions
Action 1 – Establish a permanent Broadband Council to act as advisors to the county and appoint a Broadband Liaison to lead the effort.
Establishing leadership is essential. Whether paid or volunteer, part-time or full-time, the Broadband Liaison will be the point of contact for broadband in the county. They will stay up to date on broadband policy news, new construction projects in the region, new laws, and funding opportunities, as well as maintain a community presence to keep the community interested and engaged in internet adoption and expanded internet deployment. This leader will help regularly convene the Broadband Council.
Broadband Council advisory members should include representatives from a wide variety of community stakeholders, such as:
- Healthcare: Local physicians or hospital staff
- Government: County Judge, County Commissioners, Mayor, City Council, County IT Director
- Education (K-12): Superintendents, School IT Directors
- Education (Higher-Education): University, Community college, trade schools or workforce training
- Public Safety: County Sheriff’s Office, Police Department, Fire and Rescue and surrounding Volunteer Fire Departments, Emergency Medical Services
- Agriculture: County Ag Agent, Leading Ag Producers
- Business: Chamber of Commerce, Economic Development
- Community At-Large: Someone from the community who is interested in broadband
Broadband Council responsibilities should include:
- Keep abreast of state and national broadband policy initiatives and notable broadband news. Stay up to date on any publications, events, and policy briefs published by the Governor’s Broadband Development Council (GBDC) and Broadband Development Office (BDO), as well as monitor notable broadband developments via industry newsletters and focused research.
- Keep the community informed of projects and progress and invite community participation to maintain buy-in and high adoption rates. Getting community buy-in is essential to the long-term success and sustainability of community initiatives. Success of local initiatives requires community support, transparency, and engagement. Not only will this help keep the momentum going but will show ISPs there is true interest for expanded service in the area, which will encourage greater investment in the region.
- Stay up to date on state and federal broadband legislation.
- Apply for applicable state and federal grant programs.
- Ensure digital engagement in all community sectors (telehealth, telework, education, commerce, etc.).
- Attend workshops, webinars, meetings, and general training that discuss telecommunications, and broadband specifically.
- Provide digital literacy and digital skills assistance to the community’s at-risk populations.
- Hold regular meetings. The council should meet at least once a month. Meetings can be held virtually, in person, or in a hybrid capacity to accommodate members’ needs. These meetings should provide updates on community activities, allow time for guest speakers and presentations, and offer an open forum for discussion about broadband advancements in the county.
Timeline: Establish an official Broadband Council and select a countywide liaison immediately.
Responsible parties: County Judge, Commissioners Court
Action 2 – Maintain open communications and positive relations with internet service providers (ISPs) working in the county, as well as any ISP with plans to work in the county or that has received federal funding to begin work in the county.
Open communication allows for ISPs to better understand community needs and for communities to better understand the obstacles and barriers they face. This should include regular check-ins with ISPs to stay abreast of construction and expansion progress or changes in plans, to identify any obstacles or challenges they are facing, and to communicate community goals and objectives. This understanding can encourage creative problem solving, which can lead to finding solutions through public-private partnerships. Public-private partnerships are arrangements between public entities, such as local governments, and private entities, such as ISPs, to achieve a common goal. They are often, but not always, funding arrangements. Additionally, the county should strive to be an environment that is amenable to business by having easy to use websites that allow providers and vendors quick access to relevant information and fostering a business environment that rewards open communication and timely resolution of concerns.
Internet Service Providers working in Montague County, based on January 2022 FCC and CN data are AT&T Southwest, Comcell, Nextlink Residential, Nortex Communications, Rise Broadband, Speed of Light Broadband, Suddenlink Communications, Texas Windstream Inc., TGM Pinnacle Network Solutions, and T-Mobile.
There are federal subsidy programs that help ISPs in areas with high costs of deployment, such as low population density rural areas. Connect America programs, CAF, CAF II, and A-CAM are High-Cost programs. They have sent out billions of dollars of support to carriers annually beginning in 2014, but the service requirements for internet speed set by these programs are outdated. They set the minimum speed requirements very low (4/1, 10/1, 25/3) and gave ISPs until 2026 to offer these speeds. For this reason, communities should follow-up with any CAF winners in their area to determine the ISP’s actual build-out schedule and progress. The good news is that many participating ISPs have achieved much higher than the minimum speeds required by the programs and have done so much sooner than required.
In Montague County, AMG Technology Investment Group LLC received $1,482,077.50 in CAF II funds to provide service to 598 locations, AT&T has CAF II commitment areas, and Nortex Communications has A-CAM eligible areas.
The Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) Phase I is a federal funding program for ISPs that auctioned off census blocks for internet deployment in 2020. To be eligible, a census block could not have had service of at least 25/3 Mbps (based on Form 477 data) or have an ISP already committed to providing service via the CAF II auction, the USDA ReConnect program, or state-specific programs.
RDOF winners in Montague County include LTD Broadband LLC, who won bids for $108,606 dollars to serve 13 locations, and AMG Technology Investment Group LLC, who won bids for $69,120 dollars to serve 14 locations. Winning providers have eight years to fulfill deployment; the exact deployment schedule is determined by the carriers themselves, not the FCC.
The Broadband Council should meet with CAF and RDOF winners to discuss updates about their progress, remaining build-out plans, and deployment timeline.
Timeline: Council should reach out to ISPs for an initial meeting with community stakeholders and decision makers as soon as Broadband Council leadership is established.
Action 3 – Incorporate broadband development and planning within local budgets.
Broadband expansion will bring expanded employment opportunities, innovation, and quality of life improvements. Under advisement from the Broadband Council, the county should commit funds to expand broadband access, adoption, and use, setting aside resources that reflect the broadband priorities of the community.
In March 2021, the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARPA) established the Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds (SLFRF) to provide state, local, and Tribal governments with the resources needed to respond to the Coronavirus pandemic and its economic effects.
Montague County is the recipient of $3,849,414.00 in ARPA SLFRF funds. The SLFRF provide substantial flexibility for each government to meet local needs—including, “to make necessary investments in water, sewer, or broadband infrastructure.” The Final Rule for the program, released in 2022, made it even easier to use these funds for broadband if communities deemed it necessary and they had funds remaining.
Additionally, the county could seek broadband funding from existing revenue, planned contributions, and public or private grants, including broadband grants from the state of Texas Broadband Development Office (BDO).
Action 4 – Deploy a Request for Proposal (RFP) for a Field Validation audit and an Asset Inventory to confirm unserved areas of the county to focus on and opportunities to address them.
Current FCC Form 477 data is often used and overstated because it defines served or unserved areas at the census block level, showing a wider internet coverage area than truly exists. As of November 18, 2022, the FCC released a pre-production draft of the National Broadband Map. This map includes coverage data for the entire country at the address level. The FCC Broadband Map will continue to be refined and improved as ISPs provide additional data and citizens, local and state governments, and other broadband partners challenge areas of the map that overstate coverage data. Residents can check their address on the map and complete a challenge process on the same website. Residents are able to challenge several data points and should check to make sure that their home is identified as a broadband serviceable location, that it accurately describes if they have access to broadband or not, and if the providers that indicate they provide service at specific speeds actually are available. To learn more about the challenge process, reference the FCC Broadband Data Collection Help Center
The only way to improve on this data is an on-the-ground asset inventory and field validation performed by technicians working in the county to determine actual infrastructure and coverage areas.
Based on current CN Montague County maps, found here, broadband internet is least available in a large section of the southeast corner of the county, with additional areas of concern in the southwest corner, along the northwest county border with Oklahoma, and just northwest of Bowie.
A field validation would verify where installations actually exist. It entails locating, identifying, and documenting targeted wireline platforms such as digital subscriber lines (DSL), hybrid fiber coaxial (HFC), fiber-to-the-home (FTTH), middle mile fiber optic transport lines, and fixed wireless transmit locations, and then mapping infrastructure assets and provider service boundaries. Such work would allow the community to accurately assess and map known broadband speeds and delivery platforms to verify the existing FCC data and to identify areas of need.
An Asset Inventory would map the county’s assorted assets that could be utilized by ISPs working in the area to offset deployment costs.
Assets could include:
- Anchor tenants
- Antennas
- Building rooftops
- Light poles
- Towers the cities or counties may own
Resources
- The Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF)
- ARPA SLFRF, Final Rule
- Governor’s Broadband Development Council
- The Texas Statute
- The 2021 Governor's Broadband Development Council's Report
- The 2020 Governor's Broadband Development Council's Report
- The Texas Broadband Development Office
- The Texas Broadband Plan 2022
- Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds, County Allocation
- Final Rule
- CN’s list of Current Broadband Funding
- BroadbandUSA: Federal Funding Guide
- Guide to Federal Broadband Funding Opportunities in the U.S.
Broadband readiness
- Texas Broadband Providers by County
- Smart Cities Readiness Guide
- Next Century Cities Becoming Broadband Ready Toolkit
- Municipal Boards: Best Practices for Adoption Technology
Broadband leadership
Objective
Assist Montague County’s low-income residents by removing barriers to access and adoption.
