Apply by September 28th to Accelerate Your Muni Project

In episode 320 of the Community Broadband Bits Podcast, aired on August 28th, we shared news about an opportunity regarding funding local Internet network infrastructure. Jase Wilson and Lindsey Brannon of Neighborly announced that the online investment platform had recently launched the Neighborly Community Broadband Accelerator. Applications to participate in the program close on September 28th, so we want to encourage local communities, Internet Service Providers, or community advocates interested in new ways to develop better local connectivity to check out the program.

More Than Money

For a quick recap, Neighborly is a technology company that provides an online investment platform to give individuals and entities the ability to invest in projects funded with municipal bonds. The projects are publicly owned and centered on improving the quality of life on the local level. Project areas include transportation infrastructure, schools and libraries, housing, and utilities. The accelerator program specifically aims to help local communities develop their own open access municipal networks to improve connectivity and encourage competition for broadband on the local level.

As Jase and Lindsey described in our interview, the numerous moving pieces associated with developing a fiber optic municipal network create a layered and complex project; a key element is financing. While it’s often left as a later consideration — one that makes or breaks the project — chances of success improve when community leaders address funding early and throughout projects development. 

One of the goals of the Accelerator Program is to help local communities interweave funding throughout the process. The program also provides additional resources throughout the process to help ease broadband network development. Applicants accepted to the program pay no fee and receive:

  • Tools to map, multiply & accelerate community engagement, including demand aggregation technology and marketing collateral to build a grassroots movement
  • Education sessions with leading experts who will share best practices for generating local support, working with civic leaders, overcoming legislative barriers, and designing, building and maintaining a network
  • Access to industry partners, including ISPs, network engineers, network builders, local utilities and advocacy groups at a local and national level
  • Neighborly financing at a competitive, below industry rate cost, and access to the global Neighborly Capital Network

Opening the Muni Bond Market for Broadband

Jase, Lindsey, and the rest of Neighborly concentrate investment in broadband projects on open access models as a way to increase competition and reverse the concentration of power that has plagued the Internet access industry. 

For us, to see the frustration about how the telcos and cable companies that were sort of accidentally bestowed the opportunity to run sort of local oligopolies in the Internet when the Internet evolved in the United States — to see them sort of… get into the arena and have to compete with each other and then having upstarts in the community that want access to the ability to serve the community… continues to keep them on their toes. That's the spirit of American capitalism, right?

While Neighborly believes municipal bond broadband investment should be directed toward open access projects, they don’t oppose other models. They recognize that every community is unique and needs to assess their own situation to determine what suits them. An advantage to this approach is that investors have the ability to invest in a broadband project in their own community. Members of the community who have invested have twice as much motivation to help the project excel.

Listen to the rest of the podcast episode for more on the Accelerator Program, the funding approach, and the company.

The First Cohort

In a recent interview with Route Fifty, Neighborly’s product manager Garrett Brinker said that the first set applicants accepted to the Accelerator program would be announced in November.

For its first cohort, the accelerator is looking for communities already seeing movement on broadband from local government or local advocacy groups. Brinker anticipates some of the communities selected will be able to begin building within a matter of months.

“That’s where we see the power of a community owned model,” he said. “We believe that access to the Internet should be equal by design.”

Learn more about the Community Broadband Accelerator Program here.