Reposting from Facebook - interesting story of net infrastructures in NYC

OUTRAGEOUS ACTION BY MAYOR ADAMS
Why is New York City Removing Free Broadband In Favor of C
harter?
BY ERNESTO FALCON
FEBRuARY 13, 2023

In January 2020, former New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced New York 
City’s Internet Master Plan, setting a path to deliver broadband for low-income 
New Yorkers by investing in public fiber infrastructure. The plan was a clear 
response to the gap created from systemic digital redlining (an industry 
practice EFF has called for governments to ban) that every American city deals 
with today. Shortly after the announcement by de Blasio, the COVID-19 pandemic 
hit and the made the need for public fiber into low-income areas greater than 
ever before.

In response, former union workers at Spectrum opted to build their own 
broadband cooperative called People’s Choice Communications, to deliver free 
high-speed access. This was unequivocally a good thing. The de Blasio 
Administration itself was even in the process of contracting with the 
worker-owned cooperative to build new networks. But since the election of Mayor 
Eric Adams, this critical progress has not only come to a halt, it is also now 
actively being undermined, to the benefit of large cable corporations. Instead 
of pursuing long term solutions to low-income access, as outlined by the 
Internet Master Plan, Mayor Adams has abandoned that plan. Now, the Adams 
administration is pushing an extraordinarily wasteful proposal dubbed “Big 
Apple Connect,” that literally just hands money over to cable companies.

Mayor Adam’s New Big Apple Connect Program is Akin to Lighting Tax Money on Fire
Let's be crystal clear: Going from a plan to invest millions into building 
public infrastructure to a plan to subsidize cable companies is a gigantic 
waste. Building multi-generational public infrastructure that can eventually 
deliver free access is the only means of achieving long-term sustainable 
support. Giving money to cable companies to pay their inflated bills will build 
nothing, and it won't deliver 21st century infrastructure to those most denied 
it. It simply pads the profits of companies that have long-neglected these 
communities and failed to improve access—even when granted money to do so.

The original NYC proposal captures exactly what needs to be done to deliver 
permanent solutions. It would have created infrastructure that can lead to the 
creation of more local solutions like the People’s Choice Communications. NYC’s 
population density makes it attractive to small, local providers because there 
is such high demand for broadband that even small networks can find customers. 
Accessible fiber that is provisioned on an open and affordable basis 
dramatically lowers the barrier to entering the broadband market. This would 
both create competition and drive down prices for everyone, not just low-income 
people, as new entrants enter the market delivering gigabit-level connectivity. 

You Have to Invest in the Future and Not Subsidize the Past
As if all of that wasn't aggravating enough, now we know that the Adams 
administration is actively dismantling equipment that People's Choice 
Cooperative installed in public housing. This equipment offers free 
unsubsidized broadband access—sometimes at speeds greater than legacy cable 
connections. Why? To make space for expensive, subsidized cable. No government 
entity should be taking access away from people. But the existence of a free, 
unsubsidized connection would not only embarrassingly raise questions about the 
Big Apple Connect program’s entire premise, but also threaten the cable 
monopoly of high prices for inferior speeds across the country.

Fiber infrastructure requires a one-time installation cost so that a network 
can be useful for broadband purposes for decades to come. It is more efficient 
than legacy infrastructure and is set on a trajectory to deliver faster speeds 
at lower prices. This is why the Biden Administration made clear in its own 
infrastructure program that “only end to end fiber” can deliver future proof 
access. Every dollar spent on building out end-to end fiber will not need to be 
spent again to enable connectivity in the future. By contrast, every dollar 
spent on subsidizing legacy, obsolete infrastructure is a waste. This is why 
slower networks will cost more in the long term, and why public investments 
like Big Apple Connect are entirely the wrong idea. Mayor Adams should stop 
removing local choices for broadband access such as People’s Choice 
Communications, abandon the Big Apple Connect boondoggle, and re-embrace the 
long-term vision set out with the Internet Master Plan.
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