All Points Broadband begins fiber deployment, says 1,850 Woodford County locations covered
Loading...
Summary
All Points Broadband and contractor CongruX reported the KBIP fiber project is under way in Woodford County, covering roughly 1,850 locations, deploying mostly underground fiber with about 40 short pole spans, and offering an address lookup and FAQ at allpointsbroadband.com/woodford-county-project-faqs.
All Points Broadband representatives told the Woodford County Fiscal Court the company has begun constructing a countywide fiber project that will eventually cover about 1,850 locations and that most new fiber will be installed underground.
Philip Brown, an All Points Broadband representative, showed two maps of the KBIP project on the county: one that lists approximately 1,850 locations included in the rollout and another that traces the planned fiber routes. "These are 1,850 approximately locations here in Woodford County that are covered by this KBIP project," Brown said, describing a network built largely on public right of way.
Brown also highlighted a public FAQ and an address‑lookup page where residents can check whether their property is in the planned service area and sign up for deployment notices (allpointsbroadband.com/woodford-county-project-faqs). He said construction will be mostly underground and that the project team will use a small number of utility poles only where directional boring is not feasible.
CongruX construction lead Mr. Blazer said crews started work in the county on March 12 and described the project's resident‑notification and safety protocols. "The first thing you're gonna get when we show up on your road...we finished our construction drawings...You're gonna get a door hanger...it'll have a QR code," Blazer said, explaining the QR code links to construction plans, contact information and a complaint workflow routed to project staff.
Blazer walked the court through field markings and signage residents should expect: white or pink paint to indicate the contractor's work line; blue, orange and red locates for utilities; and signs and flaggers near work zones. He said work teams will post trained personnel at intersections and will allow approved internal farm traffic or emergency movement when necessary.
Magistrates asked about poles, permits and continuity of work. Brown and Blazer said they expect approximately 40 spans where they will use existing utility poles before returning to underground construction and that they are pursuing permits with the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet where state‑maintained roads require them.
The court directed residents with address‑specific questions to the project's FAQ page and to contract channels provided by All Points. The update closed with an offer to amend the FAQ if recurring questions arise and with county staff offering permitting assistance where appropriate.

