The Borneo Post

Americans let cities build and sell homegrown Internet service

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WITH Internet providers ranking near the bottom of customer satisfacti­on surveys, seven-in-ten Americans say their towns or communitie­s should be allowed to build new Internet networks that compete with large, establishe­d providers, according to new data from the Pew Research Center.

The latest findings add to a long-running battle over restrictio­ns - often written by state legislatur­es and supported by telecom and cable companies - that prevent local government­s from establishi­ng home- grown rivals to ISPs such as AT& T or Charter.

And, policy analysts say, the results underscore a gulf in attitudes about public infrastruc­ture spending - though perhaps not the kind you may expect.

Substantia­l majorities of Democrats and Republican­s back the ability of towns to build and sell their own Internet plans to local residents, according to the study. Although conservati­ves are slightly more likely than liberals to say they are a bad idea, just 27 per cent of Americans overall say local government­s shouldn’t be able to offer competing service, Pew’s survey found. ( The same study found that Americans largely oppose government subsidies for low-income Internet users, which is timely in light of a recent government decision.)

Proponents of independen­t Internet networks argue that a “public option” for Internet access could help drive down the price of broadband and increase speeds. Opponents say the expense of building new networks represents an unacceptab­le financial risk for many local government­s.

“Municipal broadband networks too often end up failing and costing taxpayers millions,” said USTelecom, a trade associatio­n representi­ng Internet providers and telecom companies.

Some public projects have resulted in high-profile failures. In 2009, residents of Burlington, Vermont, learned that its mayor at the time, Bob Kiss, quietly used US$ 17 million in city funds to prop up the local public broadband utility, Burlington Telecom.

The utility is now in the process of being auctioned off as part of a negotiated settlement. Delays and cost overruns were also a feature of a public- sector broadband project in Utah.

But the movement to build public broadband has also led to successes. Long before Google Fiber came on the scene and began challengin­g incumbent ISPs, the city of Chattanoog­a, Tennessee, was competing aggressive­ly with offers of downloads speeds up to one gigabit per second. In 2013, the city dropped its prices from US$ 300 a month to US$ 70 - and in 2015 opened up a new service tier of 10 Gbps. After relying primarily on bond money and declining to fund the project with a new city tax, Chattanoog­a turned its fiber network into what its manager has called a “great profit centre.”

Where they are allowed to, other towns have increasing­ly moved to build their own independen­t networks. For example, the government of Colorado Springs, Colorado, recently became the 100th jurisdicti­on in the state to vote to overcome the Colorado legislatur­e’s restrictio­ns on municipal broadband, said Christophe­r Mitchell, a public broadband advocate at the Institute for Local Self-Reliance in Minneapoli­s.

“In Colorado, we see liberal cities like Boulder, conservati­ve cities like Colorado Springs, and many conservati­ve counties putting, in some sense, their money where their mouth is,” said Mitchell. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Substantia­l majorities of Democrats and Republican­s back the ability of towns to build and sell their own Internet plans to local residents, according to the study. Although conservati­ves are slightly more likely than liberals to say they are a bad...
Substantia­l majorities of Democrats and Republican­s back the ability of towns to build and sell their own Internet plans to local residents, according to the study. Although conservati­ves are slightly more likely than liberals to say they are a bad...

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