  Carl Premium join:2004-07-21 Krotz Springs, LA | reply to hailinfantry Re: How convenient
Our is the City of Lafayette, and LUS, which is the city consolidated government's utility system. They provide electric and water in Lafayette and surrounding areas. -- Carl Smith, formerly known as crstec. |
|
  hailinfantry Bizarro Quinn Premium join:2004-01-18 Brooklyn, NY
| said by Carl :Our is the City of Lafayette, and LUS, which is the city consolidated government's utility system. They provide electric and water in Lafayette and surrounding areas. He is a constituent of the people, not a business entity. -- Bizarro I Love You |
|
 raydsltech
join:2004-07-04 Concord, NC
| Government can do very little correctly and not without wasting tons of money. Do you want the government to build and maintain your network? I don't! The government is suppose to protect us not provide us with another wealth redistribution scheme. This is all about having hard working people pay for internet access via taxing the so called rich and giving away internet access for those who can't afford it. |
|
  Carl Premium join:2004-07-21 Krotz Springs, LA
·Charter Pipeline
| reply to hailinfantry said by hailinfantry : said by Carl :Our is the City of Lafayette, and LUS, which is the city consolidated government's utility system. They provide electric and water in Lafayette and surrounding areas. He is a constituent of the people, not a business entity. Well, the local news channel KLFY did a poll and over half the city said they were willing to use LUS and that it was a good idea. -- Carl Smith, formerly known as crstec. |
|
 russotto
join:2000-10-05 Collegeville, PA | reply to raydsltech Muni's are a competing-evils thing. On the one hand, socialized broadband is bad. On the other hand, effective-duopoly broadband supported by the FCCs and franchise agreements is bad too. |
|
 underscore
join:2004-04-20 Fairfax, VA
1 edit | reply to raydsltech said by raydsltech :Government can do very little correctly and not without wasting tons of money. Do you want the government to build and maintain your network? I don't! The government is suppose to protect us not provide us with another wealth redistribution scheme. This is all about having hard working people pay for internet access via taxing the so called rich and giving away internet access for those who can't afford it. "Terry Huval, director of the Lafayette Utilities System, thinks BellSouth's real goal is to kill the project. "Their end-game is to frustrate us so much that we back away from this project," he says. Huval adds, "There won't be any cross-subsidies" because the city plans to use revenue from its new broadband services to finance the entire cost of the project."
Most rich people get their money off the backs of the hard working lower-class, So it doesn't bother me. |
|
  ppcpunk
join:2001-02-11 Davenport, IA
| reply to russotto Then how about you just build a network and lease port access to many different companies providing all kinds of different services and pay back the money it takes to build such a project with the money you make leasing port access over say 20 years or whatever length of time. |
|
 ricep5 Premium join:2000-08-07 Jacksonville, FL
·AT&T Southeast
·AT&T CallVantage
·VoicePulse
·Comcast Formerly ..
| reply to raydsltech Typical Muni based fiber plans do not use general tax revenue to fund their efforts. They use their tax-exempt bonding authority to have the project underwritten and pay for the capital costs. The actual revenue to pay the bonds comes from the system subscriber income.
Other than competition, what scares Cox and BS is that Muni's can finance capital improvements cheaper than they can by using their tax-exempt bonding status. Typically, publicly held companies cannot get 30 year bonds that cheaply and pay back shareholders as quickly as the market is demanding. So they need near monopolistic policy to maintain the higher prices to pay both. |
|
 Fiber2home
join:2004-12-30 Lafayette, LA
| reply to raydsltech Somebody needs to build it. All of the incumbants say that we don't need it, they already have it, and that they won't build it. Yes - they have said all three things. If you want to see how they feel about fiber to the home check out their answers to the Chamber's forum questions.
»www.lafchamber.org/site136.php |
|
 Fiber2home
join:2004-12-30 Lafayette, LA
| reply to ricep5 Their plan calls for 25 year revenue bonds. There is a group trying to call for an election on the issue and have referenced the incorrect bond type in their petition. The group will have to start over again on getting their 75 signatures which have been obtained by cox and bellsouth employees. |
|
 Fiber2home
join:2004-12-30 Lafayette, LA | reply to Carl Actually - the city did a feasibility survey which showed that the majority of the community will switch services. For two months we had the battle of the push polls of Cox vs. LUS. |
|
  footballdude Premium join:2002-08-13 Imperial, MO
| reply to underscore said by underscore : Most rich people get their money off the backs of the hard working lower-class, So it doesn't bother me. Bull. Most rich people get their money by busting their asses and working to the point of exhaustion. Only a few make their money by persecution and it usually comes back to haunt them (like Saddam). |
|
  Carl Premium join:2004-07-21 Krotz Springs, LA
·Charter Pipeline
| reply to Fiber2home said by Fiber2home :Actually - the city did a feasibility survey which showed that the majority of the community will switch services. For two months we had the battle of the push polls of Cox vs. LUS. Oh i thought it was KLFY lol. -- Carl Smith, formerly known as crstec. |
|