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The company’s announcement follows the Alberta government’s decision to award Bell a multi-year contract to operate SuperNet services provincewide following an extensive review and consultation process that began in 2016.

Bell had been the prime contractor to build the SuperNet, which has been operating in 429 communities since 2005. At the time, Axia initially had a 10-year renewable contract with the government to provide managed broadband network services to more than 4,200 schools, hospitals, libraries and government facilities.

Art Price, who founded Axia in 1995 and remains its chief executive, had warned last month that its latest contract to provide rural SuperNet service was set to expire June 30 and that there was a danger that service might be interrupted as of July 1 if the province didn’t announce its decision.

Minister of Service Alberta Brian Malkinson formally announced on Friday that Bell had been chosen to operate both the urban and rural portions of the SuperNet service. The province had previously identified Bell as its preferred supplier.

Axia NetMedia had been an independent, publicly traded company until 2016, when it was acquired and taken private by Partners Group, a global investment group with offices around the world including in Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

Partners Group will remain invested in Axia’s operations in France, known as Covage, but will divest all of Axia’s Canadian operations to BCE to ensure uninterrupted connectivity to communities that rely on the SuperNet for their broadband, the company said in an emailed statement from London, England.

“As such, the sale is in the best interests of all parties and especially to rural Albertans.”

Companies in this story: (TSX:BCE)