Community left behind by National Broadband Plan has built its own 150MB speed network

ireland
Community Left Behind By National Broadband Plan Has Built Its Own 150Mb Speed Network
The Co Kilkenny community of Piltown and Fiddown, a growing hinterland close to the Kilkenny-Waterford-Tipperary border, is no ordinary community so nothing was going to get in its way. Photo: Dylan Vaughan
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Sarah Slater

A rural community left behind in the National Broadband Plan has built its own 150MB speed network.

The Co Kilkenny community of Piltown and Fiddown, a growing hinterland close to the Kilkenny-Waterford-Tipperary border, is no ordinary community so nothing was going to get in its way.

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The community and, more particularly, the voluntary Broadband 4 Our Community (B4OC) group has made history with the connection of the first homes and businesses in the community to the broadband network.

Their range of skills and expertise, together with a shared vision of the project and the benefits to their community both now and into the future, has brought the project to fruition, making it the first of its kind in Ireland.

In all, 750 homes and businesses in a 3.4 square kilometre area now have, or will soon have, access to at least 150MB speeds and a future-proofed high-speed broadband service they can afford.

And better still, it is community-owned, community-driven and managed by B4OC, a locally-based not-for-profit company whose board of enthusiastic volunteers came together following a town hall meeting organised by Piltown Community Enterprise (PCE) in 2019.

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'Adequate broadband'

Hundreds of families who struggled with speeds of between 1MB and 6MB also have the fibre power they need to work and study from home, to conference call, stream and really enjoy the benefits of living in rural Ireland.

It means that businesses such as Iverk Produce/O’Shea Farms, one of the largest suppliers of fresh fruit and vegetables in Ireland, and a host of other small and medium-sized enterprises in the locality, have the broadband service and infrastructure they need.

The two villages are among approximately 20 similar-sized villages and towns in Kilkenny classified on an EU standard set over a dozen years ago as having “adequate broadband”.

Therefore, they are not included for investment under the National Broadband Plan. But much has changed in what’s regarded as “adequate broadband” since 2010 and the reality on the ground now is far different.

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Locals in the Piltown-Fiddown area were adamant they would not be left behind.

B4OC’s vision and aim since the project was first mooted by Kilkenny Leader Partnership (KLP) back in 2019 was to deliver true, future-proofed high-speed broadband for the community of Piltown and Fiddown, Project Manager, Jim O’Brien, explained.

The IT graduate, who returned to college in 2018 after a career in construction, lives locally and struggled to remotely access his course materials.

He bought a dongle, moved to his garage and finally got 13MB speeds, up from just 5MB.

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He is now B4OC’s project manager and says the buy-in from local businesses and the wider community has been incredible.

Mr O’Brien said: “KLP and its philanthropic funding partner, the Tomar Trust, supplied technical assistance, planning, training and capital funding to the community to develop and advance the project. After that, the community drove on and did everything else.

“Businesses donated bits, gave us other items we needed at cost and dug deep with us.

“My own father-in-law is a retired fitter, and he has been out in the trenches and up poles with me as we built the infrastructure.

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“All of this has been built on private lands and sits into the landscape. We’ve now completed Phase 1 and have a few phases to go.”

Reaping the rewards

Following the success of an expression of interest survey within the community, the group carried out an extensive feasibility study to establish the ways and means to build their own network.

Kate Foley works in the office at O’Shea Farms/Iverk Produce, one of the connected companies in the locality now reaping the rewards.

“Since we were hooked up we haven’t dropped connection once and have found it 100 per cent reliable,” explained Ms Foley.

“Quality broadband is critical for a business like ours that employs around 95 at O’Shea Farms and a further 60 in Iverk Produce.

“This service will make this area far more attractive for everyone.”

Inspired by similar projects in the UK, B4OC believes access to reliable high-speed broadband is essential to attracting SMEs, but the project is much more than that.

The community gains not only by having access to faster broadband for families, but also for local schools and other community buildings.

This is a service by the community, for the community which is owned by the community and run in its interest.

It is a much leaner development model and operates on a not-for profit community-owned basis.

The community even hopes to be able to pay a community dividend and the intention is that this money would finance other community projects.

Declan Rice, Kilkenny Leader Partnership CEO said: “Community development and ownership of future proofed, fibre to the premise (FTTP) networks should be as familiar as local group water schemes, of which there are many hundreds.

“Installing FTTP networks is not rocket science, in many ways it’s easier than a group water scheme to instal.

“While a fibre network will require some seed money to get started, and needs wider landowner and community cooperation, as Piltown- Fiddown has shown, it can be done.

“By developing and crucially retaining ownership of the fibre network, a community takes charge of its digital future.

“It can set a cost that the community can bear, not that which the commercial market will maximise. And it can, in addition to having a maintenance fund, use some of the additional income to support other community projects.

“Piltown- Fiddown doesn’t have to be the exception; it should just be the pioneer,” Mr Rice said.

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