Benefits of Municipal Broadband | UtilityEducation.com
Rates & Finance

Benefits of Municipal Broadband

Russ Hissom, CPA Russ Hissom, CPA
February 28, 2026
2 min read

Why Utilities Build Broadband Networks

Electric, water, and gas utilities are increasingly deploying broadband infrastructure to enhance operations, improve customer service, and create new revenue streams. The convergence of utility operations and telecommunications creates compelling synergies.

Operational Benefits for Utilities

Smart Grid Infrastructure

Modern utilities need robust communication networks for advanced metering infrastructure (AMI), distribution automation, and demand response programs. Fiber-optic networks provide the bandwidth and reliability required for real-time grid management.

SCADA and Substation Communications

Supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) systems monitor and control utility infrastructure across vast service territories. Dedicated fiber connections to substations and remote facilities provide secure, high-bandwidth communications.

Operational Efficiency

Field crews use mobile devices, automated meter reading reduces manual labor, and remote monitoring identifies problems before they become outages. All these capabilities depend on reliable communications infrastructure.

Revenue Opportunities

Retail Broadband Services

Utilities with excess fiber capacity can offer internet, video, and phone services to retail customers. This creates a new revenue stream while leveraging existing infrastructure investments.

Wholesale Services

Even utilities not interested in retail services can lease dark fiber or lit services to telecommunications carriers, businesses, and anchor institutions.

Smart City Applications

Municipal fiber networks support traffic management, public safety cameras, environmental monitoring, and other smart city initiatives that improve quality of life.

Existing Infrastructure Advantages

Utilities possess unique advantages for broadband deployment:

  • Rights-of-Way - Established easements and franchises simplify permitting
  • Poles and Conduit - Existing infrastructure reduces construction costs
  • Service Territory Knowledge - Detailed mapping and customer databases streamline planning
  • Established Billing Systems - Customer relationship management infrastructure already exists
  • Trusted Brand - Communities often prefer utility-owned broadband over distant corporate providers

Regulatory and Financial Considerations

Utilities entering telecommunications must navigate:

  • Separate accounting for regulated utility and unregulated broadband services
  • Cost allocation between utility operations and retail broadband
  • Competitive pricing while recovering full costs
  • State and federal telecommunications regulations
  • Funding through grants, loans, or customer rates
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Russ Hissom, CPA
Written by
Russ Hissom, CPA
Principal, UtilityEducation.com  ·  35+ Years of Utility Accounting Experience

Russ Hissom is a nationally recognized utility accounting and rate expert with deep hands-on experience in FERC and RUS accounting, regulatory accounting, cost-of-service studies, and rate design for electric utilities and cooperatives across the United States. He also serves as an expert witness before FERC, state commissions, and in arbitration proceedings. Learn about consulting services →

Disclaimer: The material in this article is for informational purposes only and should not be taken as legal or accounting advice provided by Utility Accounting & Rates Specialists, LLC. You should seek formal advice on this topic from your accounting or legal advisor.