Wireless Community

Icon

American Broadband is Failing. Our Country's Government has Some Explaining to do.

There shouldn’t be a discussion about whether the municipal networks are going to work or not. I dare-say that common sense tells us that some number will be successful, and some number will not. How you evaluate their outcomes relies almost entirely on your point of view.

The real, fundamental problem is that America has slow, expensive, and only partially available broadband when compared to just about every other industrialized nation. This is especially embarrassing considering that we invented the damn technology, and nurtured it for its first two decades.

This is a *fact*. No amount of hewing and hawing, or dancing around the subject will change this.

Another Fact: Our sorry state of broadband has occurred over the past 5 years. A period of time when Conservative Republicans have been running this country and calling (almost) all of the shots.

So, there arise two questions which I want answered by the leaders of this Country, the Republicans in charge, the FCC, and everyone else who’s been running *our country*:

# Why is the state of broadband in America so awful?
# What are you, our leaders, going to do about it?

You who are our leaders claim that you are doing a good job. Well, here we have a great example to the contrary. And I think that we, as the American People, deserve some answers.

And the answer *isn’t* more competition in the future and a more open marketplace with fewer regulations. *That* is an end result of good policy-making. I want to know what you’re doing that’s failing, and what you should be doing instead. If good policy is put into place, more competition in a healthy marketplace will happen by itself.

Filed under: Community Wireless, Muniwireless, Policy

Let There Be Wi-Fi

Robert McChesney, president of “Free Press”:1, and John Podesta, president and CEO of the “Center for American Progress”:2, write about the need for Municipal Broadband and Community Wireless in “Let There Be Wi-Fi”:3 in the Washington Monthly.

The article covers a lot of ground, crafting a case for why municipal wireless initiatives have cropped up all across America, why telco incumbents are fighting them, and why they may be the only thing that will save this country from being an also-ran in the internet race.

bq. Those countries that achieve universal broadband are going to hold significant advantages over those who don’t. And so far, the United States is poised to be a follower — not a leader — in the broadband economy.

bq. …

bq. While about 60 percent of U.S. households do not subscribe to broadband because it is either unavailable where they live or they cannot afford it, most Japanese citizens can access a high-speed connection that’s more than 10 times faster than what’s available here for just $22 a month.

McChesney and Podesta discuss why other countries have more advanced internet access available. Often, its not that there has been government control of telecommunications. In Japan’s case, their progress was due specifically to the fact that their government gave each municipality the power to address deficiencies as necessary, including situations where local private telecommunications providers wouldn’t or couldn’t provide needed connectivity.

bq. The countries surpassing the United States in broadband deployment did so by using a combination of public entities and private firms. The Japanese built their world-class system by ensuring “open access” to residential telephone lines, meaning competitors paid the same wholesale price to use the wires. The country is also establishing a super-fast, nationwide fiber system via a combination of tax breaks, debt guarantees and subsidies. But of particular note, the Japanese government also encouraged municipalities to build their own networks, especially in rural areas. Towns and villages willing to set up their own ultra-high-speed fiber networks received government subsidies covering approximately one-third of their costs.

This is in marked contrast to the state of broadband in this country, where our President and our FCC have only paid lip service to solving the problem of universal internet access.

bq. Instead of encouraging competition, the FCC has allowed DSL providers and cable companies to shut out competitors by denying access to their lines. And whereas the Japanese government encourages individual towns to set up their own “Community Internet,” Washington has done nothing. Fourteen states in the United States now have laws on the books restricting cities and towns from building their own high-speed Internet networks. No wonder America is falling behind its Asian competitors.

