Opinion: Frontier can provide better broadband; the state should hold it accountable By Dave Weidlich The headquarters building of Frontier Communications Amid unprecedented isolation and loss, Americans are trying to continue our lives as close to normal as possible, and that means staying connected to friends, loved ones, medical providers, colleagues and our children’s teachers via the internet. For those with school-age children and those working fully remotely, reliable connectivity becomes essential. We can no longer accept subpar service and poor internet quality in this “new normal,” and as Connecticut’s very own service provider, Frontier Communications, emerges from bankruptcy, the state has an opportunity to demand better.