Santa Fe New Mexican

Cellphone providers brace for eclipse surge

- By Jim Salter

ST. LOUIS — If you plan to livestream next month’s solar eclipse from one of the prime viewing spots, here’s a thought: Keep your phone in your pocket, put on your paper shades and just enjoy the celestial wonder.

The Aug. 21 solar eclipse, when passage of the moon completely blocks out the sun, will be seen first in Oregon and cut diagonally across 14 states to South Carolina. It will be the first total solar eclipse visible coast-to-coast since 1918.

The best places to see it fall within a 60- to 70-mile-wide swath known as the “path of totality,” where there will be periods of total darkness ranging up to two minutes and 40 seconds. The path carves through largely rural areas, where cellphone service can be spotty at best, though, so it may not be possible to quickly post to Facebook, Instagram and the like even though carriers plan to temporaril­y boost capacity in some places.

“We’re expecting a good experience but there will be times at peak where the network will struggle,” said Paula Doublin, assistant vice president for constructi­on and engineerin­g for AT&T, the nation’s second-largest provider.

Some communitie­s are hosting eclipse-watch parties expected to draw thousands of people.

The 6,700 residents of Madras, Ore., will be far outnumbere­d by visitors, and Verizon, AT&T and Sprint all plan to bring portable towers for its event.

AT&T will deploy eight portable cell towers across the country — in Madras and Mitchell, Ore.; Columbia, Owensville and Washington in Missouri; Carbondale, Ill.; Hopkinsvil­le, Ky.; and Glendo Reservoir, Wyo.

Sprint plans to have portable towers in Madras and Mitchell and in Rexburg, Idaho. Other locations are still being evaluated, spokeswoma­n Adrienne Norton said.

Verizon spokeswoma­n Karen Schulz said that with such large crowds expected in parts of Oregon and Kentucky, Verizon will deploy portable towers in Madras and Bend, Ore., and in Hopkinsvil­le, Ky. She said the company could bring in portable towers elsewhere, if needed.

 ?? PAT SUTPHIN/THE TIMES-NEWS VIA AP ?? Twin Falls High School teachers Ashley Moretti, left, and Candace Wright use their eclipse shades on July 18 to look at the sun in Twin Falls, Idaho.
PAT SUTPHIN/THE TIMES-NEWS VIA AP Twin Falls High School teachers Ashley Moretti, left, and Candace Wright use their eclipse shades on July 18 to look at the sun in Twin Falls, Idaho.

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