Primary Source Document · OPALCO · April 2026

Correspondence with GM Foster Hildreth

The complete seven-message email thread between OPALCO member Philip Emanuele and General Manager J. Foster Hildreth, April 1 through April 8, 2026. Subject: the Rock Island / T-Mobile agreement and member pricing.

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What This Thread Is

On April 1, 2026, OPALCO member Philip Emanuele wrote to the OPALCO Board raising a governance concern about Rock Island Communications' fixed wireless pricing and the joint venture agreement between Rock Island and T-Mobile. The letter asked the board to (1) disclose the terms of the Rock Island / T-Mobile agreement that restrict T-Mobile from offering Home Internet on Orcas, (2) renegotiate those terms, and (3) report progress to the membership before the 2026 Annual Meeting.

OPALCO General Manager J. Foster Hildreth responded personally. Over approximately one hour on the morning of April 8, 2026, the two exchanged six more messages. This page publishes the full thread in chronological order, with the most significant admissions highlighted below.

Two redactions, no other edits: (a) one third-party CC address (Alan Smith of Rock Island Communications) preserved by name but with the email address removed, and (b) GM Hildreth's direct phone number in his email signature removed so this page does not publish personal contact lines beyond what is already on OPALCO's own contact page. The substance of every message is unchanged.

Key Admissions from This Thread

Five statements from General Manager Foster Hildreth that members deserve to hear plainly.

NDA

“We are bound by confidentiality and non-disclosure obligations with T-Mobile that we will honor. For those reasons, it would not be appropriate—or legally permissible—to publicly disclose the detailed terms of that agreement.”

— Foster Hildreth, Apr 8, 2026, 11:11 AM thread

LOCK

“Introducing lower-priced alternatives that rely on the same member-built infrastructure, without contributing to its cost recovery, would undermine the financial model that makes the entire system possible.”

— Foster Hildreth, Apr 8, 2026, 11:11 AM thread. An explicit acknowledgement that Rock Island's business model depends on preventing competing retail products from using the same infrastructure.

NONE

“There is no separate action underway to renegotiate the T-Mobile agreement, so there is no specific progress to report in that regard.”

— Foster Hildreth, Apr 8, 2026, 11:11 AM thread. Direct refusal of the member request for renegotiation.

DEBT

“There is not a single ‘debt paid off’ moment where costs drop away.”

— Foster Hildreth, Apr 8, 2026, 11:53 AM thread. Walked back 13 minutes later: “Rock Island's rates are not designed to remain fixed indefinitely, nor are they based on a concept of perpetual cost recovery.” thread

EVAL

“We will continue to evaluate that relationship over time based on what best serves the long-term interests of OPALCO members.”

— Foster Hildreth, Apr 8, 2026, 11:53 AM thread. No criteria, no timeline, no reporting commitment provided.

April 1 – 8, 2026

Seven messages in chronological order. Philip's messages are framed in teal; Foster's responses in amber.

01 Philip Emanuele <philipemanuele@gmail.com> To: Communications <Communications@opalco.com> Tuesday, April 1, 2026 · 5:17 p.m.
Member Concern — Rock Island/T-Mobile Agreement and Member Pricing

To the OPALCO Board of Directors,

My name is Philip Emanuele. I am an OPALCO member and a resident of Orcas Island, and I am writing to raise a concern I believe deserves the full board's attention.

I am also the operator of Freewave.Online, an ISP options platform serving the Pacific Northwest. I am disclosing this upfront in the interest of transparency — but the concern I am raising is a cooperative governance question on behalf of all OPALCO members, not a private business interest.

Here is the issue in plain terms.

T-Mobile currently offers fixed wireless home internet for approximately $30/month in markets where it competes freely. On Orcas Island, T-Mobile covers 98% of homes with mobile data — coverage that exists in large part because of OPALCO's member-funded infrastructure and the joint venture agreement Rock Island signed with T-Mobile. Yet T-Mobile Home Internet is not available to Orcas residents as a standalone product. The equivalent fixed wireless service is available only through Rock Island, at $80/month.