Indeed, the early history of electrical service in America bears many similarities to the current state of broadband. Perhaps we can learn from the past, in this case.

bq. Borrowing from Richard Rudolph and Scott Ridley’s 1986 book, Power Struggle: The Hundred-Year War Over Electricity, Baller showed that when electricity first became available in the 1880s, privately owned utilities marketed “the new technology as synonymous with wealth, power and privilege,” lighting large cities, businesses, and the homes of the rich. Electricity also allowed factories to stay open 24 hours a day, and led to the institution of swing shifts. But communities that didn’t have electricity couldn’t produce as much, and couldn’t keep up with urban competitors. Rural communities were left with the choice of forming a government-owned utility or being left in the dark. Even big cities like Detroit built municipal power systems to cut prices and extend service. In response, private utility companies responded with a massive propaganda and misinformation campaign that attacked advocates of municipal power as “un-American,” “Bolshevik,” and “an unholy alliance of radicals.”

bq. But the expansion of electricity, Baller argued, showed that the presence — or even threat — of competition from the public sector is one of the surest ways to secure quality service and reasonable prices from private enterprises delivering critical public services. FDR, he notes, called municipal power systems “a birch rod in the cupboard, to be taken out and used only when the child gets beyond the point where more scolding does any good.”

bq. …Baller concluded: “The plain, hard truth is that universal electric service would never have developed on a timely basis in the absence of municipally owned electric utilities and rural electric cooperatives” — which still account for more than a quarter of the power in the country today.

Essentially, both telecom lobbyists and the state governments who are enacting their legislation are cutting municipalities off at the knees, removing the only solution many of them have left, and preventing these governments from spurring the competitive marketplaces for internet services that they desperately need.

Cable and telephone companies are playing dirty by launching misinformation campaigns.

bq. First, they contend that municipalities have no place in the “free market.” Of course, the cable and telephone giants don’t mention that their own monopolies — which control 98 percent of the broadband market — have been cemented with extensive public subsidies, tax breaks and incentives (as well as free rein to tear up city streets).

bq. Opponents also warn that municipalities will “crowd out” more efficient private players. In reality, most municipal networks are a last resort by desperate local governments. Often their choice isn’t between a municipal system and a private one, but between municipal and nothing.

bq. The same critics of Community Internet claim that cities are too “lazy” or inefficient to manage complex systems and will be unable to adapt to changing technologies. But municipalities have a long track record of successfully and efficiently operating power plants, sewage systems and subways. It’s hard to imagine that the broadband networks—most of which will actually be operated by private contractors—are any more complex. Perhaps the more obvious question is: If these systems are destined to fail, why are the telephone and cable companies expending so much energy trying to stop them?

In the end, the solution requires members from all levels of government to both recognize that there is a problem, and be strong enough to enact smart policy that will address that problem.

bq. Most importantly, the federal government must ensure that the cable and telephone monopolies can’t crush innovative projects like Wireless Philadelphia and the emerging national movement for Community Internet. Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.) have introduced a bill that would free municipalities to decide for themselves which technologies best serve their citizens. U.S. policy should create incentives for communities to build advanced telecommunications networks in hundreds of cities and towns across the country, creating robust competition for communications services, assisting small entrepreneurs through public-private partnerships, and bringing opportunity to low-income urban neighborhoods and rural communities too often neglected by large entrenched monopolies.

[1]http://www.freepress.net
[2]http://www.americanprogress.org/site/pp.asp?c=biJRJ8OVF&b=8473
[3]http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2006/0601.podesta.html

Filed under: Community Wireless, Muniwireless, Policy, Urban Wireless

How Communities Around the World Use Wireless Networks

Intel has “released a paper”:1 that showcases how communities around the work use their Community Wireless networks. The paper uses as examples real world networks and applications, including governmental, consumer, and business uses. While Intel’s document is clearly marketing material for Intel’s Solution Services, it does create a clear and compelling picture for why Communities want to deploy wireless networks.

[1]http://www.intel.com/business/bss/solutions/blueprints/pdf/Wireless_Communities.pdf

Filed under: Community Wireless, Muniwireless

Cato Institute Researcher Who Preached Against Muniwireless Revealed to be Taking Money From Washington Lobbyist for Articles

The “New York Times reported on Saturday”:http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/17/politics/17abramoff.html?hp&ex=1134882000&en=215fb6d614b7a14d&ei=5094 that Cato Institute Doug Bandow took money from Lobbyist Jack Abramoff for writing sympathetic articles:

bq. A senior scholar at the Cato Institute, the respected libertarian research organization, has resigned after revelations that he took payments from the lobbyist Jack Abramoff in exchange for writing columns favorable to his clients.

bq. The scholar, Doug Bandow, who wrote a column for the Copley News Service in addition to serving as a Cato fellow, acknowledged to executives at the organization that he had taken money from Mr. Abramoff after he was confronted about the payments by a reporter from BusinessWeek Online.

