For residents tucked into the Three Fingers area of Mason County — one of the harder-to-reach corners of the county’s broadband map — the wait is over. Mason County Public Utility District No. 3 has reached the April 2026 completion deadline for its Three Fingers Fiber Project, a five-year effort funded in part by a federal USDA ReConnect grant that has connected more than 250 homes and businesses to symmetrical gigabit fiber internet.
The milestone caps a project that began in early 2020 when PUD 3 was awarded the ReConnect grant. Construction faced early delays tied to COVID-19 and federal procurement processes, but the mainline distribution network was completed well ahead of the April 2026 federal deadline. Over the final months, crews worked neighborhood by neighborhood connecting individual homes and businesses that had applied for service — a process PUD 3 calls its “Fiberhood” model.
What the Connection Means for Residents
The Three Fingers buildout brings the total number of homes and businesses connected to PUD 3’s open-access fiber network to more than 3,000 across Mason County, including areas that previously had no broadband options whatsoever. The open-access design is key: rather than locking customers into one provider, PUD 3 owns the physical fiber infrastructure while a roster of local internet retailers competes to deliver service over it. Customers can choose from multiple providers offering unlimited, symmetrical 1,000/1,000 Mbps gigabit internet, HDTV, and phone service — and switch between them without any new wiring.
For families in the Three Fingers community, that means the same fiber speeds available in urban centers, delivered to homes that until recently had to make do with slow or unreliable connections. Remote workers, students doing homework, and small home-based businesses all stand to benefit directly.
Residents who have not yet applied for a connection are encouraged to contact PUD 3’s Telecom Team. An Engineering Designer will review the construction needed to reach the home and walk through next steps. The application fee waiver extended through May 31, 2026, for the neighboring Cloquallum Communities Fiberhood may also still be in effect — residents in that area should check pud3.org for current terms.
Shelton Eyes $6 Million Overhaul of Olympic Highway North — But Bikes Come First
On the southern end of the county, Shelton is moving — slowly but deliberately — toward the most significant road reconstruction project in nearly four decades. Olympic Highway North, which runs from C Street to Wallace Kneeland Boulevard, has not been paved in 37 years. The pavement is fractured and cracked, and the City of Shelton is now asking the public to weigh in on what the rebuilt road should look like.
About 50 residents turned out to a community meeting at the Shelton Civic Center on March 10 to hear consultant Transpo Group present four design options. Each option addresses the deteriorating roadway differently, with varying configurations for travel lanes, parking, and — notably — bike lanes. A $3.7 million grant from the Washington State Transportation Improvement Board comes with a condition: the final design must include dedicated bicycle lanes. That requirement is shaping the conversation and has generated discussion among residents about how best to balance competing uses on the corridor.
The total project cost is estimated at up to $6 million, with the Transportation Improvement Board grant covering the majority of that figure alongside additional city and grant funding. Transpo Group is expected to finalize the design this coming winter, with the project going out for bid in spring 2027 and construction potentially beginning in summer 2027.
For now, the city is continuing to gather public feedback on the four design options. Residents who want to weigh in can visit sheltonwa.gov for more information on the Olympic Highway North project. The road serves as a key corridor for residents commuting between the northern neighborhoods of Shelton and downtown, and the reconstruction is expected to improve safety, drainage, and accessibility when it eventually gets underway.
What to Watch
On the broadband front, PUD 3’s Cloquallum Communities Fiberhood — Phase 2 of which launched in February 2026 covering the Wivell Road, Loertscher Road, and Cloquallum neighborhoods — has a project completion deadline of October 2026. Residents in those areas who have not yet applied should do so before application windows close.
For Olympic Highway North, the next public milestone will be the release of the final design, expected winter 2026–2027. Shelton residents with strong feelings about bike lanes, parking, or lane configuration should engage with the city now, while options are still on the table.
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