County seeks sales tax for high-speed internet

News

County seeks sales tax for high-speed internet

Proposed broadband project may cost $39 million
Suckla
Ertel
Lambert
Fiber optic cable is installed in Dolores in 2012.
Bryce Capron displays the end of the fiber optic line that ends just short of Dove Creek in 2013.
Nick Yelloweagle climbs 250 feet up a radio tower to adjust a telecommunication antenna at the top.

County seeks sales tax for high-speed internet

Suckla
Ertel
Lambert
Fiber optic cable is installed in Dolores in 2012.
Bryce Capron displays the end of the fiber optic line that ends just short of Dove Creek in 2013.
Nick Yelloweagle climbs 250 feet up a radio tower to adjust a telecommunication antenna at the top.
How much would it cost county residents?

A proposed broadband network to provide high-speed internet access across Montezuma County is estimated to cost $39 million.
The price-tag is based on an estimated “take rate” — people who sign up for the service — of 30 percent from residents in Cortez, Dolores, Mancos and Towaoc. The take rate for residents in the unincorporated county is estimated at 45 percent.
In all, planners say it would initially connect an estimated 12,137 households in the county, but the fiber-optic network is designed to handle much more than that.
Installing 360 miles of fiber-optic lines underneath roads and along power poles is estimated to cost $23.6 million. Connecting fiber-optic lines into all of those homes is estimated to cost $5.3 million.
Electronics and engineering comes in at $5.4 million, and preparing 11,262 power poles to handle fiber-optic lines is estimated to cost $3.2 million. A five percent contingency of 1.4 million is also worked into the price.

click here to add your event
Area Events