Members are paying a $50/month premium — $600/year — not because of geography or the actual cost of delivering service here, but because a private agreement appears to have eliminated the very competition that members' own infrastructure made possible. The towers exist because of OPALCO. The backhaul exists because of OPALCO. The coverage exists because of OPALCO. And yet members cannot access the market rate that coverage would otherwise provide them.

I am asking the board to take one specific, concrete action: renegotiate or amend the Rock Island/T-Mobile joint venture agreement to allow T-Mobile to offer its Home Internet product directly to Orcas Island residents.

This is not a request to dismantle Rock Island or abandon a revenue stream. Rock Island's fiber product is excellent and serves members who need it. This is a request to remove what appears to be an anti-competitive restriction that is costing members $600/year for a service that the market would otherwise provide at $30/month. Rock Island can compete on service quality, local support, and fiber — advantages it genuinely has. It should not need to compete by locking out a lower-cost alternative.

OPALCO was formed because CenturyLink was failing this community and members deserved better. The founding argument was that a locally-owned cooperative would put members first. I am asking the board to honor that founding argument today.

I respectfully request that the board:

  1. Disclose the terms of the Rock Island/T-Mobile joint venture agreement to the membership, specifically any provisions that restrict T-Mobile from offering home internet products independently on Orcas Island.
  2. Direct Rock Island to renegotiate those terms to allow T-Mobile Home Internet to be available to Orcas residents.
  3. Report progress to the full membership ahead of the 2026 Annual Meeting.

I am happy to discuss this further and appreciate your service to this community.

Respectfully,
Philip Emanuele
OPALCO Member
Orcas Island, WA
Freewave.Online
philipemanuele@gmail.com | 321-222-0889

02 Foster Hildreth <fhildreth@opalco.com> To: Philip Emanuele Wednesday, April 8, 2026 · 11:11 a.m.
Re: Member Concern — Rock Island/T-Mobile Agreement and Member Pricing

Hi Philip,

Thank you for taking the time to write and for clearly outlining your concerns. I appreciate the transparency regarding your background, and I agree that questions like this deserve a thoughtful and complete response.

There are a few important pieces of context that I think are missing from your assessment, and they are central to understanding both the Rock Island/T-Mobile relationship and why rates are what they are today.

First, the network you're referencing did not exist prior to OPALCO and Rock Island stepping in. Here is a link to our website that outline the history of Rock Island.

https://www.rockisland.com/post/home-grown-broadband

In 2012, internet and cellular service across San Juan County ranged from unreliable to nonexistent. A major outage in 2013 that took down phone, internet, and even 911 service made it clear that doing nothing was not an option.

At that time, no private provider—including the large telecom companies—was willing to invest here. The geography and density simply did not pencil out. This community made the decision to build essential communications infrastructure ourselves.

That decision required real capital and real risk.

Rock Island was launched as a startup. OPALCO members contributed upfront funding, and additional financing was secured to build what is now a countywide fiber and wireless network. That infrastructure—much of it installed underground through bedrock, across water, and to remote locations—was and continues to be very expensive to build and maintain.

Today's rates are directly tied to that reality.

They are not set based on what a mainland market might bear in a competitive urban environment. They are set to:

  • Pay debt service on the infrastructure that was built
  • Operate and maintain a system spread across 20 islands
  • Continue expanding service to unserved and underserved areas
  • Ensure long-term reliability for homes, businesses, and emergency services

Without that revenue, the system simply would not exist—or would not be sustainable.

Second, regarding the T-Mobile relationship: it's important to understand that this was not a case of OPALCO enabling a ready-made competitive market and then restricting it. The partnership was what made widespread fixed wireless and cellular coverage possible in the first place.

OPALCO provided the fiber distribution network and mainland backhaul. T-Mobile provided the cellular equipment and operations. In return, Rock Island secured the ability to deliver fixed wireless broadband locally.

