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Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Mayor McGinn's New Broadband Strategy Isn't New

Posted by on Tue, May 15, 2012 at 2:15 PM

There's been some coverage of Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn's proposed broadband strategy recently that I'm pretty sure is getting it wrong. "Seattle pulls plug on its broadband network," the Seattle Times' Brier Dudley reported last week about the end of the city's free public Wi-Fi experiment along the Columbia City business district. "Seattle abandons plan for city broadband network," the SeattlePI.com's Scott Gutierrez added yesterday, reporting that the city is "ditching its years-long quest to build a city-sponsored fast broadband network."

Well, not exactly. Yesterday the mayor announced plans to seek a new ordinance that would permit the city to lease out to private partners more than 500 miles of city-owned fiber optic cable to help facilitate faster broadband to poorly served neighborhoods. Which is exactly what the mayor was talking about last year at a May 23, 2011 press conference he held in Pioneer Square:

"Today is a small tangible step," the mayor said, referring as much to his announcement that he would ask the City Council for permission to lease out city-owned conduit as he was to the ditch and work crew in the background. If the Council agrees, the city will put out a request for proposal to telco and cable operators to hook up and serve this four block stretch of Pioneer Square. If no one bids, McGinn said the city would consider "whether we can just do it ourselves."

The city ended up leasing its four-block stretch of Pioneer Square conduit to Comcast, which pulled fiber and is now serving more than 50 new customers in the neighborhood with high speed broadband service. That's exactly what McGinn is proposing for the rest of the 500 miles of city-owned fiber. And that's been his official broadband strategy for at least the past year.

Yes, the city shuttered the seven-year-old Columbia City public Wi-Fi test project last month, but public Wi-Fi was never part of McGinn's broadband plan, not even during the election. It's an entirely different technology than what the mayor has been pitching. So to view this as some sort of abandoning of McGinn's plan for a citywide broadband network is a misreading of events. McGinn is still pursuing citywide broadband, but via fiber to the home and business, not Wi-Fi.

And neither is McGinn abandoning the threat of building out a city owned and operated network. "If the private sector cannot get this done, then the City will have to look at doing it ourselves," McGinn wrote on his blog yesterday, echoing his words at last year's event. "That will take years to build and the cost would be significant," McGinn admits, "but it remains an option."

It's a carrot and stick approach. On the one hand McGinn is offering to lease city-owned conduit and dark fiber to private companies willing to offer high speed broadband to homes and businesses, lowering the upfront capital expense where the fiber already exists. On the other hand, if Comcast, CenturyLink et al continue to refuse to invest in bringing fiber to the home (and why should they when their near monopolies are currently profitable as-is?), they'll be in no position to complain should they suddenly find themselves in competition with a city-owned public broadband network.

What should we expect to happen? It's not clear. McGinn spokesperson Aaron Pickus says his office was pleasantly surprised when Comcast so quickly responded to last year's RFP for leasing the Pioneer Square conduit. Dozens of neighborhood businesses are benefiting from the partnership. So given the chance, perhaps service providers will be just as enthusiastic about leasing the rest of the 500 miles of under- or unused infrastructure scattered throughout the rest of the city?

Or perhaps a few years from now the lack of response from Internet service providers will provide the justification needed to move forwarded with a city owns and operated network?

 

Comments (10) RSS

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gloomy gus 1
The municipal plan that was, in fact, given up on is the one McGinn campaigned on rather prominently. True, the idea he decided was better (since it requires little of the political capital he finds it so hard to accrue) is moving forward, just as you say.

But it's silly to say "apples aren't disappearing, 'cos look at these oranges right here."
Posted by gloomy gus on May 15, 2012 at 2:20 PM
Kinison 2
The city needs fiber to the premise, not fiber to the node (2 -4 blocks down the street), only problem is that local telcos will sue, they've done so int he past. All we need is a mayor who is tough enough to deal with the instant lawsuit that is sure to be filed the second we think about wiring up the city with a sales tax.

Gay, straight, republican, democrat, driver, cyclist, owner or tenant, fiber internet is something EVERYONE can agree to and we already have half a dozen ISPs ready to offer this service (Dry Loop DSL is dying).
Posted by Kinison http://www.holgatehawks.com on May 15, 2012 at 2:25 PM
Zebes 3
Way to perpetuate the war on dial-up, McSchwinternet.
Posted by Zebes http://www.badrap.org/rescue/index.html on May 15, 2012 at 2:27 PM
Will in Seattle 4
Meanwhile, even in the most positive light, the US is ranked 7th internationally in our big cities for broadband, and something like 41st for cost per GB.

Think you're being ripped off?

You're right.
Posted by Will in Seattle http://www.facebook.com/WillSeattle on May 15, 2012 at 2:32 PM
Goldy 5
@1: Wrong. A) There was never a municipal plan to string the city with public WiFi, and B) McGinn never campaigned on one.

What he announced yesterday is exactly what he was talking about a year ago. Exact same plan. Offer to lease city-owned fiber and conduits. If we don't get results, pursue city-owned network.
Posted by Goldy on May 15, 2012 at 2:51 PM
6
As many are dropping cable TV for the internet, are broadband prices going to go up again? Leasing out public networks is one thing but should there be some price control of natural monopolies?
Posted by anon1256 on May 15, 2012 at 3:07 PM
7

As a Pioneer Square business owner with an office sitting directly above the city-owned fiber, I call bullshit on this plan.

Right after Comcast grabbed leased the conduit last year, they dropped by my office gave me an estimate of $1000/month for a 10mbps fiber synchronous line. A few blocks outside Pioneer Square, prices drop to around $100/month.

If the city is going to roll out this plan to other areas, they need to have pricing restrictions in place - otherwise, they are just further enabling these ISP monopolies.
Posted by Bill Nordwall on May 15, 2012 at 4:14 PM
8
Step 1 to improve Seattle broadband: take away Broadstripe's license.
Posted by decidedlyodd on May 15, 2012 at 4:53 PM
gloomy gus 9
@5, you're a great contrarian and a hard worker, but a) I didn't write it was wifi he ran on. My comment was to broadband, the topic of your post, and b) this McGinn interview and analysis about broadband written during the actual campaign season in question by Glenn Fleishman does a way better job than you or me at specifying what the fuck McGinn actually ran on. To me, it looks pretty close to just what I said.

But hey - make up your own mind. Happy reading.
http://publicola.com/2009/09/22/technerd…
Posted by gloomy gus on May 15, 2012 at 6:02 PM
10
Actually this public-private "partnership" idea goes back to 2007 under Nickles. The city put out an RFI for those interested in doing this. They got a lot of responses, but none of them panned out to the benefit of the citizens. Actually WiFi does play a part, for those areas not easily provided with FTTH, and for other reasons of affordability.

The biggest issue is NOT just access, but affordability. The city could still establish am Internet utility with shared bandwith, or tiered service, but they don't have the will or the guts to do it. This is not about the costs of the Last Mile, as much as the threat to sue from Comcast and Century Link.

Many feasible ideas were floated back in 2006-2008. None of them mattered as much as fear of being sued. However, the City of Edmonds took Comast on and in 2010 beat Comcast in court over the "competition." issue. The "expense" is no longer a reason, but a convienent excuse to not deal directly with this.

This is why the big telcos and ISP's are now heavily lobbying state legislatures for statutes prohibiting municipalities from establishing municipal public broadband networks. They have not succeeded in WA St, yet. They have succeeded in several other eastern and Midwestern states.
Posted by Nemo on May 21, 2012 at 2:51 PM

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