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raj2001
02-02-03, 08:38 PM
Interesting article from CNN.

http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/internet/02/02/public.broadband.ap/index.html

(AP) -- If you ever wince after opening your cable bill, you're not going to like this: The good folks in Glasgow, Kentucky pay $19 a month for 70 cable channels, and for an additional $25 they can get blazing fast Internet access.

How do they get prices nearly half the national average?

Because the city-owned electric utility provides cable TV and Internet access over wires that also monitor power usage in the town of 14,000. The utility isn't trying to profit from the service -- just recover its costs.

Utility superintendent William Ray estimates that since Glasgow began offering cable in 1989, $32 million of residents' money has stayed in town that otherwise might have been vacuumed by giant telecommunications companies -- which often don't offer advanced services in rural areas like Glasgow anyway.

"It's like an armored car wrecking in the streets once a year and spreading money in the streets for people to grab for themselves," Ray says.

Slow deployment spurs action
Some utilities built networks from scratch. Others extended infrastructure they already had, such as fiber-optic lines and networking equipment needed to monitor power flow or remote substations.

Not surprisingly, big phone and cable companies hate this, and have fought with some success to block public gas, water and electric utilities from providing telecom services. Eleven states bar or restrict the practice, sometimes by imposing artificial costs on municipal telecoms so the prices they charge end up closer to what private companies offer.

But things may be looking up for municipal telecoms -- thanks to recent favorable court rulings, weakness in the private telecom industry and a technological breakthrough that lets data be transmitted over power lines.


"A very large number of communities across the country are beginning to realize this is like the history of electrification all over again, and if they don't help themselves, they're not going to get advanced communications services any time in the foreseeable future," said Jim Baller, an attorney who has represented municipal telecoms in several cases. "Recognition of that is forcing legislatures to take a second look -- even ones that had enacted barriers."

City-owned utilities -- which generally buy their cable programming from a cooperative in Kansas and connect to the Internet by leasing facilities from big data carriers -- don't have to be rivals of telecom companies.

For example, in Washington state, which prohibits utilities from selling retail telecom services, several public power providers are becoming "carriers' carriers" -- building fiber networks that private Internet and phone providers can lease.

But generally, private companies say municipal telecoms create unfair competition because they have no need to make profits or pay off debts quickly, have preferential access to digging streets and other "rights of way" and are owned by cities that have regulatory power over the industry.

"The mere existence of the competition is not really an issue for us," said Rob Stoddard, spokesman for the National Cable & Telecommunications Association. "The issue is more that the competitive playing field seems tilted in favor of municipalities."

Level playing field?
The industry's arguments also stray into other realms.

In Palo Alto, California, where the public utility is considering spending $50 million building fiber-optic connections to every home, a SBC Pacific Bell executive gave officials "MuniToons," a memo describing municipal telecoms as "folly."

Among its contentions: Municipal telecoms hurt a town's tax base and may violate the First Amendment by placing the distribution of media content under government ownership.

Baller, the utilities lawyer, believes nearly every sentence in MuniToons is "incorrect or misleading or a half-truth." Even SBC spokesman Kevin Belgrade said the document doesn't exactly reflect the company's position.

Richard Carlson, chairman of Palo Alto's utility advisory committee, wasn't swayed by Munitoons. Nevertheless, he worries that a civic fiber network might lose out to private competition or become obsolete in a few years.

Ultimately, the municipal telecom fight boils down to two words: "any" and "entity."

The 1996 Telecommunications Act -- meant to usher the nation into the digital age -- said no state or city could prohibit "any entity" from providing "any" telecom service.

With that in mind, officials in Abilene, Texas, asked the Federal Communications Commission to let them wire their own broadband network despite a 1995 Texas law banning municipal telecoms.

No clear lines
But the FCC agreed with phone and cable companies that Congress wasn't absolutely clear whether it meant for utilities to be "entities" protected by the law. The agency declined to overrule Texas.

A federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., let the decision stand.

Since then, a federal district court in Virginia and the Nebraska Supreme Court have seen things differently, ruling in favor of municipal telecoms. Most importantly, so has a federal appeals court in Missouri.

In hopes of getting clarity on the issue, Missouri's attorney general plans to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In the meantime, municipal telecoms are finding new ways to offer broadband -- such as wireless antennas recently installed on water towers in Carthage, Missouri -- and soon could have another method.

Private electric companies are experimenting with a new technology that delivers data over existing power lines. So is the city-owned electric utility in Manassas, Virginia, which provides broadband to city departments but not residents.

"The interest in that is very high," said Ron Lunt, the American Public Power Association's telecom director. "It is a natural fit."

firephoto
02-02-03, 10:50 PM
Great article.
I'm hoping the local public utility district here will do something other than sell large chunks of bandwidth to companies that think they need to charge the same as large population areas. They have a fiber backbone here, but really no way to hook up to it yet. The cheapest "broadband" here isn't cheap and it's wireless.
256k down / 128k up is $69 a month.
256k/256k is $79 a month
and there is a $595 + install up front.

They list fiber hookups and it is the same as the wireless per month for bandwidth fee's plus another $50 a month plus $250 - $800 in equipment fees + install.

They act like we are isolated from the world here or something. We have one of the biggest satellite gateway stations in the country here. It alone has 2 if not 3 fiber cables that go to it. It's an old comsat station but has expanded slightly over the years.

http://www.verestar.com/network/net_snap_brewster.htm

And it costs so much to give people broadband here? Oh wait, someone can't get rich off of it so why do it I suppose.

Just a little rant. ;)
Maybe a public wireless network is in order. hmmmm

firephoto
02-02-03, 11:12 PM
Picture of what it's like living in the sticks. :)
Gotta luv 56k dialup.


http://www.nwinternet.com/~riverock/spy_pic.jpg

The big dish is 30 meters across. (solution for your rain fade maybe?) The one off by itself at the lower right is one of 5 antennas for the ICO project (not sure if that program is even alive still) www.ico.com I think they are 15 meters, and they move really fast too.