That structure was intentional. It created a viable path to:

  • Rapidly expand cellular coverage (now roughly 95% countywide)
  • Generate early revenue to support startup operations
  • Build a scalable communications system for the islands

Without that arrangement, it is unlikely that either the current level of cellular coverage or the Rock Island network would exist in its current form.

Finally, I want to emphasize something that often gets overlooked in these discussions: Rock Island is not a private company extracting value from the community. It is 100% owned by OPALCO. And OPALCO is owned by its members. That means Rock Island's rates are not going to outside shareholders—they are sustaining infrastructure that members collectively built and continue to rely on. You are absolutely right that OPALCO was formed to serve its members when others would not. Rock Island is a continuation of that same principle. It exists because this community chose to invest in itself.

That ownership comes with tradeoffs. One of them is that we must set rates at a level that keeps the system financially healthy—so it can continue to serve current members and reach those who are still unconnected.

To answer your requests directly:

1. Disclosure of the Rock Island / T-Mobile agreement

Rock Island operates as a competitive communications business within a broader cooperative structure. Like any business partnership, our agreements include confidential and proprietary terms. We also have binding non-disclosure obligations with T-Mobile that we will honor. For those reasons, it would not be appropriate—or legally permissible—to publicly disclose the detailed terms of that agreement.

2. Request to allow T-Mobile Home Internet to be offered independently

This request is based on an assumption that Rock Island is simply preventing access to a lower-cost alternative. That is not an accurate characterization of the situation. Rock Island exists because this community chose to build its own communications infrastructure when the private market would not. That required taking on significant debt to fund startup operations and construct a network across one of the most challenging geographies in the country. Our subscription rates are set to support that system. They are what allow us to:

  • Pay back the loans used to build the network
  • Maintain and operate infrastructure across 20 islands
  • Continue expanding service to additional members
  • Ensure long-term reliability for essential communications

Introducing lower-priced alternatives that rely on the same member-built infrastructure, without contributing to its cost recovery, would undermine the financial model that makes the entire system possible. If Rock Island's revenue is materially weakened, the consequence is not simply "more competition"—it is reduced ability to maintain the network, slowed expansion, and risk to the long-term viability of the system members built.

3. Reporting back to the membership

There is no separate action underway to renegotiate the T-Mobile agreement, so there is no specific progress to report in that regard.

That said, OPALCO and Rock Island regularly report to members on financial performance, capital investments, and system expansion. We will continue to do so in a transparent and responsible manner.

I will be forwarding our email exchange to OPALCO Board members as requested.

Thank you again for reaching out and for being part of the cooperative.

Sincerely,
Foster Hildreth
General Manager
OPALCO and Rock Island
[direct phone redacted]

03 Philip Emanuele <philipemanuele@gmail.com> To: Foster Hildreth Wednesday, April 8, 2026 · 11:14 a.m.
Re: Member Concern — Rock Island/T-Mobile Agreement and Member Pricing

Dear Foster,

Thank you for the detailed and thoughtful response. I appreciate you taking the time personally, and I want to acknowledge that the history you've outlined is real. This community did take on significant risk when others wouldn't, and that deserves credit.

I also want to be clear that I understand the financial reality of building infrastructure across 20 islands. That is genuinely hard, and Rock Island has done remarkable work.

That said, your response raises a few questions I'd like to put on the record.

You've confirmed that the T-Mobile agreement contains confidential terms that restrict what can be disclosed — and by implication, what T-Mobile can offer independently in this market. I understand the NDA obligation. But I'd ask the board to consider: when a private agreement has the practical effect of limiting member access to lower-cost services on infrastructure members funded, does the cooperative have an obligation to at least disclose that such a restriction exists and explain its duration? Members don't need to see the contract. They do deserve to know how long the current arrangement is in place.

Which brings me to my core follow-up question: when does the debt get paid off?

