Thursday, October 16, 2025

A Local Perspective: The Cost of a Municipal Fiber Network vs. Private Options


The Town of Longmeadow is evaluating a plan to create a town-owned fiber-optic Internet network, with construction and operation contracted to the South Hadley Electric Light Department (SHELD). The estimated capital investment is $27 million, to be financed and owned by the Town. The project would take roughly five years to complete.

   

Under the proposed structure, SHELD would not only build the network but also operate it on Longmeadow’s behalf once construction is finished. That includes:

  • Hiring and supervising its own staff,

  • Managing customer billing and technical support, and

  • Providing ongoing maintenance of the fiber system and customer equipment.

In essence, SHELD would act as Longmeadow’s contracted network operator, while the Town retains ownership of the physical infrastructure and the long-term financial obligation.

💰 Prevailing-Wage Requirements and Cost Implications

Because the network is a municipally owned public-works project, Massachusetts law requires that construction labor be paid at the state’s “prevailing wage” rate. These rates — established by the Department of Labor Standards — can run 1.5 to 2 times higher than equivalent private-sector wages for the same type of telecommunications work.

That means Longmeadow’s build cost will be significantly higher per mile than what a private company would pay for the same installation. When combined with public-sector procurement, permitting, and bonding requirements, total capital costs typically exceed those of private builds.

Once the network is built, ongoing operation and maintenance may fall into a more nuanced category. If SHELD provides these services under a service contract as an independent utility entity — not as direct employees of the Town of Longmeadow — prevailing-wage laws usually do not apply to those operational functions.  However, these costs are expected to remain higher than those of private networks, since municipal contracting and staffing rules restrict flexibility and raise administrative overhead.

📊 Comparing the Three Models

CategoryComcast/XfinityPrivate Fiber CompanyMunicipal Fiber (SHELD–Longmeadow)
Infrastructure StatusExisting, fully operational    New build New build
Construction CostMinimal (incremental upgrades)    Moderate High (prevailing-wage labor)
Financing SourcePrivate capitalPrivate capital or investors Municipal bonds (taxpayer-backed)
OperationsExisting large-scale staffPrivate management  SHELD-contracted operation
Prevailing-Wage ImpactNoneNone  Required for construction; likely not    for contracted operations
Financial RiskComcast shareholdersPrivate investors  Longmeadow taxpayers/ratepayers

 
Summary

Comcast’s existing hybrid fiber-coax system already reaches nearly every home in Longmeadow and continues to be upgraded to faster standards, reducing the need for costly new construction. A privately financed competitor could theoretically build a new all-fiber system at market-rate labor costs but would bear its own financial risk.

By contrast, the municipally financed network would build new infrastructure at a higher total cost, due to prevailing-wage requirements, borrowing expenses, and the need for a separate contracted operator. If subscriber revenue falls short, ratepayers as well as taxpayers would be responsible for covering the deficit.

As the town evaluates this proposal, the key question remains: 

Will Longmeadow’s investment in a new municipally owned fiber network truly deliver better performance or lower costs than the upgraded systems already available from Xfinity or new private providers?

Jim Moran
48 Avondale Road

Monday, October 13, 2025

A Smarter, Faster, and Cheaper Xfinity Upgrade

After years of dependable but expensive Comcast service, my wife and I decided it was time to take a closer look at our monthly bill — and we're glad that we did. By rethinking what we actually use and how we watch TV, we ended up with faster Internet, the same entertainment options, and major savings every month.

📺 From Cable TV to Streaming

Our original Comcast package included television programming with DVR service on multiple TVs, along with Internet at about 500 Mbps or less.
The total monthly cost? $285.

The reality was that most of those cable channels and extra DVR boxes went unused. So, we made the decision to eliminate the traditional TV programming and keep only Internet service.

To replace live TV and DVR, we switched to Roku streaming (device cost ~ $30-40) and added YouTube TV for ~$82 per month, which includes many local and national channels as well as full cloud DVR capability — perfect since my wife and I often watch shows at times different vs. broadcast time.  It took a short learning curve, but we quickly adapted and found that nearly everything we watched before is available through streaming.  This includes watching Select Board/ School Committee meetings on YouTube Live (streaming).

⚙️ The New Xfinity/Comcast Plan

We recently upgraded to a new Gigabit Internet plan that includes a free Xfinity Gateway modem/router for $85 per month, guaranteed for five years — and best of all, there’s no contract.

That’s down from our previous Xfinity Internet-only rate of $124 per month, saving $39 per month or $468 per year right away.

📱 Free Phone & Verizon Reimbursement

By transferring one of our mobile phone accounts from Verizon to Comcast/Xfinity Mobile:

  • We received one full year of free phone service (valued at $480).

  • Comcast also covered the remaining $195 phone financing balance on our Verizon plan, reimbursing us via a $195 Visa card.

📺 Bonus Streaming Value

The new plan even includes two years of Peacock Premium streaming at no charge — a $10.99/month value, or $132 per year.

📶 Extra Perk from Verizon

Ironically, Verizon offered a $10/month discount for one year on our second phone line, adding another $120 in savings. (Could this be a competitive retain customer incentive since we transferred one of our two Verizon mobile accounts?)

💰 Total First-Year Savings

SourceValue
Lower monthly Internet rate$468
Free phone service$480
Verizon payoff reimbursement$195
Peacock Premium (2-year value, annualized)$132
Verizon wireless discount$120
Total Savings (Year 1)$1,395

Even after paying $85/month ($1,020 per year) for Gigabit Internet, we are effectively ahead by $255 — meaning our new high-speed Internet and streaming setup is essentially free in the first year.

⚡ Real-World Speed Results

The performance boost has been impressive. Here are the up/down data speeds from the Xfinity Gateway to one of our computers connected via an Ethernet cable. 

  • Download speed: 931 Mbps

  • Upload speed: 118 Mbps

At the incoming cable connection (Xfinity Gateway), we are receiving around 1.2 Gbps, slightly above the advertised 1.0 Gbps Gigabit plan speed — a great sign that Xfinity’s network capacity has improved locally.

🏁 The Bottom Line

By cutting cable TV, upgrading to Gigabit Internet, and embracing streaming through Roku and YouTube TV, we reduced our total monthly cost from $285 to $167and improved both speed and flexibility.

Between the first-year savings, free streaming perks, and better Internet performance, this upgrade has been well worth the change.

Sometimes a little rethinking — and a willingness to learn something new — can lead to faster service, lower bills, and a better experience overall.

Jim & Judy Moran
45 year Longmeadow residents and 35 year customers of Comcast/ Xfinity and prior cable system owners (ATT-Broadband, Media One ...)