Orcas Power & Light Cooperative · Rock Island Communications

$80 Rock Island 50 Mbps vs. $50 T-Mobile Up to 400 Mbps

About $30 a month savings…
AND up to 8x faster internet.

01 The Question

Why can't we get cheaper, faster internet?

02 The Reasoning

OPALCO has a joint venture with T-Mobile that brings T-Mobile cellular service to San Juan County on member-built fiber backhaulopalcoopalco pdf. T-Mobile Home Internet is not part of that arrangement and is not offered to members.

03 The Response From OPALCO

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.

— J. Foster Hildreth, OPALCO General Manager · April 8, 2026 thread
04 The Counter-Offer

The cost the cooperative recovers today is $1.29 per subscriber per month990 pdf. If OPALCO let T-Mobile pay that same $1.29 directly — exactly what Rock Island pays today — the cooperative would collect the same revenue, members would pay less, and Rock Island would just lose the markup.

Deal?

05 The Solution

We need to renegotiate to allow members more choices for their internet.

What $30 a month becomes over time

Per member · currently flowing to a markup OPALCO will not explain

1 month
$30
1 year
$360
5 years
$1,800
10 years
$3,600

$30 Less. Eight Times the Speed. Blocked from San Juan County.

Rock Island Communications (legally Island Network LLC) is a for-profit broadband subsidiary 100% owned by OPALCO, the member-owned electric cooperative serving San Juan County990 pdf. It is the dominant broadband provider in San Juan County. This page is specifically about Rock Island Communications' fixed wireless product. Rock Island's fiber-to-the-home offering is a different service with a different value proposition and is not the subject of this analysis.

Rock Island's Classic fixed wireless plan is $80 a month for 50 Mbpsrockislandsnapshot 2026-04-11. On the mainland, T-Mobile Home Internet Rely is $50 a month with real-world speeds up to 400 Mbpst-mobilet-mobile — about eight times faster, for less money. T-Mobile Home Internet is not sold in San Juan County as a retail product, even though Rock Island has a joint venture with T-Mobile that put T-Mobile cellular coverage here using OPALCO's own fiber backhaulopalcoopalco pdf.

The 400 Mbps figure is T-Mobile's published maximum for the Rely plan; real-world speeds for fixed wireless service vary by location, signal strength, and tower distance. Whether T-Mobile Home Internet would deliver usable performance specifically in San Juan County is a testable engineering question that the cooperative could answer with field data.

Twelve years. Three statements. One broken promise.

All on the public record · in OPALCO's own words.

2014

“OPALCO will allow cell phone providers to access our infrastructure at the cost of service – like any other member – which could improve cell phone service. Currently, there are no proposals from cell phone companies to do so.”

OPALCO 700 MHz Q&A, June 2014 opalco 2014

2016

OPALCO enters an exclusive joint venture with T-Mobile to deploy cellular service on Rock Island's fiber backhaul. No equivalent “cost of service” access has been publicly offered to any other carrier in the years since.

OPALCO press release, February 2016 opalcoopalco pdf

2026

“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.”

— J. Foster Hildreth, OPALCO General Manager, April 8, 2026 thread

Rock Island Classic rockislandsnapshot 2026-04-11
San Juan County · 50 Mbps
$80/mo
$960 / year
T-Mobile Home Internet Rely t-mobile
Mainland · up to 400 Mbps measured
$50/mo
$600 / year · Would save $360 / year
Blocked in San Juan County — GM says allowing it “would undermine the financial model” thread

What the 2024 Form 990 Reveals

Federal law requires nonprofits to disclose all financial transactions with controlled subsidiaries on Schedule Rirs. Here is what OPALCO reported to the IRS in November 2025990 pdf.

Transaction (Schedule R, 2024 Form 990) 990 pdf
Amount
Backbone / infrastructure access fee paid BY Rock Island TO OPALCO (Type A)
$108,053
New loans FROM OPALCO TO Rock Island (Type D)
$2,137,065
Shared employees — OPALCO to Rock Island (Type O)
$70,875
Reimbursements paid TO Rock Island BY OPALCO (Type P)
$832,103
Reimbursements paid BY Rock Island TO OPALCO (Type Q)
$514,778
Cash transferred FROM Rock Island TO OPALCO (Type S)
$302,873
Asset sale to Rock Island (Type G)
$80,861

Source: OPALCO 2024 Form 990, Schedule R — publicly filed with the IRS, November 2025. Direct PDF 990 pdf.

Schedule R Part V labels Type A as “Receipt of (i) interest, (ii) annuities, (iii) royalties, or (iv) rent from a controlled entity.” Since OPALCO owns the fiber backbone that Rock Island operates on, this line is the aggregate fee Rock Island paid OPALCO for use of member-built infrastructure in 2024. If any portion is interest, royalty, or other rent rather than pure backbone access, the backbone-only figure would be smaller, not larger.