Why is this important? Mr. Bandow is the author of Cato Institute “columns that attack municipal wireless”:http://www.catoinstitute.org/dailys/07-05-04.html. We’ve known for a while that many of the “research institutes” that come out against any type of government involvement in telecom and internet service “have been aligned with telco and cable companies”:http://wifinetnews.com/archives/cat_sock_puppets.html that lobby against such initiatives.

Now, in at least one instance, we can connect the dots between the money paid to lobbyists by the telco/cable duopolies to advance their agenda, and the anti-municipal wireless and municipal internet position taken by at least one conservative think-tank. While the evidence isn’t direct (yet), it is pretty damning.

Filed under: Muniwireless, News, Policy

Can Wi-Fi make it in Manhattan?

C|Net’s article “Can Wi-Fi make it in Manhattan”:1 lays out very clearly the state of affairs in New York City with regards to municipal and affordable broadband. NYCwireless, along with a number of other supporters like “Andrew Rasiej”:2 and “Micah Sifry”:3, have been battling the apathy here regarding affordable broadband, and it feels like we’re finally starting to make progress.

There are plenty of organizations (profit and non-profit alike) in NYC that been helping different constituencies get access to broadband in NYC at affordable rates. But if we want to address the issue for everyone, then the City Government must be involved. And thankfully, City Councilmember Gale Brewer has been both supportive and vocal in her work to address these issues. And there are lots of others in our City government that are as supportive, if not as vocal. Unfortunately, Mayor Bloomberg is completely disconnected and uninterested in addressing the issue.

[1]http://news.com.com/Can+Wi-Fi+make+it+in+Manhattan/2100-7351_3-5992316.html
[2]http://www.personaldemocracy.com/about/#andrew
[3]http://www.personaldemocracy.com/about/#micah

Filed under: Muniwireless, New York City, News, NYCwireless, Policy

Municipal Wireless is Good for the Broadband Marketplace

There’s a comment that Rick Truocchio left on the MuniWireless article “Scrooge of the Year nomination: BellSouth”:1 — about how BellSouth recinded an offer to the city of New Orleans for use of one one of the buildings for free when the city announced its free wireless network — that really highlights the delusion of broadband providers, both big and small, when it comes to Municipal Wireless.

His comment:

bq. First off that is illegal and unpractical. Second I do not see how you do not get the point of BellSouth. They pay millions in taxes and give free internet to government agencies, who then turn around and use their tax money to compete directly with them by give the service that they make money off of to pay thise taxes, for free. You cannot compete with free.

bq. If the city open a restaurant on Bourbon Street and gave away free food I am sure you would see local restauranteurs up in arms as well, and they dont employee half of what bell does, nor do they pay near the taxes, nor do they assist the local govt in achieveing their connectivity goals.

bq. Sorry to burst the philanthopic business bubble, but there still is no such thing as a free lunch, and bell nor anyother intelligent successful/business operator is not going to give free buildings away to a city that threatens to put them out of business or severly cut into thier market share. Economics 101.

bq. I compete with bell and cable co’s all day, but I can never compete with free wireless from a municipality as a small business. This amounts to taxpayer subsidised competition (if taxpayer money is used) which is really not fair or level competition becuase private enterprise does not have access to the same money or free right of way that the city enjoys.

bq. Regards,

bq. Rick

My response:

bq. Rick, do you compete with free dialup? Sure you do. Every broadband provider is “threatened” by free dialup connections. Why should I pay for your broadband when I can dialup to the internet for free?

bq. The answer is simple! I get more service and support from a company that I buy DSL from then from a free dialup service. Municipal Wireless is the same. You compete not just on cost, but on value.

