Evan Huff, owner and CEO of Vested Networks, gave a detailed presentation to the commissioners on the company’s hosted voice services, redundancy options and support model. Huff said Vested serves roughly 38 Texas counties and offers a mobile app to separate business and personal calls, 90 days of included call recording with transcription and AI sentiment analysis, and “medical-grade” fax handling for hospitals. He described built-in redundancy (multiple carrier paths, battery backup) and said the company can supply LTE or Starlink backup for critical sites.
On pricing and implementation, Huff said Vested Networks typically absorbs initial onboarding and equipment costs so customers pay only a predictable monthly service fee; he described a financing arrangement that he said involves no interest or hidden fees. “We actually take the hit on the initial onboarding costs… We provide all that to you for nothing, just the monthly service,” Huff said.
Commissioners asked technical and operational questions about outages, carrier handoffs, the RFP status and local support. Huff said the company has local support technicians in the region and described short hold times on support calls (about 15–16 seconds). He confirmed the vendor remains available following a prior RFP process that was tabled by the court.
Why it matters: Commissioners are deciding whether to move forward on a telecom RFP and potential countywide phone infrastructure changes; vendor claims about redundancy and support affect continuity for emergency services and county offices. The presentation provided product details and a vendor commitment to be available if the court chooses to proceed.
No procurement or contract award occurred at the meeting; commissioners posed follow-up questions about the earlier RFP and local outages.