The U.S.’s $42.5 Billion High-Speed Internet Plan Hits a Snag: A Worker Shortage

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The U.S. has a $43 billion plan to build out high-speed internet. Now they need to find the workers to get it done.

Shortage of fiber technicians casts doubt on the White House goal to bring fast internet to every home this decade

Jason Jolly, chief executive of Fiberscope LLC, says demand for his fiber-splicing crew has been ‘nonstop.’The federal government is missing a crucial link in its plan to greatly expand access to high-speed internet service in rural America: enough workers to get the job done. Fiber splicers—the workers who install, maintain and repair wired broadband networks—are in short supply. “We’re running around like chickens with our heads cut off,” says Jason Jolly, chief executive of Fiberscope LLC, a Sullivan, Mo.-based company that does contracted fiber-splicing work. Mr. Jolly says his five-person crew has been “getting nonstop calls for the last two months.”

 

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