Some creative thinking saved the broadband dreams of 10 cities in two Minnesota counties. Could cooperatives (co-ops) provide the magic bullet for municipalities encumbered with funding and political hurdles?\n\nCommunities in Renville and Sibley Counties created the RS Fiber Cooperative to address rural communication needs. Recently the\xa0communities decided to lend the co-op funds they need\xa0to build a fiber and wireless infrastructure to cover the towns and farmlands in the co-op's service\xa0area. The arrangement resolves\xa0several challenges that a number of communities face:\nit was easier for cities to pass a bond to pay the co-op to build the network\xa0rather then have the cities build it;co-ops\u2019 existing community relationships translate\xa0into faster network take rates;Minnesota is one of the 21 states with a law restricting public broadband.\nMark Erickson,\xa0Winthrop, MN EDA Director and a key contributor to the project joins us to talk us through the complexities of the financial arrangement and the benefits of having the co-op take the lead on the network buildout. He also discusses the role of co-ops in the bigger broadband picture as they take aggressive action in deploying networks.\n\nMy new book, Building the Gigabit City, Vol 2, devotes significant coverage to co-ops and their increasing impact on broadband.