Columbus Breaks Ground on $430M Fiber Backbone Expansion Targeting 60,000 Underserved Households by 2027
For thousands of Columbus families, reliable high-speed internet has remained frustratingly out of reach. The Columbus City Council has approved a $430 million public-private partnership aimed at bridging that gap, committing to connect 60,000 households in some of the city’s most underserved neighborhoods by the end of 2027.

Historic Investment in Broadband Equity
The Columbus fiber expansion ranks among the most ambitious municipal broadband initiatives in the Midwest. Through a collaboration with a regional ISP consortium, the city will deploy fiber-optic infrastructure across Linden, Franklinton, and the South Side—neighborhoods that have historically lagged in connectivity despite sitting within Ohio’s largest metropolitan area.
The project draws $112 million in federal funding through the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program, established under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. That federal commitment will be matched by $318 million in private investment from the ISP consortium and municipal bonds, creating a financing structure that distributes risk while preserving public accountability.
Affordability at the Core

Unlike previous broadband initiatives focused solely on infrastructure deployment, this agreement includes strict affordability mandates designed to ensure connectivity translates into real access for low-income residents. Qualifying households will have access to high-speed plans capped at $30 per month—a threshold advocates say separates digital exclusion from meaningful participation in today’s economy.
The affordability provisions apply to families enrolled in federal assistance programs, including SNAP, Medicaid, and housing assistance. City officials estimate that approximately 40% of households in the targeted service areas will qualify for reduced rates, ensuring the infrastructure investment delivers tangible benefits to those who need it most.
Targeting the Digital Divide Where It Matters
The three neighborhoods selected for the initial buildout were identified through a comprehensive digital equity assessment conducted by the city in partnership with community organizations. Linden, Franklinton, and the South Side have consistently recorded the highest rates of digital exclusion in Columbus, with many residents relying on mobile data plans or public Wi-Fi for essential services such as telehealth appointments, remote work, and online education.
In Linden, where median household incomes fall significantly below the city average, the absence of affordable high-speed internet has created persistent barriers to economic mobility. Local business owners have struggled to compete in an increasingly digital marketplace, while students have faced disadvantages accessing educational resources.
Franklinton, despite its proximity to downtown Columbus, has remained a connectivity desert—limited provider competition and aging infrastructure have failed to keep pace with the neighborhood’s recent growth. The South Side faces similar challenges, compounded by a housing stock that often lacks the internal wiring required for modern broadband service.
Timeline and Implementation
Construction is scheduled to begin in the second quarter of 2025, with the ISP consortium committed to completing deployment to all 60,000 targeted households by December 2027. Interim milestones require 20,000 connections by the end of 2025 and 45,000 by the end of 2026.
The agreement includes financial penalties for missed deadlines and enforceable quality standards to sustain momentum across the multi-year buildout. City officials will conduct quarterly progress reviews, with public reporting requirements intended to maintain transparency and community accountability.
Economic and Educational Impact
Beyond residential connectivity, the fiber backbone will expand opportunities for local businesses, schools, and community organizations. Small businesses in the targeted neighborhoods will gain access to symmetrical gigabit speeds—the same enterprise-grade connectivity available in downtown Columbus—at rates comparable to residential service.
Public schools in these areas will receive priority connections at no cost, supporting enhanced digital learning and reducing the homework gap that has disadvantaged students without reliable home internet. Libraries and community centers will serve as digital navigation hubs, offering technical assistance and digital literacy training to help residents make full use of their new connectivity.
BEAD Program’s Role in Closing Connectivity Gaps
Federal BEAD funding is central to the project’s financial viability. The program specifically targets unserved and underserved areas, making initiatives like this one economically feasible in markets where private investment alone has not delivered results.
Ohio received a substantial BEAD allocation, and Columbus’s successful application demonstrates how cities can leverage these funds to address entrenched broadband equity challenges. The program’s emphasis on affordable access aligns directly with the city’s goal of ensuring that infrastructure investment produces measurable improvements in residents’ daily lives.
Community Engagement and Digital Literacy
Recognizing that infrastructure alone does not guarantee digital inclusion, the agreement allocates $8 million for digital literacy programs and community outreach. These initiatives will help residents understand available plans, navigate affordable service enrollment, and build the skills needed to make effective use of high-speed internet.
Community organizations in Linden, Franklinton, and the South Side will receive grants to conduct hyperlocal outreach, reaching residents who may be skeptical of new programs or unfamiliar with the enrollment process. The approach draws on lessons from earlier connectivity initiatives that saw low adoption rates despite available infrastructure.
A Model for Broadband Equity Nationwide
As cities across the country work to close persistent connectivity gaps, Columbus’s comprehensive approach offers a replicable framework. By combining BEAD program resources with private investment, enforcing affordability mandates, and centering community engagement, the city has developed a model that addresses both the supply and demand sides of the digital divide.
The initiative’s success will ultimately be measured not in miles of fiber deployed, but in the number of families who gain meaningful access to economic opportunity, educational resources, and essential services. For 60,000 Columbus households, that transformation is now underway.
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