The Critical Calculation

Backbone access fee (2024) 990 pdf $108,053
÷ Rock Island subscribers opalco ~7,000
÷ 12 months 12
Backbone cost per subscriber $1.29 / month

Members pay $80 per month for 50 Mbps wireless servicerockislandsnapshot 2026-04-11 on a network whose backbone costs $1.29 per subscriber per month. Even accounting for customer service, equipment, maintenance, and salaries, that gap is extraordinary for a cooperative subsidiary.

The $1.29 figure is the per-subscriber average of the total backbone access fee Rock Island paid OPALCO in 2024 ($108,053 spread across roughly 7,000 subscribers and 12 months). It is presented here as a cost-recovery floor — the minimum amount the cooperative collects for backbone access — not as a per-subscriber pricing benchmark or as a marginal-cost figure.

Make That Make Sense

Backbone cost OPALCO recovers, per subscriber per month990 pdf
$1.29
Markup over the T-Mobile market price members pay every monthrockislandt-mobile
$30.00

The markup is 23× the cost recovery.

If “cost recovery” is the financial model OPALCO is protecting, members are paying twenty-three times more in markup than the cooperative needs to recover for backbone access. The General Manager has said allowing competing alternatives “would undermine the financial model.”thread The math suggests the financial model being protected is something other than backbone cost recovery — and the cooperative could collect the exact same $1.29 per subscriber by letting T-Mobile pay for backbone access instead of Rock Island.

On the Record

OPALCO General Manager J. Foster Hildreth responded to a member inquiry across an April 2026 email thread. The full seven-message exchange is published at thread. These are direct quotes.

  • "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 thread

  • "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 thread

  • "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 thread

  • "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 thread · no criteria, no timeline, no reporting commitment

Sell the Backhaul. Honor the Promise. Lower the Bills.

Open the backhaul to T-Mobile, AT&T, Verizon, and any other carrier willing to pay for access. Each pays a cost-of-service backbone fee — exactly what OPALCO already promised in 2014. Rock Island keeps its fiber business and meets its federal RDOF commitmentsfcc da 25-350. The cooperative collects more backbone revenue, not less.

Today

$80/mo

50 Mbps fixed wireless

One option: Rock Island Classic.

Under the Constructive Fix

$50/mo

Up to 400 Mbps

Choose from T-Mobile, AT&T, Verizon.

About $30 a month savings…
AND up to 8x faster internet.

And Rock Island wins, too. Less retail support burden. More focus on fiber, where it has genuine expertise and a real track record. The cooperative collects more backbone access revenue from multiple carriers, not less. Everyone does what they do best.

Five Questions Worth Asking

Every question below is sourced to OPALCO's own public filings and written correspondence. Open each to see the supporting data and inline sources.

The Question

"Schedule R of the 2024 Form 990 shows Rock Island paid OPALCO $108,053 for backbone infrastructure access in 2024990 pdf. That is about $1.29 per subscriber per monthopalco. Why is OPALCO not allowing T-Mobile to pay the same $1.29 backbone fee that Rock Island pays today — so members can buy T-Mobile Home Internet at $50/montht-mobile instead of Rock Island Classic at $80rockislandsnapshot 2026-04-11, and the cooperative still collects the same backbone revenue?"

Why It Matters

Every number comes from OPALCO's own IRS filing990 pdf. Schedule R is the "Related Organizations" schedule that federal law requires nonprofits to fileirs. The backbone is the most expensive component of any ISP network. Here it is $1.29 per subscriber. The gap between that and the $80 retail price needs an explanation members can see on paper.

The Question

"The same 2024 Form 990 shows OPALCO made $2.137 million in new loans to Rock Island in 2024990 pdf. We have been told rates are set to sustain the system because of debt obligations thread. How much total debt does Rock Island currently carry, and what is the repayment timeline?"

Why It Matters

The GM has justified current pricing by pointing to ongoing debt thread. But Schedule R shows the debt is being added to, not paid down990 pdf. Members deserve to know the total debt load and when it will actually be retired, because that is the only point at which the cost-recovery justification for premium pricing expires.

The Question

"Rock Island received a $16.5 million Washington State BEAD 'Benefit of the Bargain' grant in 2025opalcowa commerce, on top of roughly $15 million from the federal Capital Projects Fund passed through Washington State Commercewa commerce. That is over $31 million in public money flowing to a for-profit subsidiary of a cooperative. What public interest obligations, build-out commitments, and affordability commitments did Rock Island accept in exchange for that funding? And will the board make the subrecipient agreements available to members?"

Why It Matters

Washington State broadband grant agreements held by the Department of Commerce are generally subject to the Washington Public Records Actrcw 42.56. The specific terms Rock Island committed to — build-out milestones, any voluntary affordability commitments, quarterly compliance reports — should be available to members on requestwa pra. The June 2025 federal BEAD restructuring eliminated the prior provider-proposed low-cost plan requirement for Lifeline-eligible householdsntia, lowering the federal floor on what grantees must offer. That makes the question of what Rock Island actually committed to in writing — and whether anything in those agreements protects member affordability — more important, not less.