bq. Essentially, Municipal Wireless is raising the floor for broadband. Instead of the base level of service being dialup, it will now be the wireless service that is provided by the city, or by an organization working with the city.

bq. Does this change your marketplace? Sure it does. But it doesn’t cut you out of the market. Just like you need to change strategy when Verizon starts to offer FiOS in your area.

bq. This is healthy marketplace competition. *That* is Economics 101. According to your view, you’d rather the marketplace be stagnant. And frankly, though I always root for the small ISP in the marketplace, you suggest that customers suffer just so you can live. That’s both unpractical and, more importantly, damaging to our country.

Some people complain loudly about how municipalities shouldn’t compete with private industry. First, this is downright wrong. Of course municipalities should be able to compete with private industry, especially when there aren’t otherwise enough competitors in the marketplace to provide value to consumers. And while they should be competing *fairly*, most people who complain ignore the fact that the Telcos and Cable Companies already have an unfair advantage because of the tax breaks and subsidies they receive from government.

Second, markets evolve. And in the course of that evolution, some companies die, and every company changes. This is both healthy and unavoidable.

Third, municipal wireless doesn’t kill competitors. If anything, it helps small businesses by bringing more consumers into the marketplace. As Joe Plotkin of Bway.net likes to say, he’s actually *gained* customers by supporting NYCwireless.

[1]http://www.muniwireless.com/municipal/936/

Filed under: Muniwireless, News, Policy

Interview in the New Haven Advocate: Take My WiFi, Please

I was interviewed for an article in the New Haven Advocate, titled “Take My WiFi, Please”:1, about New Haven’s Muniwireless initiative. This is a great article that really touches on the reasons why a small town (and really any town) would want to support some form of municipal network:

bq. Sometimes, citizens take matters in their own hands. If the residents of an apartment building buy small routers for their apartments, they often have enough coverage radius that the street in front of them becomes a wireless hotspot. Many businesses offer strong wireless signals, knowing that neighbors can use the signal (in our offices, the Omni Hotel “WiFi” wireless fidelity signal is strong enough that we can use it). In New York City, NYC Wireless, a non-profit organization, has gotten parks to agree to place routers at key spots to turn the parks into free wireless hot spots. So you can sit in Bryant Park or Union Square and check your email on your laptop. Parks and businesses and citizens can team up, too, to make a whole block or neighborhood WiFi-enabled.

bq. Then there is “municipal broadband.” Dana Spiegel, the executive director of NYC Wireless, defines municipal broadband as “merely the local government stepping in to spur the development of universal coverage and affordably priced broadband.”

bq. …

bq. In Lafayette, La., the government built its own fiber cable network and has become a wholesale broadband internet provider. It not only gets revenue from its internet customers, but it also gets savings on its telecommunications costs, because it no longer has to pay a telecom company to carry its phone and internet traffic.

bq. But more commonly, says Spiegel, “municipal broadband could be the government putting out a contract with a company after an appropriate competition, and providing guaranteed rates for the use of local, government-owned facilities in order to build a network that is run by the private company and also, in exchange for this, requiring that there be affordable access provided to all members of the community.

bq. “The most popular model is to contract out the building, operation and maintenance of the network, let a private company do all the development, but they get use of government-owned buildings for the infrastructure “like antennae].

bq. “This is not a new model this is how cable TV was developed,” Spiegel adds. “The city said, ’Okay, we’ll franchise you to do this, we’ll give you access to our rights of way, you can use under our streets, on our buildings. In exchange, you need to pay us, provide community access TV, and all sorts of other things. And these are the benefits that a local government got out of a business using their resources.’”

bq. With wireless web, the benefits would be different, but the franchise model could be the same.

