republican-creole
site Search:


 
    All Forums Hot Topics Gallery






how-to block ads


 
Search Topic:
Share Topic
Post a:
Post a:
AuthorAll Replies

ilsr_chris

join:2008-01-29
Saint Paul, MN

reply to battleop

Re: Makes one wonder..

Very few community networks are funded by tax dollars. They are overwhelmingly funded with revenue bonds bought by private investors.

Indianola has been slowly expanding its network and is working with a local company that offers services. They are simply smart, not making other people pay for it.


battleop

join:2005-09-28
00000

"Very few community networks are funded by tax dollars. They are overwhelmingly funded with revenue bonds bought by private investors."

No, that's how they make up the difference. EPB has a few hundred million in government grants plus a few hundred more in bonds. At this point in time they are somewhere close to spending half a BILLION dollars.

"Indianola has been slowly expanding its network and is working with a local company that offers services. They are simply smart, not making other people pay for it."

And this is EXACTLY how it should be done. The government should remove the hurdles so that their citizens can get the services they want. I.E. make it easy for 3rd party (I.E. not the Cable co or ILEC) to come in and offer service.
--
I do not, have not, and will not work for AT&T/Comcast/Verizon/Charter or similar sized company.


ilsr_chris

join:2008-01-29
Saint Paul, MN

A few hundred million in government grants? More like $111 million from DOE. The city got some homeland security funds to build specific wireless infrastructure (I think less than $30 million) but that is not an asset of the utility which built the fiber network.

But yeah, they have probably spent between $300 and $500 million. It is an investment that will last decades. It is a smart investment that has helped the private sector create 4800 jobs in 3 years there. Possibly even more over the next 3 years.



battleop

join:2005-09-28
00000

The wireless project is not part of the EPB network, it's done by private group. That network is currently being used for Law Enforcement though they say they plan on offering internet access to everyone at some point.

"It is a smart investment that has helped the private sector"

So long as the private sector is not classified as competition. I have worked for and with companies in Chattanooga that offer VoIP, Cloud Services, Data Backup, etc. and because these companies also offer ISP services EPB will not do business with these guys.

I have seen them tell some guys they can't service them because they have an ISP network. I have seen them quote a medical customer $2000/mo for a 100Mb connection while they quote the ISPs $5000-7500/mo for the EXACT service on the same street. They will sell a 30Mb connection for about $100/mo to a local business with out caps but the EXACT same service to another ISP was $500/m with a 60GB monthly cap.

Tell me how exactly does this help the private sector?
--
I do not, have not, and will not work for AT&T/Comcast/Verizon/Charter or similar sized company.


ilsr_chris

join:2008-01-29
Saint Paul, MN

As you well know, a 30/30 oversubscribed line to a resident is priced differently than a 30/30 dedicated line to an ISP. As to how different those prices are, that is up to EPB. EPB's investment has not helped _every_ business, as I'm sure Comcast and AT&T will attest.

I wish communities didn't have to get into building these networks. However, the existing ISPs were not meeting demand and EPB's network is now among the most popular I have seen. It sucks that specialized IPS are now finding themselves unable to compete, but cities cannot just wait for decades for the private sector to finally get the job done.

Thanks to EPB's network, the vast majority of private sector companies have more choices and appear to be very excited at the new possibilities.



battleop

join:2005-09-28
00000

I am comparing business and enterprise circuits not residential. A medical office that uses 25mb @ 95th percentile is no different than an ISP using 25mb @ 95th percentile on a 30, 50, or 100mb circuit.
--
I do not, have not, and will not work for AT&T/Comcast/Verizon/Charter or similar sized company.


ilsr_chris

join:2008-01-29
Saint Paul, MN

I would expect that an ISP would actually have a different usage pattern than a medical office but whatever. If your point is that EPB is discouraging competitors, then I will have trouble disagreeing with you. Presumably they are acting within the law and probably still more honorably than AT&T does.


ISurfTooMuch

join:2007-04-23
Tuscaloosa, AL

As far as discouraging competitors goes, considering how long it often takes for a community to get a muni fiber network off the ground, any company wanting to compete will have an ample opportunity to get in there first. There are plenty of opportunities for a company to do this, and I'm sure most communities would welcome having another player in the market as opposed to having to wire themselves. It just takes a company with the vision to make it happen and the resources and competence to pull it off.



battleop

join:2005-09-28
00000

reply to ilsr_chris
No. In my example 25Mb @ 95th percentile is the same amount of bandwidth no matter who the end user is.
--
I do not, have not, and will not work for AT&T/Comcast/Verizon/Charter or similar sized company.



skeechan
Ai Otsukaholic
Premium
join:2012-01-26
AA169|170
kudos:2

reply to ilsr_chris
And who pays back the bonds? In California, taxpayers do, like for the bullet trains to nowhere.


ilsr_chris

join:2008-01-29
Saint Paul, MN

The bonds are paid back by the revenues created by people buying services. I don't know how the bullet trains are financed but revenue bonds are typically used in these muni bb networks. There have been a few cases where the revenues were less than forecast and there is a potential at that point that public money would be used to make up the difference, but this starts to get into specifics that vary from community to community.



skeechan
Ai Otsukaholic
Premium
join:2012-01-26
AA169|170
kudos:2

Infrastructure so expensive and prices they plan to charge so low, I wouldn't think that revenues alone would cover paying back the bonds.


Skippy25

join:2000-09-13
Hazelwood, MO

Bonds are an investment risk unless they are government guaranteed. Usually they are not guaranteed so if the business makes no money then the investors make no money and their bonds could very well become worthless if the business fails.

Are these guaranteed bonds? I personally dont care and think it is good and wise for virtually all communities to do this.



skeechan
Ai Otsukaholic
Premium
join:2012-01-26
AA169|170
kudos:2

They may be revenue bonds in which case I'd be nervous about holding them.


Monday, 20-May 00:07:45 Terms of Use & Privacy | feedback | contact | Hosting by nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo
over 13.5 years online © 1999-2013 dslreports.com.
Most commented news this week
Hot Topics