In Montague County, 17.3% of survey respondents have no internet at home. Of those without internet at home, 46.7% said internet was not available, and 36.7% said it was too expensive. Affordability is a key challenge, the average monthly cost of internet in Montague County is higher than other Connected communities ($86.53 in Montague versus $78.16 in other Connected communities). Mobile device use is high in Montague County - 18% of survey respondents say that mobile internet is their primary internet connection and 15.6% say that they use their smart phone to connect other devices to the internet.
Montague County is also home to North Central Texas College, where approximately 300 Montague County residents take online-only classes in any given academic year. The college estimates that 60% of those students do not have adequate internet service at home to complete their coursework.
Actions
Action 1 – Montague County Libraries should share information with the community about the availability of public computers and free Wi-Fi at libraries.
Public Libraries can be a great resource for residents without internet at home. They can go to libraries to use public computers and Wi-Fi. Montague County is fortunate to have three libraries available to residents: Bowie Public Library, Saint Jo Public Library, and Nocona Public Library, all with public computers and free Wi-Fi available for residents.
Information about the availability of public computers and public Wi-Fi should be shared widely with the community on a County Broadband Resources website, at the library, posted on social media, and promoted throughout the community.
Action 2 – Montague County Broadband Council should share information with the community about the availability of low-cost internet packages and internet subsidy programs to assist residents.
Low-income residents can be assisted with their internet expenses at home by low-cost internet packages and subsidy programs to address internet affordability. There are two main federal internet subsidy programs, and ISPs often have their own low-cost programs as well.
Lifeline is a federal program administered through the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) Universal Service Administrative Company that lowers the monthly cost of phone or internet services for eligible consumers. Eligible consumers can get up to $9.25 off the cost of phone, internet, or bundled services each month. Households can qualify based on income or participation in Federal or Tribal assistance programs. More information can be found here.
The Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) was created to help households struggling to afford internet service. The ACP provides a $30 a month credit toward internet coverage ($75 a month for qualifying residents on tribal lands) and up to $100 for the purchase of a device. Households can qualify based on income or participation in Federal or Tribal assistance programs. To receive the connected device discount, consumers need to enroll in the ACP with a participating provider that offers connected devices. The internet company will provide the discount to the consumer, then seek reimbursement. To find out which providers participate click here. More information about the program can be found here.
The ACP tool kit is a great resource that communities can use to promote the program to residents.
There are programs to assist low-income residents with the cost of internet, but ISPs need to participate in them for residents to benefit. Where ISPs do not participate in federal subsidy programs, the Broadband Council should find out why not and what can be done to encourage them to do so.
Internet service providers often have their own low-cost options or subsidized programs offering internet for consumers at a greatly reduced cost, so customers should always ask. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL) of 2021 requires internet providers that receive federal grant money to offer low-cost service to eligible low-income households.
Free or low-cost internet programs available in Montague County by internet service providers are:
AT&T: Access from AT&T and ACP
Comcell: ACP
Nextlink: ACP
Suddenlink / Optimum: ACP
Texas Windstream: Lifeline, ACP
T-Mobile: ACP, Project 10Million
Information about the availability of internet subsidy programs and low-cost internet programs should be shared widely with the community on a County Broadband Resources website, at the library, posted on social media, and promoted throughout the community.
Timeline
Broadband Council should share information about affordability programs immediately.
Objective
Help Montague County K-12 schools and libraries.
The average internet download speed for schools in Montague County is slower than other Connected communities (1145.8 Mbps versus 1624.7 Mbps). However, the average download speed of Montague County libraries is faster than other Connected communities (375 Mbps versus 56.54 Mbps). It is important that schools and libraries have the fastest internet available. Schools benefit most from high-speed internet, but libraries are where people who do not have internet at home go to get online and where multiple people are online at the same time. Eighty percent of survey responding K-12 schools in Montague Country indicated that they do participate in E-rate, 20% are unsure.
Actions
Action 1 – Broadband Council should inform schools and libraries about programs to assist them with internet expenses.
The E-Rate program is designed to make telecommunications and information services more affordable for eligible schools and libraries by providing discounts on telecommunications services, including internet access, internal connections, and basic maintenance of internal connections. Schools can receive discounts of 20% - 90%, and most accredited public libraries in Texas are eligible for an 80% - 90% discount on internet costs.
