Thousands of homes in Yorkshire to gain access to faster broadband after Quickline secures contract

Thousands of homes and businesses in rural South Yorkshire will soon have access to faster broadband after Quickline Communications was awarded a second contract under the government’s £5bn Project Gigabit programme.

Project Gigabit is the Government’s programme to connect areas which, without intervention, would miss out on fast and reliable broadband. It means rural households will no longer have to struggle with limited bandwidth, and businesses will be able to improve their productivity.

The latest win means Quickline is now one of only a handful of providers across England with multiple Project Gigabit contracts, covering a combined total of more than 60,000 premises and worth around £104m in public funding.

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The new deal will fund the rollout of a full fibre network to up to 32,100 premises across rural South Yorkshire, along with homes and businesses in East Yorkshire, North Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire.

Rural broadband provider Quickline Communications has been awarded a Project Gigabit contract to connect thousands of homes and businesses in rural South Yorkshire. Pictured in the South Yorkshire village of Woodsetts are Quickline team members, from left, Ashley Heidstra, Area Build Manager; Ryan Johnson, Cabling Operative; Sean Royce, CEO; Shaun Smith, Splicer Operative; and Lee Jackson, Area Build Manager. (Photo by Sean Spencer/Hull News & Pictures Ltd)Rural broadband provider Quickline Communications has been awarded a Project Gigabit contract to connect thousands of homes and businesses in rural South Yorkshire. Pictured in the South Yorkshire village of Woodsetts are Quickline team members, from left, Ashley Heidstra, Area Build Manager; Ryan Johnson, Cabling Operative; Sean Royce, CEO; Shaun Smith, Splicer Operative; and Lee Jackson, Area Build Manager. (Photo by Sean Spencer/Hull News & Pictures Ltd)
Rural broadband provider Quickline Communications has been awarded a Project Gigabit contract to connect thousands of homes and businesses in rural South Yorkshire. Pictured in the South Yorkshire village of Woodsetts are Quickline team members, from left, Ashley Heidstra, Area Build Manager; Ryan Johnson, Cabling Operative; Sean Royce, CEO; Shaun Smith, Splicer Operative; and Lee Jackson, Area Build Manager. (Photo by Sean Spencer/Hull News & Pictures Ltd)

It comes just weeks after Yorkshire-based Quickline was awarded a £60m Project Gigabit contract covering 29,000 rural premises in West Yorkshire and parts of North and East Yorkshire.

The new contract will see the connection of outlying communities situated around Barnsley, Doncaster, Epworth, Goole, Maltby, Penistone, Rotherham, Sheffield and Worksop.

Quickline will connect a further 29,000 homes and businesses as part of its commercial network build.

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The latest contract was awarded to Quickline following a competitive public procurement process and is worth £44m in Government subsidy.

It makes Quickline, which is backed by Northleaf Capital Partners, one of the UK’s largest rural broadband providers.

A spokesman said: “Quickline’s full fibre footprint will ensure over 200,000 deep rural premises are taken out of broadband poverty. This is in addition to another 200,000 rural premises able to connect to Quickline’s next generation fixed wireless network.

“As well as building a broadband network, Quickline will also play a key role in ensuring economic growth across the region with the delivery of a wide-ranging social values programme seeing the creation of jobs, apprenticeships, training courses, work placements, workshops, mentoring and more.”

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Quickline’s CEO Sean Royce said: “We are incredibly proud to have been awarded a second Project Gigabit contract and one that is again in a very important area for us.

“Our roots are in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire and as a broadband provider we have a very strong regional focus. We employ people from Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, we deliver broadband to the people of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire and we want to play our part in the growth and economic development of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire.”

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