State broadband director outlines BEAD rollout: Washington to connect ~166,000 locations with mixed technologies
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Summary
State Broadband Director Jordan Arnold told the Public Works Board the state's BEAD allocation is $1.2 billion with approvals so far for about $736 million in last‑mile awards; Washington plans a mix of fiber, fixed wireless and satellite to serve roughly 166,000 locations and expects challenges around NEPA, permitting and contracting.
Jordan Arnold, Washington’s new state broadband director, briefed the Public Works Board on the BEAD (Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment) program and the state’s approach to using federal and state match funding.
Arnold said Washington’s BEAD allocation is $1.2 billion in federal funds; staff were able to obligate roughly $736 million of the federal allotment to last‑mile projects that were approved in the plan. State match of about $112 million and local/non‑state match of roughly $163 million combine to push total BEAD investment in Washington well over $1 billion.
“Ultimately we’re going to connect about 166,000 homes and small businesses,” Arnold said. “Roughly a third of those locations will be served with fiber, a third with fixed wireless and a little less than a third with low‑Earth‑orbit satellite. Because fixed wireless and LEO are less expensive per location, they represent a larger share of locations for a smaller share of the dollars; the bulk of funding still goes to fiber.”
Arnold flagged near‑term steps: the federal government approved the state plan and the technology mix; provisional awards are expected to be announced and award letters will be issued to provisional subgrantees; the state then has up to six months to negotiate and execute subgrantee contracts. She warned the board that BEAD projects are subject to federal NEPA and associated permitting and environmental reviews, which will present coordination and scheduling challenges.
Board members asked about remaining BEAD funds and what Washington might do with unobligated dollars; Arnold said federal guidance is pending and potential uses being discussed include workforce development, permitting support, digital skills, and resilience measures.
Why it matters: BEAD deployment will determine which Washington households and businesses gain high‑capacity broadband and will shape state broadband priorities for several years. Coordination between the State Broadband Office, the Public Works Board and other funders will affect project sequencing and the ability to close remaining digital‑divide gaps.