The Broadband Council would benefit from having a council member who is familiar with E-Rate or have someone from one of the schools who has participated in E-Rate to assist them. Additionally, CN has a tool to help schools negotiate better internet pricing. Connect K-12 is a free internet speed and pricing information tool for America’s K-12 school districts. Connect K-12 was built to provide transparency around the bandwidth school districts buy. Data transparency is critical for two reasons:
- It creates informed buyers at the state and school district level who, as a result of transparency, can negotiate more effectively to increase bandwidth for their students.
- It helps track progress towards bandwidth targets that will enable all students to take advantage of digital learning.
Connect K-12 has been designed as a resource for leaders in state government and for school district administrators, including superintendents and technology directors, who are helping school districts upgrade their connectivity. You can find out more about Connect K-12’s resources for schools here.
Timeline
Broadband Council should begin to educate themselves on E-Rate and Connect K-12 immediately and offer an education opportunity for schools and libraries within the next 6 months.
Responsible Parties
- Broadband Council
- Montague County schools and libraries
Resources
- The Universal Service Administrative Company (USAC) E-Rate Program page
- The Universal Service Administrative Company (USAC) Eligible Services List (ESL).
- Texas Education Agency (TEA) E-Rate program overview and application assistance page
- Connect K-12, resource for schools
Objective
Partner with libraries and community organizations to provide digital literacy training.
Montague County is fortunate to have three libraries available to residents: Bowie Public Library, Saint Jo Public Library, and Nocona Public Library. All libraries offer public computers and free Wi-Fi for residents, but only one currently offers digital literacy classes.
Actions
Action 1 – Encourage all libraries in Montague County to offer digital literacy classes either in person or virtually.
All three libraries in Montague County have public computers for use, giving a total of 25 computers available to the public within the county. Libraries can offer classes in-person or online or share information about digital literacy classes available online by-demand. Interested parties can sign up and take classes from the library computers or from home, selecting courses depending on their interest or skill level.
CN is currently offering in-person and online digital literacy classes in basic computer sills that libraries can promote to residents; you can find out more here. Additional topics could include more advanced technology, such as product specific training on devices, new technology like smart home devices or wearable technology, cybersecurity, and advanced software applications like multimedia and design programs, based on community interest.
Action 2 – Encourage Montague County libraries or community organizations, such as chambers of commerce or service organizations, to offer web design and online marketing classes for local businesses.
A 2018 study commissioned by Google, “Connecting Small Businesses in the U.S.,” found that the main reason businesses weren’t engaging online was not lack of access, but lack of an understanding of the value it brings. According to the study, small businesses that are active online are three times as likely to have recently hired additional workers than those that are not.
Montague County businesses could benefit from expanded online activity. Survey data indicates that 42% of responding Montague residents interact with non-local business online daily, and 32.4% at least once a week. Over 66% of Montague residents interact with local business online daily, yet only 28.6% of responding businesses have a website. The primary ways that responding business interact online are email (57% daily, 29% at least once a week), text (57% daily, 29% at least once a week), Facebook (57% daily, 14% at least once a week), and website update (29% daily, 29% at least once a week). Montague County residents are doing business online, and expanding local businesses’ online presence could be an opportunity for local businesses to increase revenue and keep funds local.
Action 3 – Encourage Montague County public safety entities, libraries, or community organizations to offer cyber security classes.
Survey data indicated that only 40% of survey responding Public Safety organizations train their staff on the basics of cybersecurity and cybercrime, and only 20% share cybersecurity or cybercrime resources with the public. Cybersecurity classes, whether for online banking, internet shopping or daily online activities should be offered to county residents, and public safety entities can be great partners in these efforts.
CN is currently offering in-person and online digital literacy classes in Cybersecurity that public safety entities, libraries, or community organizations can promote to residents; you can find out more here.
Timeline
Montague County should begin digital literacy training for residents and businesses within six months.
Responsible Parties
- Broadband Council
- Libraries and library boards
- Community service organizations
- Public Safety entities
- Local businesses
Resources
Digital Literacy
- Connected Nation Digital Literacy Workshops
- Digital Learn – Free courses to learn anything about computers
- Digital Literacy Curriculum for K-12
- Free Applied Digital Skills – Google for Education
- Live, Virtual Classes for Seniors
Cybersecurity
Objective
Ensure that Montague County utilizes all available resources to improve quality of life and economic outcomes through technology.
Actions
Action 1 – Pursue grants that advance local community development using broadband technologies (e.g., workforce development, telehealth, digital literacy, etc.).
In conjunction with the countywide Connected Community Engagement, Montague County has been allocated funding to pursue applicable grant applications, if identified. For specifics, contact your Connected Nation Broadband Solutions Manager.
Timeline
Community should identify grant opportunities within one year.
Responsible Parties
Local and county governments
Montague County Broadband Advisory Council