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EPB of Chattanooga, formerly known as the Electric Power Board of Chattanooga, is an American electric power distribution and telecommunication company owned by the city of Chattanooga, Tennessee. [2] EPB serves nearly 180,000 homes and businesses in a 600-square mile area in the greater Chattanooga area and Hamilton County. [3]
Beginning in 2009 and continuing through March 2011, when Haletown, Tennessee, received service from EPB's fiber optic network, EPB began to establish its exclusive fiber optic network to its 600 sq mi (1,600 km 2) service area, which covers the greater Chattanooga Metropolitan Statistical Area. [117]
Dec. 21—Chattanooga's power utility, EPB, has been ranked as the best mid-sized electric utility in the nation, according to consumer surveys of residential electricity customers. J.D. Power, a ...
As a result of Corker's vision and EPB's execution, Chattanooga has since been dubbed the "Gig City" [30] and became the most connected city in the Western Hemisphere, [31] offering Internet speeds of up to 10 gigabits per second to every home and business in EPB's 600-square mile service area. [32] He implemented a merit-based bonus system for ...
EPB will raise its rates for video services in April, adding anywhere from $2 to $9 a month for most of its cable TV plans. The Chattanooga utility, which typically raises its video rates ...
TEPCO continued to operate as a street car company in Chattanooga and was reorganized in 1941 as Southern Coach Lines. The company operated street cars until 1946, when it focused on bus travel. The company was purchased by the Chattanooga Area Regional Transportation Authority in 1973.
A developing Trump administration plan for deep staff cuts and drastic changes at the Federal Emergency Management Agency is raising alarm among some state officials and even Republican lawmakers ...
However, the largest 1 Gbit/s deployment in the United States, in Chattanooga, Tennessee, despite being conducted by power utility EPB, [19] was FTTH rather than FTTC, reaching every subscriber in a 600-square-mile area. Monthly pricing of US$350 reflected this generally high cost of deployment.