neighbors building the future—together.

From stringing party‑line phones in the 1960s to lighting gig‑speed fiber today, our mission stays the same: keep Lincoln County connected.

our cooperative story

Established 1962 · Member‑owned since day one

What started as a handful of ranchers pooling dollars for party‑line service has grown into a 3,800‑member cooperative delivering world‑class fiber. Because we’re member‑owned, every dollar you pay goes back into better service, broader coverage, and community good.

our historical timeline

1962

1962

InterBel is incorporated and operated jointly with Lincoln Electric Cooperative; J.R. Pitman, General Manager.

1963

1963

1st REA loan is approved for $350,000. As of May 31 the Co-op had received membership applications from 238 potential subscribers, all accompanied by a $15 membership fee.

1964

1964

Eureka and Fortine Central Offices are cut-over and InterBel’s first telephone service begins. Congratulations came from President Lyndon B. Johnson via a phone call to Board members Fred Anderson and Courtney Stoken.

1968

1968

InterBel custom-wires a contact switch for President Johnson to make a phone call and blast the final hole through the seven-mile Flathead Tunnel near Trego.

1971

1971

Three-year relocation project begins with Highway 37 from Rexford to Libby—creating significant buried-cable work for InterBel.

1974

1974

InterBel becomes the first in Montana to install an underground cable plant and single-party lines—moving away from overhead wires with five-party lines and a three-minute conversation cut-off.

1982

1982

InterBel and Lincoln Electric move to their new, combined Corporate Office facility north of town.

1986

1986

InterBel becomes the first in Montana to implement a 911 Dispatch Center.

1993

1993

InterBel and Lincoln Electric agree to terminate the joint operation between the two cooperatives, creating a new General Manager position at InterBel.  InterBel also installs a fiber-optic cable crossing on Lake Koocanusa, bringing improved service to the West Kootenai.

1994

1994

InterBel moves to its new building in downtown Eureka.  Completed a new plant design, installed a Lucent 5ESS digital Central Office (combining the Fortine and Eureka COs into one building), and built a fiber-optic ring network with 24 CSA sites.

1998

1998

Lincoln Electric and InterBel form the Eureka Rural Development Partners (ERDP), leading to many significant projects and millions of dollars in grants over the years.  Ground is also broken on construction projects that improve reliability with a redundant cable route to carry Internet and long-distance traffic.

2000

2000

InterBel announces phone service to Eureka and Rexford, adding 1,200 more access lines and 900 co-op members.

2002

2002

InterBel becomes an Internet Service Provider and begins offering ISDN (early broadband) while testing DSL.

2006

2006

InterBel retires its last legacy Central Office switch and converts 100% of customers to IP-technology soft-switches.  The first InterBel customers are cut over to Fiber-to-the-Home (FTTH)—a new cable plant that will replace the older copper network.

2009

2009

InterBel discontinues dial-up Internet service and converts all customers to broadband using DSL.

2011

2011

InterBel expands its IP soft-switch platform, builds Ethernet rings, and accelerates the FTTH build-out—continuing the process of replacing copper with fiber.

Mission & values

Our mission is to deliver reliable, affordable connectivity that powers rural life and local business.

01

community first

We sponsor rodeos, classrooms, and volunteer fire halls.

02

Pioneer Spirit

We test new tech where the pavement ends.

03

Neighborly Service

When you call, a local answers—24/7.

04

Reinvested Dollars

Profits return as better speeds or capital credits.

Mission & values

Our mission is to deliver reliable, affordable connectivity that powers rural life and local business.

community first

We sponsor rodeos, classrooms, and volunteer fire halls.

Pioneer Spirit

We test new tech where the pavement ends.

Neighborly Service

When you call, a local answers—24/7.

Reinvested Dollars

Profits return as better speeds or capital credits.

every new subscriber grows this impact—thank you for fueling our future.

$500K+ reinvested in scholarships, broadband adoption classes, 4‑H clubs, and rural business grants in the past five years.

leadership

board of directors

Member-elected volunteers guiding the cooperative’s future.

