On January 30, 2019

Internet hub opens at Brownsville Butcher

By Curt Peterson

ECFiber and Brownsville Butcher and Pantry jointly hosted an open house on Friday, Jan. 18 that might be called “a match made in heaven.”

The occasion was ECFiber’s introduction of a new “internet café” within the former Brownsville General Store. West Windsor, of which Brownsville is a part, is one of 24 towns that are being geared up with ECFiber’s fiber optic broadband internet access. Patrons are invited to come for meals or just a beverage, and sit in the café using their hand-held device or laptop to access the Worldwide Web.

Broadband service in rural Vermont has been the promise of three successive gubernatorial administrations, and is considered key to attracting and retaining younger entrepreneurs and tech-dependent employees. ECFiber has assisted in making the broadband dream come true, at least for some Vermonters, Chairman Irving Thomae told The Mountain Times.

And the Brownsville Butcher and Pantry, a brand-new venue, seems appropriate for ECFiber’s third internet café roll-out.

Peter Varkonyi and Lauren Stevens met when Varkonyi was a chef in a Royalton restaurant, and Stevens delivered fresh produce from a local farm she managed.

“We became friends and discovered we had similar aspirations and passions,” Stevens said. “We were talking about starting a business together almost immediately.”

The couple started dating and their dream of a business partnership remained the focus of their relationship.

Stevens grew up in Granville, New York, not far from the Vermont border, and studied agriculture at SUNY Syracuse. Varkonyi is from the Washington, D.C. area and attended New England Culinary Institute in Montpelier. They live on Bible Hill Road in Brownsville.

Their new venture opened on Nov. 20. There is no sign – the store is well known to locals. The interior, however, is impressively updated and finished, and the menu includes traditional favorites as well as more adventurous choices.

Beer and wine are served and sold as package goods. There is a full butchery and delicatessen department.

An alliance of local residents, called Friends of the Brownsville General Store, owns the property – Varkonyi and Stevens have a five-year lease with the contractual opportunity of ultimately buying the store.

People sit at the counter or at tables, surfing or working on laptops or phones connecting Brownsville with the world via superfast ECFiber infrastructure.

The other two ECFiber internet cafes are at the South Royalton Market, and the Rochester Cafe and Country Store in Rochester.

Thomae says he feels ECFiber’s accomplishments have already made a vast difference in the lives of rural Vermonters. Eight years into operation, the organization’s network covers almost 700 miles in 21 towns and serves over 3,200 subscribers.

Fiber optic cable is much faster than DSL, which many Vermont internet access systems employ, according to Thomae.

“Young people would go out into the world and start on tech careers,” the former academic Thomae said, “then they came home to Vermont to face an impossible situation – no broadband access. It’s going to make a vast difference.”

The subscribers also own the company, Thomae said. Original financing came from individuals. Since their founding, ECFiber has been able to sell $22 million in revenue bonds, and they plan to issue $19 million more. The first bond paid off the original investors.

Thomae said 100 percent of the bond proceeds are invested in capital infrastructure.

The bonds are backed by revenue from subscribers, and are not “general obligation bonds,” Thomae said. The towns that allow ECFiber to install broadband access are not financially obligated in any way.

“Not one penny of tax money goes to ECFiber installation or operations,” he said.

Photo by Curt Peterson

Laura Stevens and Peter Varyonyi opened the Brownsville Butcher and Pantry in the former Brownsville Store Nov. 20.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Robert Hecker appointed to Killington Select Board

May 15, 2024
By Curt Peterson Robert Hecker has been appointed to take Steve Finneron’s seat on the Killington Select Board. The announcement came after an executive session Monday night May 13. The position lasts until next Town Meeting Day vote, when voters will choose the person to fulfill the remaining year of Finneron’s term.  Hecker was one…

Town resolves eminent domain 

May 15, 2024
Deal with landowner called ‘win-win’ By Polly Mikula The town of Killington will not pursue an eminent domain hearing scheduled for May 20, having recently resolved the case with the landowner.  Eva Nagymihaly and her sister, Theresa Rust, own land on the east side at the base of Killington Road to the intersection with Route…

Logging company fined for wetland and water quality impacts in Bridgewater, Thetford

May 15, 2024
The Agency of Natural Resources Dept. of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and Vermont Forests, Parks, and Recreation (FPR) announced May 8 that Thomson Timber Harvesting and Trucking LLC (Thompson Timber), a company that performs logging activities in Vermont, was fined $32,550 for violating the Vermont Wetland Rules and failing to follow acceptable management practices (AMPs) for…

Wonderfeet Kids’ Museum celebrates expansion

May 15, 2024
By Polly Mikula Saturday, May 11, Wonderfeet Kids’ Museum held a grand opening celebration from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. on Merchants Row downtown. While the museum relocated to its current location (66 Merchants Row) last spring, this was the first time the organization has celebrated that expansion. The move allowed Wonderfeet Kids’ Museum to tripled in size with new…