bq. …

bq. Meanwhile, these large companies, fat with profit, have shown very little interest in building a better internet. The telecoms have, according to NYC Wireless’s Dana Spiegel, “been promising for 20 or 30 years, in exchange for getting subsidies and tax credits, to build broadband infrastructure. We taxpayers have given them everything they wanted and we’ve gotten nothing. They promised 15 years ago to build nationwide fiber infrastructure. They laughed all the way to the bank. They have been spending all of their money over the past five to 10 years lobbying for their agenda and not doing a whole lot to provide better, cheaper broadband. And they’ve been found to bypass low-income communities.”

bq. What we have here is a market failure. As much as some economists assure us that the free market will take care of us all and it’s true that the American free market has brought us a wealth of computer and technology innovation in this crucial area we have fallen way behind. The European and Asian countries where government and private industry have worked together, now have faster, cheaper, more accessible broadband internet.

bq. That helps poor people get jobs. It helps small businesses compete. And, yes, it helps lonely people find dates. It spreads the benefits of the internet across the population.

[1]http://newhavenadvocate.com/gbase/News/content?oid=oid:135562

Filed under: Interview, Muniwireless, News, NYCwireless

The Heartland Institute Issues Erroneous Reporting about Bryant Park

“The Heartland Institute”:1, an organization that has published anti-municipal wireless reports in the past, has “posted an article about Google’s sponsorship of Bryant Park”:2. In the article, Steven Titch spouts a number of unfounded and inaccurate claims regarding muniwireless initiatives by the company.

I’d like to correct a few of the errors in Mr. Titch’s article:

* NYCwireless is a non-profit organization that *has no affiliation* with any part of the NYC government. We were not “formed by the city”.
* There has never been any discussion of Google “owning” any hotspot in NYC. Hotspots in NYC are owned by the people that build and operate them, including the “Bryant Park Restoration Corporation”:3 and the “Alliance for Downtown New York”:4 to name a few. The Public Internet Project merely supply support for Bryant Park. Google, and in the past Intel, sponsor the hotspot, providing operational funds to keep the hotspot running.
* Google’s sponsorship *does not* offer *”more evidence that cities cannot operate free Wi-Fi networks”*. It merely provides evidence that companies may be willing to sponsor hotspots, especially popular ones.

And here’s the most important correction: *The New York City government and the NYC Parks Department have had no involvement in the Bryant Park Hotspot.* Bryant Park is a privately managed park under contract with the Parks Department, and NYCwireless and volunteers installed the Bryant Park Hotspot *for free*.

If anything, Google’s sponsorship of Bryant Park shows the popularity and importantance of public Wi-Fi. It is a shining example of how New York City can make use of free public infrastructure, like a park, to provide a worthwhile and meaningful service to residents and visitors. The park’s Wi-Fi network shows why cities *should be* paying attention and addressing issues of public broadband and wireless.

[1]http://wifinetnews.com/archives/004948.html
[2]http://www.heartland.org/Article.cfm?artId=17904
[3]http://www.bryantpark.org/park-management/overview.php
[4]http://www.downtownny.com

Filed under: Community Wireless, Muniwireless, New York City, News, NYCwireless, Policy

Free American Broadband!

S. Derek Turner, a research fellow at “Free Press”:1 has “published in Salon a stunningly complete overview of the current state of broadband and wireless in the US”:2.

Mr. Turner highlights how a number of cities and countries around the world provide broadband service that is both many times faster and cheaper than anything available in the US.

bq. “Most Japanese consumers can get an Internet connection that’s 16 times faster than the typical American DSL line for a mere $22 per month. Across the globe, it’s the same story. In France, DSL service that is 10 times faster than the typical United States connection; 100 TV channels and unlimited telephone service cost only $38 per month. In South Korea, super-fast connections are common for less than $30 per month.”

*In effect, the USA has become a 2nd World Country when it comes to Internet access.* We are playing catch-up to the rest of the advanced world, and are falling further and further behind in an area where we once led.

