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Coastal Electric among EMC’s looking at internet
coastal cooperative.

Some day soon your electric company and internet provider could be one and the same. The Georgia Public Service Commission announced Wednesday it is directing Electric Membership Cooperatives that want to provide broadband internet service in rural parts of the state to develop a cost allocation manual.

The PSC must approve that manual before the EMC can start to provide internet service. Coastal Electric Cooperative, which serves parts of Bryan, Liberty, Long and McIntosh counties, is “very actively involved in developing a plan to bring high speed broadband fiber to their customers,” according to CEO Chris Fettes.

He said the PSC-mandated Cost Allocation Manual is a necessary first step toward the Coop’s eventual goal of offering broadband fiber to the unserved and underserved areas of our counties.

“The current COVID-19, pandemic which has forced school closures and created many work-from-home situations, is an unexpected example of why our rural communities must have high-speed broadband internet available. We have heard many real-life experiences this past month of students trying to finish school assignments and from employees working from home who can’t get connected with sufficient bandwidth to do their work. Their old legacy internet connection slows to a crawl because adequate broadband infrastructure does not exist where they live,” Fettes said.

The PSC said its order represents the culmination of a yearlong effort between the PSC, EMCs, the Georgia Cable Association, and AT& T.

Officials with all these groups were tasked by the Georgia General assembly to develop guidelines for EMC broadband service via Senate Bill 2, which passed in the 2019 session of the General Assembly.

Commissioners approved the order last month.

PSC Commissioner Jason Shaw helped lead the efforts.

A resident of Lakeland, Shaw has seen the problems a lack of reliable Internet service has created in the less populated areas of the state, the PSC said.

Often, children must travel to a McDonalds or a public library to access the internet so they can complete homework assignments. Likewise, businesses large and small find themselves inadequately equipped to perform services in a world more and more dependent on the Internet.

“This is a major issue,” Shaw said as the Commission voted to approve the order. “Hopefully what we’re doing here will move the needle on rural broadband, which I think is the number one issue facing rural Georgians.” Commissioner Tricia Pridemore thanked Georgia EMC, the Georgia Cable Association and AT& T for their hard work and their many compromises. But she gave particular kudos to her colleague for his efforts that led the competing interests to come together in agreement.

“Commissioner Shaw has led this effort,” she said. “He has done an amazing job to continue to push rural broadband.” The order approved by the Commission stipulates, among other things, that a cost allocation manual show that an EMC will not raise energy prices to the customers to develop broadband service, an EMC will not provide better rates to customers who utilize both broadband and energy from an EMC, and an EMC will show that is has the available assets to provide broadband and a financial plan to do so.

An EMC in Southwest Georgia, Diverse Power, had already filed a cost allocation manual with the PSC for approval.

The PSC unanimously approved their cost allocation manual at its Tuesday Administrative session.

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