Montgomery County Juvenile Court Detention Services

Billed Entity 16055295 · Ohio

Overview

Indicator2025202420232022202120202019201820172016201520142013201220112010200920082007200620052004200320022001200019991998
Total E-Rate subsidies$18K$25K$35K$6K$6K$6K$6K$5K$8K$14K$14K$14K$17K$7K$10K$9K
Average discount rate86%88%87%90%90%90%85%85%88%88%88%90%90%90%90%90%
Schools & libraries (in this area)1111111111
Service providers1111111111111111
Avg download speed (Mbps)1,0001,0001,00020202020202020
Avg upload speed (Mbps)1,0001,0001,00020202020202020

Subsidies by E-Rate service type

Service type2025202420232022202120202019201820172016201520142013201220112010200920082007200620052004200320022001200019991998
Voice
Telecomm Services
Internal Connections$14K
Data Transmission and/or Internet Access$17K$23K$20K$6K$6K$6K$6K$5K$8K$8K$8K$14K$17K$7K$10K$9K
Basic Maintenance of Internal Connections
Managed Internal Broadband Services$1K$2K$540$268$6K$6K

Back of Envelope Estimate of Equal Distribution

Recipient2025202420232022202120202019201820172016
Montgomery County Juvenile Court Detention Services$26K$25K$39K$6K$6K$6K$6K$5K$8K$14K

Recipient demographics

RecipientCityDiscount RateStudentsNSLPDown MbpsUp MbpsUrban/Rural
Montgomery County Juvenile Court Detention ServicesDayton90%72721,0001,000Urban

Subsidies by service provider (top 10)

Service provider2025202420232022202120202019201820172016201520142013201220112010200920082007200620052004200320022001200019991998
Metropolitan Educational Technology Association$18K$25K$35K$6K$6K$6K$6K$5K
Metropolitan Dayton Educational Cooperative Association$8K$14K$14K$14K$17K$7K$10K$9K

Overview and provider figures are the entity’s total authorized disbursements (entity-wide, FCC Form 471 FRN Status). Per-recipient figures are a back-of-envelope estimate: each funding request line item’s post-discount cost divided equally among the line’s recipients. FY2010–2015 figures are from USAC legacy data (BEN level). FY2026 omitted (funding year in progress). Note: the last year or two in any disbursement series always looks artificially low (FY2025 invoices are still being paid), which is why figures dip at the end — that’s the real state of USAC’s data, not an error. Source: USAC Open Data, retrieved 2026-06-10.