State broadband director: Washington awarded $1.2 billion BEAD grant, $736 million currently provisioned
Loading...
Summary
Jordan Arnold, the state's broadband director, told the Public Works Board the BEAD program awarded Washington $1.2 billion; provisional BEAD subgrantees account for about $736 million of federal funds, with state and private matches also in place. Authorities and permitting are the next major hurdles.
The Public Works Board heard an overview April 3 from Jordan Arnold, Washington’s new state broadband director, on BEAD (Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment) implementation and next steps.
Arnold said the state’s BEAD allocation totals $1,200,000,000. Of that, staff secured federal approval to spend approximately $736,000,000 on the first round of last‑mile subgrantee projects; those awards require additional contracting, permitting and NEPA reviews before construction begins. Arnold also said the state has put forward a $112,000,000 state match and expects roughly $163,000,000 in other (private or non‑state) matching funds to drive a total investment above $1 billion.
"The BEAD program is ... incredibly confusing, constantly changing, and so we are all just trying to stay on our toes here," Arnold said, describing federal rule changes that broadened eligible technologies (fiber, fixed wireless and low‑Earth orbit satellite) and altered cost dynamics.
Arnold outlined the work ahead: finalizing award letters to provisional subgrantees, negotiating contracts over a negotiation window (up to six months), planning for permitting and environmental review requirements (BEAD projects are subject to federal NEPA), and standing up systems for monitoring and compliance. She emphasized that some projects were ready to break ground this year while more complex deployments will require substantial planning.
Related program note: the board’s broadband committee also reviewed a compressed ARPA second‑round application timetable for Public Works Board ARPA funds (application opened March 31; preapplications due April 15; full application deadlines and scoring windows followed). Committee staff said the ARPA cycle prioritizes tribal applicants and faces a hard end‑of‑year completion date for those awards.
Next steps: The Broadband Office plans to issue award letters to provisional BEAD subgrantees and begin contract negotiations; the Public Works Board will continue coordinating with the State Broadband Office and local implementers on readiness and permitting issues.
