Fiber optics and the city’s can’t-do spirit

Date: 9 Jan 2006 | posted in: information, MuniNetworks | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

When the Star Tribune recently asked Bill Beck, the city’s deputy chief information officer, why Minneapolis never even considered public ownership of a proposed city-wide high-speed information network, he insisted, "The city lacks the money, competence and ability to build and manage that kind of a network right now."

That isa remarkable admission. More than 100 U.S. cities, including five in Minnesota, already have decided they were competent to build and manage high-speed information networks. Few if any regret their decisions. Most recently, St. Louis Park opted for municipal ownership. At least a half-dozen other metropolitan cities, and consortiums of cities, are seriously considering public ownership.

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Who Will Own Minnesota’s Information Highways?

Date: 9 Jun 2005 | posted in: information, MuniNetworks | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail
Consumer-Friendly Broadband Service Within Reach of Most Minnesotans; Municipalities Can Play Vital Role in Making Telecom Markets Competitive.

Current federal telecom policies are biased toward corporations at the expense of consumers.

Competitive broadband service and pricing is within reach of most Minnesotans if anti-competitive polices and practices are removed and municipal governments build broadband infrastructure, according to this report by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance.

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