Return to Virginia Business - August 2004

Around the Old Dominion

Broadband goes south

Virginia Business
August 2004

Where there’s smoke, there will soon be wire. Twenty counties in the tobacco-growing region of southern Virginia are slated to get 700 miles of fiber-optic cable in an investment that state and local officials hope will bring in businesses.

The $12 million Regional Backbone/Roots of Progress Initiative, announced in June and funded by the Virginia Tobacco Indemnification and Community Revitalization Commission and the U.S. Economic Development Administration, will make high-speed Internet access available to 700,000 people and 19,000 businesses.

Work is scheduled to begin in October with completion expected by early 2006. Gov. Mark Warner called the initiative “a dramatic leap forward” in rural Virginia that “will certainly get the attention of new employers and investors looking to tap the potential of Southside and Southwest Virginia.”

In fact, officials estimate that the new network will bring in more than $140 million in investments and create 1,560 new technology-based jobs and $70.2 million in wages. Within three years of project completion, proponents also expect that 75 percent of 35 “targeted” business, commercial and industrial parks will have attracted a minimum of two new technology-based businesses.a

WIRED
The cable initiative will connect these localities:

Cities: Bedford, Danville, Emporia, Lynchburg and Martinsville

Counties: Amelia, Appomattox, Bedford, Brunswick, Buckingham, Campbell, Charlotte, Cumberland, Dinwiddie, Franklin, Greensville, Halifax, Henry, Lunenburg, Mecklenburg, Nottoway, Patrick, Pittsylvania, Prince Edward and Sussex.

Return to Virginia Business - August 2004