Logan County Board
Logan County broadband project approved

[January 08, 2026] 

On Monday, January 5th, the Logan County Board met for a special regular session. This session, which lasted for less than half an hour, was held in the second-floor courtroom of the Logan County Courthouse. Eleven of the twelve board members were present, with Kathy Schmidt being the only member absent. Present were Chairman JR Glenn, Vice Chairman Dale Nelson, Lance Conahan, Michael DeRoss, Hannah Fitzpatrick, Bob Sanders, Gil Turner, Jim Wessbecher, Keenan Leesman, Kevin Knauer, and Joseph Kuhlman.

The broadband project, which has been in the works to get approved for several years now, is a project aimed at providing high speed internet access to all parts of Logan County. Eighty miles of fiber is going to be run by the company WANRack, with Logan County getting 12 strands of that fiber for their own use.

In addition to providing high speed internet to residents, it would also be something that could attract businesses to the county. Any business could purchase parts of the fiber and rent them, paying WANRack for the use of that strand or strands. Since Logan County is helping with the cost of the project, they would receive a portion of the revenue generated by this project.

Several years back, Leesman went to the state to apply for a grant to assist in the cost of the project. WANRack wanted the county to commit more money than they were able to. After over a year of applying and waiting on approval, the state agreed to commit several millions of dollars, helping cover the part that Logan County would not be able to afford.

This led to another issue, the board had to allocate $2 million to expand the Logan County Safety Complex, something that was required under the new Illinois SAFE-T Act. The $2 million was taken from the broadband project and dedicated to the expansion. This left broadband without a funding source after the state had agreed to help fund it. The board was also not sure if there was a time limit on when the project had to be started before the state’s offer expired.

After several conversations with the state, Leesman discovered that the board still had enough time to get the project funded and started before the state would pull their grant due to inaction, but a funding source had to be found. After much discussion, it was ultimately decided that the county could not give $2 million up front, but they could do smaller monthly payments. This was not something WANRack wanted. This, combined with the fact that the county did not have the full amount up front, caused WANRack to walk away from the deal, leaving Broadband dead once again.

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Leesman went back to the state, informing them that they no longer had a commercial partner to help build the project. The state went to WANRack on Logan County’s behalf and got them to come back to the negotiating table, as well as agree to monthly payments from the county in the amount of $14,500 over ten years.

In December of 2025 the details were finally being worked out. To read on the specifics of this agreement, as well as why the board did not vote to approve broadband, click here.

In this month’s meeting, Leesman stated that all of the concerns that the board members brought up at December’s meeting had been addressed, and that WANRack’s legal team was working on it. He stated that the agreement was not yet ready, so the board could either approve it with some contingencies or push off the approval until they had the contract in hand. He also clarified that the revenue share agreement would be for the life of the project, not just the ten years the county was paying. After those ten years, however, the county could renegotiate to potentially get a higher percentage of the profits from Broadband.

It was stated that, for the first ten years, the county would not receive any revenue share until the percentage of their earnings was higher than their $14,500 per month contribution. Leesman also informed that board that, should any county business get a customer to purchase fiber lines on the project, the county would get fifteen percent of the revenue generated from that customer rather than the agreed upon ten percent. The “hub” of the project would be the courthouse, with Leesman referring to it as the “center of the spoke.”

The board eventually decided to take a vote with some contingencies. Those contingencies were that the wording met what the county and WANRack agreed to change, and that State’s Attorney Brad Hauge approved it. The motion was made by Conahan, seconded by Leesman and was unanimously approved 11-0.

[Matt Boutcher]

 

[Text received from file]

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