Friday, September 24, 2021 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com • A3 County looks to improve broadband in Jewell By ERICK BENGEL The Astorian Clatsop County may partner with Jewell School District to bring broadband to a rural region of the county where internet service is slow, spotty and often nonexistent. At a county Board of Commissioners work session earlier this month, Steve Phil- lips, the Jewell superintendent, proposed hiring the fi rm Oregon Coast Wireless, which recently upgraded internet service in Tillamook County. Before Phillips took a lead role in addressing the inferior internet in Jew- ell and Elsie, the county had worked with a consultant on the issue and stakeholders had weighed in. Tillamook and Clatsop counties both have sparsely populated areas with weak internet service, Phillips noted, and he argued that what worked in Tillamook could work in Clatsop. Jewell’s main internet provider is Cen- turyLink, which won’t accept new cus- tomers in the area, Phillips said. “Frankly, the service they do provide is hit-and-miss because they’re so maxed out,” he said. Less than 40% of people in that part of the county enjoy reliable internet, according to a 2020 survey of Jewell School District families. “It’s tough out here,” Phillips said. He estimates that, if the community fol- lows Tillamook’s model, the cost of inter- net per home will fall in the $65-a-month range. Residents in Jewell and Elsie typi- cally pay between $80 and $120 a month, he said. During coronavirus shutdowns, the school district has relied on “old-school packets,” not the internet, for distance learning, he said. “And that’s tough for our kids, it’s tough for our teachers, to know that they’re kind of missing out on a better way,” Phillips said. Under the proposed three-phase plan, a new dedicated fi ber-optic cable would con- nect to Jewell School, which would receive one-gigabit internet. Towers would serve areas north and south. The fi rst phase would involve a $500,000 contribution from the county and $250,000 from Jewell School District. Phase two would reach northeast into the Fishhawk Lake community. “To be honest, we don’t have a ton of students there,” Phil- lips said, “but it’s a big community, and they need internet, as well.” The third phase would push south to U.S. Highway 26 and west toward Camp 18 Restaurant, he said. The high-end total estimate for all three phases is $1.8 million, Phillips said. County Manager Don Bohn said the pub- lic contribution would off set the infrastruc- ture costs that would normally be amortized as part of the rate structure. Such costs are a reason rural areas often don’t enjoy internet access, he noted. Subsidies help make these projects pencil out for developers. Phillips advised that the county should see how the fi rst phase goes, and make sure Oregon Coast Wireless can replicate what it did in Tillamook, before signing off on phases two and three. The project would cover the major- ity of Jewell and Elsie families, but not all of them — an economy-of-scale problem, Phillips said. Bohn said the county will also use the towers — which the school district will own, with the rest of the broadband infra- structure — for public purposes, such as beefi ng up communications systems for emergency responders. The area has 911 dead spots, he said. “This may not be the 20-year solution, but what we were looking for is: What is the here-and-now solution?” Bohn said, adding that, hopefully, the project will bring at least 10 years of suitable internet. Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian The county hopes to improve internet access in Jewell. Providence caregivers care. It’s that simple, even when it’s hard. To every Providence caregiver, through every demanding day of the COVID-19 crisis, you make us proud. You are heroes, and you’ve done heroic work. We honor you as people of Providence. People filled with kindness who dig deep in difficult times and never, ever waver from providing compassionate care. We thank you, for all you do for the communities we serve.