not much different than other cities except the location...

http://muniwireless.com/municipal/bids/1217/

has links to the RFP
----

AP story

Chicago seeks city-wide wireless Internet access
May 31 12:42 PM US/Eastern
Email this story        

Chicago could soon become the world's largest Internet cafe now that  
the city hall has put out a request for bids to build a city-wide  
wireless Internet system.

The goal is to provide inexpensive -- or even free -- Internet access  
to all residents in order to help Chicago bridge the digital divide,  
Mayor Richard Daley said in a statement Tuesday.

"In technology, as in too many other areas of our society, there's a  
wide gap between the haves and have-nots," Daley said. "It's known as  
the digital divide - and the people on the wrong side of the divide  
generally have lower incomes and less education."

According to one estimate the city cited, even though Internet use  
has been on the rise among most Americans, 80 percent of households  
with incomes below 50,000 dollars a year remain unconnected.

The city of Chicago will offer the long-term use of its  
infrastructure, such as street lights and lamp poles to a private  
firm or consortium to use to set up the antennas used to broadcast a  
high-speed wireless network.

The provider would have to: commit to keep rates low; provide access  
even in the city's poorest neighborhoods; offer free access in  
schools, public parks and other destination "hot spots"; and support  
digital inclusion projects to make computers more widely available to  
low-income residents.

Chicago was the first big American city to have free wireless  
Internet access throughout its public library system. Other public  
"hot spots" currently include Millennium Park, the Cultural Center  
and Daley Plaza.

"When we make modern computer and Internet technology available  
across Chicago, we are giving every person in Chicago the same chance  
for a good life," Daley said.

"We're improving our children's education. We're working to end  
poverty. We're creating a more modern, sophisticated workforce. And,  
most important, we're creating hope and opportunity."



--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~

TELECOM-CITIES
Current searchable archives (Feb. 1, 2006 to present) at 
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
Old searchble archives at 
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to