Two infrastructure projects moving through Mason County in 2026 have direct implications for local businesses. The completion of PUD 3’s Three Fingers Fiber Project means that businesses in the Grapeview area that previously operated without reliable broadband now have access to symmetrical gigabit fiber — a connectivity baseline that changes what’s operationally possible. And for businesses operating on or near Olympic Highway North in Shelton, the city’s $6 million road reconstruction project means a design decision about parking and traffic flow is coming, and the window to influence it is open right now.
What Gigabit Fiber Means for Mason County Businesses
The Three Fingers Fiber Project completion isn’t just about residential internet. Businesses in the Three Fingers area of Grapeview — whether retail, service-based, agricultural, or home-based — are now on the same fiber network that urban businesses have built their operations around. PUD 3’s open-access gigabit fiber delivers symmetrical 1,000/1,000 Mbps speeds for approximately $85 per month. Symmetrical upload speed is the detail that matters most for business use: cloud backups, video conferencing, point-of-sale systems, and file transfers all depend on upload, not just download.
The open-access model gives Mason County businesses something rare: genuine provider competition on a single physical network. PUD 3 owns the fiber infrastructure; multiple retail ISPs compete over it. Businesses can compare service-level agreements, support quality, and pricing between providers — and switch if a better option emerges — without any new wiring or construction. For businesses that have been locked into a single slow provider by geography, this changes the economics of operating from rural Mason County.
Businesses in Three Fingers that haven’t yet applied for service can reach PUD 3’s Telecom Team at pud3.org. An Engineering Designer will assess the specific construction needed to reach your location.
Cloquallum Businesses: Fee Waiver Expires May 31
If your business is in the Cloquallum Communities area — PUD 3’s next active fiberhood — an application fee waiver is in effect through May 31, 2026. After that date, the standard application fee applies. For businesses evaluating the cost of getting fiber established, applying before the deadline is a straightforward way to reduce the upfront expense. Visit pud3.org for current program details.
Olympic Highway North: What Business Owners Need to Know Now
The City of Shelton is in the process of selecting a design for the reconstruction of Olympic Highway North, the stretch from C Street to Wallace Kneeland Boulevard. The road last saw pavement in 1989 and the city has secured up to $6 million in funding — including a $3.7 million Washington State Transportation Improvement Board grant — to rebuild it from the ground up. That TIB grant requires bike lanes in the final design. The question is how those bike lanes are configured, and what that means for on-street parking.
Consultant Transpo Group has developed four design options. For businesses along the corridor, the core variable is customer parking access:
- Option 1: Parking on both sides retained; traditional painted bike lanes
- Option 2 (city staff recommendation): Parking on one side; buffered bike lanes that physically separate cyclists from vehicle traffic
- Option 4: All on-street parking removed; businesses would rely on on-site or side-street parking
City staff recommend Option 2, citing the balance between safety, parking retention, and the TIB grant requirements. For businesses whose customers depend on on-street parking — retail, food service, personal services — the difference between Option 1 and Option 4 is material. Construction isn’t until summer 2027, but the design is being locked in this winter.
If you operate a business on or near Olympic Highway North between C Street and Wallace Kneeland Boulevard, attending a city public comment process or submitting input online at sheltonwa.gov is the most direct way to influence the outcome. Once Transpo Group finalizes the design this winter, the configuration is set.
For more on what PUD 3 fiber means for Mason County businesses, see What PUD 3’s Gigabit Fiber Means for Mason County Business Owners in 2026. Full infrastructure context at Mason County Infrastructure Update — May 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does PUD 3’s open-access fiber network benefit Mason County businesses?
PUD 3 owns the fiber infrastructure and multiple retail ISPs compete to deliver service over it, giving businesses genuine provider choice without requiring new wiring. Businesses pay approximately $85/month for symmetrical 1,000/1,000 Mbps gigabit service — with matching upload and download speeds critical for cloud operations, video conferencing, and large file transfers.
My business is in Three Fingers — what’s the process to get fiber?
Contact PUD 3’s Telecom Team at pud3.org. An Engineering Designer will assess what construction is needed to reach your specific location and walk through next steps. The Three Fingers project is now complete, so connections are being processed for all businesses that have applied.
How will Olympic Highway North construction affect my business access in 2027?
Construction is planned for summer 2027. Specific traffic management and temporary access plans will be set by the contractor selected in spring 2027. The bigger near-term decision is the design: which option is chosen determines whether on-street parking survives. Businesses should submit input on the design options at sheltonwa.gov before winter 2026, when the design locks in.
What is the TIB grant requirement for bike lanes on Olympic Highway North?
The $3.7 million Washington State Transportation Improvement Board grant awarded to Shelton for the Olympic Highway North project requires that the final design include dedicated bicycle lanes. This requirement is non-negotiable — it’s a condition of the funding. All four design options presented by Transpo Group include bike lanes in some form; the debate is about configuration and how much parking each option preserves.

Leave a Reply