Much of the problem lies in telecom competition, or lack thereof.

bq. “Today, major cable companies and DSL providers control almost 98 percent of the residential and small-business broadband market. This trend is the direct result of FCC policies that fail to encourage real competition among broadband providers, giving free rein over the market to the cable and DSL giants. The corporate giants are also vigorously fighting to stop cities and towns from building “Community Internet” systems — affordable, high-speed broadband services funded in part by community groups and municipalities — even in places where the cable and DSL companies themselves don’t offer service. Yet, like rural electrification projects in the early 20th century, today’s Community Internet projects offer the best hope of achieving universal broadband service.”

bq. “In the 1996 Telecommunications Act, Congress directed the FCC to oversee the timely deployment of Internet services that “enable users to originate and receive high quality voice, data, graphics, and video telecommunications.” Currently, this requirement translates into an Internet connection with typical download and upload speeds between 10 Mbps and 20 Mbps (megabits, or million bits, per second).

bq. “But the FCC defines a “high-speed” connection as one capable of transmitting data at a rate of 200 kbps (kilobits, or a thousand bits, per second) in one direction — about four times the speed of dial-up. At this slow speed, it is barely possible to receive low-quality streaming video, and is completely impractical to originate high-quality video.”

*If free trade and competition are supposed to maximize value for consumers and provide fair prices for goods, why are American’s getting the short end of the stick? Where the FCC and Bush’s White House are declaring success through free markets, why are Americans paying more and more per megabyte then in Europe, Asia, and Canada?*

There’s a further problem as well: availability of broadband doesn’t equal adoption and uptake. Here in NYC, much of the city has both DSL and cable-modem service. Yet most residents don’t make use of broadband due to the unreasonably high prices and poor service that the telco/cable duopoly maintains.

Overall, we are developing a greater digital divide. This bigger divide isn’t between the rich and poor in this country, but rather *a digital divide between the US and the rest of the advanced world*.

Mr. Turner’s “article”:2 is as complete a statement as can be made about how our government and our “markets” are letting us down. Read it and pass it along.

[1]http://www.freepress.net
[2]http://muniwireless.com/community/guests/872/

Filed under: Community Wireless, Muniwireless, Policy

Anaheim to Consider Citywide Wi-Fi Franchise with Earthlink

The Anaheim City Council is “getting ready to consider granting Earthlink a 20-year franchise to operate a public Wi-Fi network”:1 throughout all 50 square miles of the city.

As proposed, this franchise is both good and bad. On the good side, Anaheim is recognizing that public wireless is a good feature to add to their city, and they’ve already completed an RFP for their network. And its also good that the City is providing access to streetlight poles and existing fiber deployments.

On the bad side, the franchise is exclusive, and it specifically enables Earthlink to be both network maintainer as well as the sole service provider. This aspect of the franchise clearly shows a lack of vision on the City’s part. Earthlink will be allowed to set prices, and the City has given them a complete monopoly for public wireless service for 20 years. What Anaheim should have done is provide a 5 year exclusive franchise for the operations of the network, but require the network be open to any ISP that wants to use it at wholesale rates. This would enable price and service competition that will ensure that *affordable* wireless broadband is deployed.

In addition, the 20 year franchise is far too long for Wi-Fi deployments, and its not clear that such a franchise will be useful for Anaheim once Wi-Fi has evolved over the next 5 years. The City is granting a very long term exclusive contract for a service that is brand new, and technology that is also in its infancy. Whether Earthlink will succeed *and* provide good service remains to be seen.

As cities increasingly move towards trying to deploy municipal networks, they need to recognize that they shouldn’t be giving away the farm. Too many cities and towns were burned badly by franchises handed out to telco and cable operators, but they haven’t learned their lessons. In cases like Anaheim’s, Earthlink would have been happy to get the network operations contract for a handful of years, without any franchise or exclusivity. The City could have bargained much harder and given away far less, thereby ensuring that they get full value for their physical resources.

And of equal if not greater importance, Anaheim should have required that competition be part of the marketplace. Having a single company that controls the creation, operation, maintenance, and service over a network is a terrible idea. Its exactly the type of behavior shown by telco and cable giants like SBC and Verizon, who provide expensive, poor service.

[1]http://www.govtech.net/magazine/channel_story.php/97030

Filed under: Muniwireless, News, Policy, Urban Wireless

Twitter

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.