Your response frames current pricing around debt service and cost recovery. That's a legitimate justification — but it has an expiration date. Rock Island was already reported to be cash-flow positive and on track for $9 million in annual revenue. At what point does the cost-recovery rationale expire, and what happens to member pricing when it does? Has the board established a timeline or a benchmark at which rates will be revisited downward?

I'm not asking Rock Island to operate at a loss. I'm asking what members can expect once the network is paid for — and whether there is a concrete commitment to passing those savings on.

I'll also note for the record: members contributed upfront through rate surcharges, and many funded their own last-mile construction out of pocket — after which Rock Island retained ownership of those assets. Those members have already paid twice. The cost-recovery argument lands differently for them.

I recognize there is no renegotiation underway and that you've answered my three requests directly. I appreciate the candor. I will be sharing this exchange with the broader membership so they can draw their own conclusions, and I look forward to raising these questions at the 2026 Annual Meeting.

Thank you again for your time.

Respectfully,
Philip Emanuele
OPALCO Member · Orcas Island, WA

04 Foster Hildreth <fhildreth@opalco.com> To: Philip Emanuele Wednesday, April 8, 2026 · 11:53 a.m.
Re: Member Concern — Rock Island/T-Mobile Agreement and Member Pricing

Hi Philip,

Thank you for your thoughtful follow-up. I appreciate the tone of your response and the opportunity to continue the discussion. You've raised important questions around agreement transparency, debt, and long-term pricing. I'll address each directly.

On disclosure and duration of the T-Mobile agreement

While I understand the interest in greater visibility, we are bound by confidentiality and non-disclosure obligations with T-Mobile that limit what we can share publicly.

What I can reiterate is that the agreement was foundational to making both cellular coverage and fixed wireless broadband viable in San Juan County. It was not layered on top of an existing market—it helped create one where none existed. We will continue to evaluate that relationship over time based on what best serves the long-term interests of OPALCO members.

On debt, cost recovery, and future rates

It's important to clarify that Rock Island is not a completed project with a fixed endpoint. The network is still being built out. Today, we serve just over 7,000 subscribers—roughly half of the households in San Juan County. That means a significant portion of the community is still not connected, and expanding the network to reach those members requires continued investment.

Rock Island uses debt not only to finance the original build, but also to continue extending the communications grid and connect additional subscribers. As we grow, we are simultaneously paying down existing obligations while investing in expansion. Because of that, there is not a single "debt paid off" moment where costs drop away. This is an ongoing infrastructure system that requires:

  • Continued expansion to serve remaining members
  • Upgrades to meet increasing demand and usage
  • Maintenance and replacement in a harsh marine environment
  • Long-term planning to ensure scalability and reliability

As a cooperative, rates are not set to maximize profit—they are set to sustain the system over time. Financial performance is regularly reviewed, and rates are evaluated accordingly, with a focus on long-term system health and reliability.

On the $30 comparison

The comparison to a $30/month mainland product does not reflect the underlying cost structure here. That pricing exists in dense markets with existing infrastructure and millions of customers. In contrast, the network in San Juan County was built from scratch across a geographically complex archipelago, with far fewer subscribers to share those costs. The service Rock Island provides is supported by infrastructure that members collectively funded and that must be maintained and expanded locally.

On the claim that members have "paid twice"

I want to address this point directly, as it is not an accurate characterization. Rock Island provides a connection incentive of approximately $1,500 per new connection. The member contribution covers only the remaining portion of the individual service drop to their home. That contribution does not pay for—and does not come close to covering—the cost of the broader system, including backbone infrastructure, fiber distribution, wireless sites, or ongoing operations. The cooperative model shares costs between the system as a whole and individual connections, but it is not a case of members fully funding infrastructure and then being charged again for the same asset.

Closing

We welcome your participation in the Annual Meeting and the opportunity for an open discussion with the broader membership. Rock Island was built through significant community investment and careful long-term planning, and we are confident in the strength of that story. We encourage a discussion grounded in the full set of facts, including the actual cost structure and ongoing investment required to sustain the system.