The Question

"The General Manager committed in writing to evaluate the T-Mobile relationship based on member interests thread. What criteria are being used for that evaluation, and when will the board report back to members with findings?"

Why It Matters

This question does not require disclosure of confidential NDA terms thread. It asks the board to stand behind a public commitment and give members a process and a timeline. A cooperative's GM is not a private company CEO. He works for the members. When he makes a written commitment affecting member pricing, members can reasonably expect a public accounting.

The Question

In plain English: Rock Island just took on a $1.4 million federal grant with hard build-out deadlines that could cost the cooperative money if missed. Members deserve to know how it is going.

"In April 2025, the FCC approved Rock Island acquiring Commnet Wireless's Rural Digital Opportunity Fund support and build-out obligations for two San Juan County census block groupsfcc da 25-350. The transferred support is $138,186 per year — $1,381,860 over the ten-year RDOF term — in exchange for deploying voice and broadband service to 2,305 locationsfcc da 25-350. The FCC order specifies four mandatory build-out milestones, each enforced as of December 31 of the year shown: 40 percent of locations by 2025, 60 percent by 2026, 80 percent by 2027, and 100 percent by 2028fcc da 25-350. The order also required Rock Island to submit an irrevocable letter of credit and a bankruptcy opinion letter within 90 days of the April 18, 2025 release date — a deadline that fell in mid-July 2025fcc da 25-350. Has Rock Island consummated the transaction, posted the required letter of credit, and met its first build-out milestone? What is the current deployment status in the Assigned Census Block Groups, and who at OPALCO is accountable for tracking and reporting it to members?"

Why It Matters

The FCC order itself states that Rock Island “must assume all risks and consequences of noncompliance with program requirements, including default recovery of support and potential forfeiture penalties”fcc da 25-350. The carrier Rock Island is taking these obligations from — Commnet Wireless — had already notified the FCC, before this transfer was approved, that it would not fulfill its RDOF commitments in certain other Washington census blocks and had withdrawn entirely from its RDOF support areas in Idahofcc da 25-350. The two San Juan County census block groups Rock Island acquired were a separate Section 214 transfer rather than part of those defaults, but the broader pattern matters: the prior holder could not make the economics work, and Rock Island has now stepped into the same federal compliance regime with the same hard deadlines. Because Rock Island is wholly owned by OPALCO990 pdf, any clawback of disbursed support, draw on the letter of credit, or forfeiture penalty ultimately sits on the balance sheet of the member-owned cooperative. This is a forward-looking federal financial exposure with hard deadlines and a documented history of difficulty in the same program — the kind of risk members should hear about in plain numbers, in advance, not after the fact at an annual meeting.

What You Can Do

Member transparency depends on members showing up. Here are the most effective ways to weigh in before and during the 2026 Annual Meeting.

1

Attend the Annual Meeting opalco

All OPALCO members have standing to speak and vote at the Annual Meeting regardless of which district they live in. The virtual business meeting is Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. on Zoom. The in-person festival is Friday, May 8, 3–6 p.m. at the Lopez Center for Community and the Arts.

OPALCO Annual Meeting Page →
2

Email the Board

Send your own questions to the OPALCO board and communications office. Reference the Form 990 Schedule R directly 990 pdf. These are their own filed numbers.

Email Communications → communications@opalco.com
3

File a Public Records Request rcw 42.56

Washington State's Department of Commerce holds the Rock Island BEAD wa commerce and Capital Projects Fund wa commerce grant agreements. Members can request the subrecipient agreements, scoring documents, any voluntary affordability commitments, and compliance reports under the Public Records Act.

WA Commerce PRA Portal → WSBO@Commerce.wa.gov wa commerce
4

Share With Neighbors

Most OPALCO members do not know about the $1.29 backbone number or the Schedule R filings. Share this page with anyone on Orcas, Lopez, Shaw, or San Juan Island paying a Rock Island bill.

Member Transparency Is Not Adversarial

We are not opposed to Rock Island. We are not opposed to OPALCO. We are not opposed to the cooperative model. The cooperative model only works when members have enough information to hold management accountable.

Every claim on this page links directly to a primary source. The numbers come from OPALCO's own public IRS filing990 pdf, from the providers' own published pricingrockislandsnapshot 2026-04-11, from state and federal broadband program recordswa commercentia, and from General Manager J. Foster Hildreth's own written correspondence thread. We are not guessing. We are not accusing. We are asking questions that any responsible cooperative member would ask.

Members funded this networkopalco pdf. Members deserve to understand how it works.

Right of reply. OPALCO and Rock Island Communications are invited to submit a written response to the questions and claims on this page. Any substantive response will be published here in full alongside the member analysis, unedited. Contact: philipemanuele@gmail.com.

This page presents publicly filed information and written correspondence with commentary and questions from an OPALCO member. Every numerical figure is linked to a primary source. Interpretations, framings, and questions reflect the author's views as a cooperative member exercising governance rights. Nothing here is legal or financial advice. If any factual claim on this page is incorrect, please contact the author and it will be reviewed and corrected promptly.