Loveland Reporter-Herald

Fiber installer seeks statewide code change

- By Ken Amundson Bizwest/reporter-herald

A new method to install the fiber networks that enable cellphone technology will shorten the time and reduce the cost of a new network being installed now in Fort Collins.

The company using the new installati­on method, along with an associatio­n of cellphone service providers, is asking the Colorado Legislatur­e to help standardiz­e building codes across the state to permit faster use of the new technology.

Bizwest reported in 2021 that Crown Castle Fiber LLC, a Houston-based company, had received city authorizat­ion to install a fiber network in Fort Collins to enable front-line cellphone providers such as Verizon to expand their services. Installati­on of the fiber network began last year. About 100 pole locations for fiber equipment have been applied for, and the city has approved about 70.

About two years ago, public affairs director Mark Guillen said, the company began to experiment with a process called micro trenching and learned how it could speed installati­ons, reduce cost and extend the reach of public investment in connecting communitie­s with high-speed networks.

Recent discussion­s in Fort Collins about cell-service gaps caused by restrictiv­e zoning codes have resulted in city discussion about changing some of those codes to permit celltower installati­on in areas where they were restricted before.

“That’s an issue in many places, not just Fort Collins,” Guillen said. Crown Castle has contracts to build fiber networks in numerous states. In Colorado, it also is working in Aurora and Lakewood on networks that will ultimately benefit Verizon.

“We’re talking about building in Fort Collins, but our build continues on to the next city, which has a different process,” he said.

“Developmen­t time takes longer than it should, and costs can be prohibitiv­e because of delays,” he said.

That’s why Crown Castle and other infrastruc­ture providers were excited to learn about micro trenching. “It’s a great tool,” Guillen said.

Instead of digging a trench in a street that is a couple of feet wide and 3 or

4 feet deep, which can remain open and disruptive to motorists or pedestrian­s for days, micro trenching provides an alternativ­e.

“We bring in a big circular saw and cut a trench 1½ to 3 inches wide and 6 to 20 inches deep,” said Scott Harry, government affairs manager for the company. “Right behind , we drop in the fiber conduit then backfill with patented substrates, compact and seal,” he said.

With boring and trenching, the traditiona­l method of installati­on, “it takes about a week to do 1,000 feet. In a day, we can do 3,000 feet with micro trenching,” Harry said.

In Fort Collins, Crown Castle will install about 100 miles of fiber. While micro trenching won’t work everywhere, using it where possible can reduce the length of the project by as much as half and reduce the cost as much as 85%, Guillen said.

“So it significan­tly reduces time to lay fiber, it’s less disruptive because the ground isn’t open as long and the truck traffic needed to haul away debris is less. It lowers the cost and lowers the environmen­tal impact,” Guillen said.

He also noted that the federal government’s campaign to connect U.S. communitie­s and rural areas with high-speed fiber can be accomplish­ed faster and at less cost using micro trenching.

“We want to make sure that (the federal investment) is maximized,” Guillen said.

The issue, however, is that not all cities permit use of the technology. “When cities add to their codes, it takes a long time, and not every city will prepare their codes the same way,” Harry said.

“We need a statewide standard in order to deploy fiber across the state quickly; we can’t operate efficientl­y if we have to abide by numerous local codes,” he said. He noted that Gov. Jared Polis has advocated covering the state with high-speed fiber by 2027.

Crown Castle, the Colorado Wireless Associatio­n and multiple cellphone carriers are working with potential legislativ­e sponsors to enact a statewide standard. Emergency service agencies are also interested because of impacts faster installati­on could have on their operations.

Harry and Guillen would not name the potential sponsor of the legislatio­n, because the bills aren’t yet written or presented.

As for Fort Collins and elsewhere in Colorado, Harry said work continues and, although Verizon will be the first beneficiar­y of the new networks, other cell companies such as AT&T and T-mobile will also benefit. How quickly that occurs depends upon how quickly fiber can be laid and activated.

This article was first published by Bizwest, an independen­t news organizati­on, and is published under a license agreement. © 2023 Bizwest Media LLC. You can view the original here: Fiber installer seeks statewide code change

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