$800 million in public-backed broadband contracts has left All Points Broadband under pressure as rural Virginia rollouts lag, with only about 200 of 1,500 target properties in Rappahannock currently able to sign up.
APB has blamed easement problems and Virginia Department of Transportation permitting delays for slowing last-mile connections, while customers report repeated vague installation timelines.
Loudoun County shows a similar gap: nearly 800 addresses can sign up out of an 8,600-address target market, adding to frustration in Augusta and other rural areas.
Culpeper County already terminated its APB contract last year after delays left just one home connected, then switched in 2025 to FiberLync, where progress has since appeared steadier.