Presenting partial comparisons or simplified assumptions risks mischaracterizing the situation for members who deserve a complete and accurate understanding.

Sincerely,
Foster Hildreth
General Manager
OPALCO / Rock Island Communications

05 Philip Emanuele <philipemanuele@gmail.com> To: Foster Hildreth · Cc: Alan Smith (Rock Island Communications) Wednesday, April 8, 2026 · 11:59 a.m.
Re: Philip Emanuele — Rock Island/T-Mobile Agreement and Member Pricing

Foster,

Thank you again for the detailed response. I want to acknowledge that you've been straightforward and I appreciate that.

A few things stand out to me in your reply that I'd like to note for the record.

You've confirmed that there is no point at which the cost-recovery justification expires. Rates are set to sustain the system indefinitely, and there is no milestone at which members can expect prices to come down. I understand the operational reality behind that, but I think members deserve to hear it stated plainly, and you've now done that.

You've also said that OPALCO will "evaluate" the T-Mobile relationship over time based on member interests. I'd ask that the board treat that as a public commitment and report on that evaluation at the 2026 Annual Meeting. Not the terms of the agreement, just whether the evaluation has happened and what criteria are being used.

On the $30 comparison: I take your point that San Juan County isn't a dense mainland market. But Rock Island has been operating for over a decade, has 7,000 subscribers, generates $9 million annually, and the infrastructure exists. At some point the "we built this from scratch" argument has to give way to "we built it and now it runs." I don't think we're there yet in your view, but I think members are entitled to know when you think we will be.

On the "paid twice" point: I hear your rebuttal and I'll grant that the $1,500 incentive partially offsets last-mile costs. My broader point stands though. Members paid into this system through their power bills during the startup years. Many paid additional thousands for their own connections. Rock Island owns the resulting assets. That's not an accusation, it's just the structure, and it's worth members understanding clearly.

I'll be sharing this exchange at the Annual Meeting and with the broader membership. I think the conversation has been useful and I intend to keep it factual and fair. I'd welcome the opportunity to continue it in person in 2026.

Thank you.

Philip Emanuele
OPALCO Member · Orcas Island, WA

06 Foster Hildreth <fhildreth@opalco.com> To: Philip Emanuele Wednesday, April 8, 2026 · 12:06 p.m.
Re: Philip Emanuele — Rock Island/T-Mobile Agreement and Member Pricing

Hi Philip,

Thank you for the continued exchange and for your engagement on these topics. Before we close this thread, I want to clarify one point to avoid any misunderstanding.

Rock Island's rates are not designed to remain fixed indefinitely, nor are they based on a concept of perpetual "cost recovery." As with any utility-scale infrastructure system, rates are reviewed over time and reflect a combination of operating costs, ongoing investment, and system performance. The network is still being actively expanded and upgraded, and those realities are part of that evaluation. It's not a static system with a single endpoint.

Beyond that clarification, I don't think additional back-and-forth over email will be productive. We welcome the opportunity to have this conversation in a broader setting, including the Annual Meeting, where the full context can be shared and discussed with the membership.

Thank you again for your perspective.

Sincerely,
Foster Hildreth
General Manager
OPALCO / Rock Island Communications

07 Philip Emanuele <philipemanuele@gmail.com> To: Foster Hildreth Wednesday, April 8, 2026 · 12:09 p.m.
Re: Philip Emanuele — Rock Island/T-Mobile Agreement and Member Pricing

Foster,

Thank you for the clarification. I'm glad to hear rates are reviewed over time and can reflect improved system performance. I'll look forward to understanding more about what triggers those reviews and what members can expect going forward.

I appreciate the invitation to continue this at the Annual Meeting and I intend to take you up on it.

See you there.

Philip Emanuele
OPALCO Member · Orcas Island, WA

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