Mike Hedges

Board President

Craig Eaton

Board President

Doug Purdy

Board President

Craig Sands

Board President

Amy Truman

Board President

our team

Dedicated locals powering our cooperative’s day-to-day.

Jason Moothart

General Manager/CEO

Kevin Hodik

Chief Financial Officer

Brett Damaskos

Director of Sales & Marketing

Mitch Miller

Director of Operations

Shanan Truman

Office Supervisor

Marielle Simonson

Accountant

Bailey Palmer

Billing Administrator

Aubree Sherwood

Billing Representative

Lillian Humphrey

Cashier

Rebekah Apeland

Customer Service Representative

Tiffany Wright

Customer Service Representative

Christopher O’Boyle

Sales Exec/Brand Ambassador

Jared Sherwood

Network Operations Supervisor

Tom Rasmussen

IT & Security Manager

Andy Escobar

Project Manager

Kaitlyn Farrar

Network Engineering Manager

Troy Unrein

OSP Supervisor/Sales Engineer

Blair Bohn

Engineer

Donald Conard

Engineer

Ben Traina

Engineer

Linda McNicol

Dispatch Operations

Ben White

OSP Technician

Keith Hill

OSP Technician

Jeremy Roose

OSP Technician

Kyle Neuheimer

Network Engineer

David Lafollet

CO Technician

Joshua Persson

Network Administrator

Sean McCracken

CO/ISP Technician

Hannah Booth

Warehouse Coordinator

Paul Torres

Construction Foreman

Cameron Colvard

Construction

Sterling Drollinger

Construction

Taylor Sylvester

Support Specialist

Shani Little

Support Specialist

want to build the next mile with us?

Fiber splicers, customer advocates, and IT pros—apply today and serve neighbors while exploring Big Sky country.

Broadband Facts

InterBel Telephone Cooperative, Inc.

Fiber Gig - CLEC-South

Fixed Broadband Consumer Disclosure

Monthly Price$125.00

This monthly price is an introductory rateNo

Additional Charges & Terms

  • One-Time Fees at the Time of Purchase
  • Router$75.00
  • Connect Fee$20.00
  • Government TaxesVaries by location

Discounts & Bundles

Visit the link below for available billing discounts and pricing options for broadband service bundled with other services like video, phone, and wireless service, and use of your own equipment.

Speeds Provided with Plan

  • Typical Download Speed925 Gbps
  • Typical Upload Speed925 Gbps
  • Typical Latency 11 ms

Data Included with Monthly PriceUnlimited

Network Management

Network Practices

Privacy

Privacy Policy

Customer Support

Broadband Facts

InterBel Telephone Cooperative, Inc.

Fiber 500 - CLEC-South

Fixed Broadband Consumer Disclosure

Monthly Price$105.00

This monthly price is an introductory rateNo

Additional Charges & Terms

  • One-Time Fees at the Time of Purchase
  • Router$75.00
  • Connect Fee$20.00
  • Government TaxesVaries by location

Discounts & Bundles

Visit the link below for available billing discounts and pricing options for broadband service bundled with other services like video, phone, and wireless service, and use of your own equipment.

Speeds Provided with Plan

  • Typical Download Speed450 Mbps
  • Typical Upload Speed450 Mbps
  • Typical Latency 11 ms

Data Included with Monthly PriceUnlimited

Network Management

Network Practices

Privacy

Privacy Policy

Customer Support

Broadband Facts

InterBel Telephone Cooperative, Inc.

Fiber 100 - CLEC-South

Fixed Broadband Consumer Disclosure

Monthly Price$85.00

This monthly price is an introductory rateNo

Additional Charges & Terms

  • One-Time Fees at the Time of Purchase
  • Router$75.00
  • Connect Fee$20.00
  • Government TaxesVaries by location

Discounts & Bundles

Visit the link below for available billing discounts and pricing options for broadband service bundled with other services like video, phone, and wireless service, and use of your own equipment.

Speeds Provided with Plan

  • Typical Download Speed93 Mbps
  • Typical Upload Speed93 Mbps
  • Typical Latency 11 ms

Data Included with Monthly PriceUnlimited

Network Management

Network Practices

Privacy

Privacy Policy

Customer Support