Planning to 

Sent from my Verizon 4G LTE Smartphone

----- Reply message -----
From: [email protected]
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: [AFMUG] Erate to expand broadband across Alabama
Date: Wed, Mar 2, 2016 12:31 PM

But you can be an E Rate vendor too.  You should be bidding on all the 
E Rate jobs in your area.  Easy money.  




From: CBB - Jay Fuller 
Sent: Wednesday, March 2, 2016 9:22 AM
To: [email protected] ; [email protected] 
Subject: [AFMUG] Erate to expand broadband across 
Alabama



So - everything I had pretty much heard about this before 
- means this can't be done and is illegal.
But actually - I guess not.  If a local company in 
the state of Alabama expands to connect school systems
using e-rate money , the additional pairs of fiber can be 
used for other purposes, right?

I know of this traveller company... (quoted in the 
article).  They're a lot like our WISPs, except we never hear
that they do any business. We are on a lot of the same 
towers.  Apparently they only do business customers.

http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2016/02/schools_will_bring_high-speed.html

Nearly three dozen Alabama public school systems will take 
the first step this month to build their own high-speed Internet 
networks.

It is the first phase of a plan to extend high-speed 
Internet into rural Alabama announced by Gov. Robert Bentley in his Feb. 2 
State 
of the State speech.

More school districts will follow in 2017 and 2018 until 
publicly owned networks bring high-speed Internet to thousands of state 
students 
who don't have it now, officials say.

The schools will be seeking bids from companies who want 
to build, operate and maintain – but not own - high-speed Internet connections 
to schools and libraries, state officials say.

Experts from across the state, led by Office of Broadband 
Development Director Kathy Johnson, have been studying how to do it since July 
2015.

What the governor said

"Technology is growing at lightning speed, changing the 
way we educate, deliver healthcare and even start a business," Bentley said in 
his speech. "Yet our communities and rural areas cannot tap into the potential 
that Broadband access would bring."

Other cities and counties across America are rapidly  
extending high-speed Internet. A recent Washington conference showed how 
doctors 
are monitoring patients over high-speed lines, students are watching live 
demonstrations from distant colleges, and cities are putting free high-speed 
Internet into community centers in low-income neighborhoods.

Nearly 1 million Alabamians have no access to high-speed 
Internet, according to a recent federal study, and 41 percent of them are in 
the 
state's rural areas.alabama broadband map.JPGThis map, which is several 
years old and was generated for the Connect Alabama effort, shows Broadband or 
high-speed Internet providers in rural Alabama. The lightest colored areas have 
1 or 2 providers and the darkest have 5 or more providers. 

Part of the reason is business economics. Running fiber 
cable or using towers to beam Wi-Fi Internet access costs money. Private
companies want a return on that investment.     


"If you've only got 50 or 60 customers (in a town)," 
explains Tim Erwin, owner and CEO of Huntsville's Traveller Multimedia Network, 
"how do you stay in business?"

State Education Trust Fund money

In the first phase of Bentley's plan, State Education 
Trust Fund money would match federal grants to build the fiber networks, 
Johnson 
said this week. The federal grant program is called E-rate, and it can pay up 
to 
90 percent of the cost of running the fiber cable to rural areas.

The federal share of the spending comes from fees paid by 
all Americans on their telephone bills now.

Bentley says rural connectivity won't just improve 
schools, law enforcement communications and healthcare. He told the Legislature 
it will lead to "enhanced economic development opportunities."

The governor offered few specifics on how the state will 
take to make that happen, but he did mention "cutting the bureaucracy" around 
Internet service now and providing infrastructure.

Cutting the bureaucracy could mean making it easier for 
companies to access public rights of way and power poles to extend their
services. It isn't immediately clear what "providing infrastructure" might 
mean.

Opelika and Auburn

One example of the complications is found in Opelika and 
neighboring Auburn. Opelika has a municipally owned and operated high-speed 
system that provides television, telephone and Internet service to customers – 
so-called "Triple Play" service. The city originally ran and connected its 
fiber 
cable to create a "smart" utility grid, then realized it could provide 
additional services.

But Opelika is banned by state law from offering Internet 
service to next-door Auburn because Auburn isn't in the Opelika city limits. 
Fencing Opelika protects other commercial Internet providers.

Those Internet providers, including large 
telecommunications companies such as AT&T, Comcast and Charter, are leery of 
publicly owned Internet, to say the least.

But providing high-speed Internet to schools and libraries 
isn't as controversial.

"We have provided school buildings with power, water and 
roads," Johnson said. "It's the government's role to also provide high-speed 
Internet."

'Not a horrible idea'

"That's not a horrible idea at all," David Williams of the 
Washington-based Taxpayers Protection Alliance said Tuesday of the school 
initiative.

"This is money that's already there," Williams said of the 
E-rate program. "I wouldn't want to see the tax rate increased to put into the 
program."

Williams' organization opposes most publicly owned 
Internet as a bad investment. He does not agree that providing high-speed 
Internet is "a core government service."

Devil in the details?

Back at Huntsville's Traveller Multimedia Network, Erwin 
is already serving rural areas with wireless connectivity across 2,700 square 
miles of North Alabama, including service for major new developments like the 
Polaris plant in areas without fiber access.

"The issue comes down to how you make it happen," Erwin 
said of expanding service. He believes Bentley is sincere, but he's worried 
that 
big players could have undue influence in what happens next. "The usual 
suspects," he calls them.

Reply via email to