Faster, Cheaper Broadband in North Carolina Comes From Community Fiber Networks

Date: 23 Nov 2010 | posted in: information, MuniNetworks | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

 

North Carolina aims to be a hotbed for innovation and technology, but the General Assembly has recently considered bills that would preempt local authority to build broadband infrastructure.  Such preemption would cripple the most advanced broadband networks in the state.  This new analysis shows that community owned networks are faster and cheaper than incumbent cable and telephone networks in North Carolina. 

Past broadband discussions in the General Assembly focused on a bill to prevent communities from building their own networks — but communities are the only ones building citywide next-generation fiber-to-the-home networks in North Carolina.  The best connections in the state are in the towns of Salisbury and Wilson because both built community fiber networks that offer much faster connections to residents and businesses at more affordable prices.

 

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Twin Cities Economy Hurt By Slow, Expensive Internet

Date: 17 Nov 2010 | posted in: information, MuniNetworks, Press Release | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

Twin Cities Internet subscribers pay more money for slower Internet than even small towns with community owned broadband according to a new analysis by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance’s New Rules Project. Over the past several years, communities in the Twin Cities have considered building their own community owned network to increase competition, lower prices, and ensure everyone has access to the connections required for success in the digital economy. The failure to do so is costing consumers and businesses millions and the Twin Cities untold amounts in lost business opportunity.… Read More

Twin Cities Broadband No Match for Community Networks

Date: 17 Nov 2010 | posted in: information, MuniNetworks | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

If you live in the Twin Cities, your internet connection is slower and more expensive than small town Monticello due to a reliance on big national phone and cable companies. Over the past several years, communities in the Twin Cities have considered building a community owned broadband network to increase competition, lower prices, and ensure everyone has access to the connections required for success in the digital economy. The failure to do so is costing consumers millions and communities untold amounts in lost business opportunity.… Read More

ILSR Tells the FCC to Embrace Community Broadband Networks

Date: 28 Sep 2010 | posted in: information, MuniNetworks | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail
On August 19, 2010, ILSR’s Christopher Mitchell was one of hundreds of people telling the Federal Communications Commission to do its job and regulate in the public interest.
Mitchell focused on the benefits of publicly owned broadband networks and the need for the FCC to ensure states cannot preempt local governments from building networks.  Click thru to read the text of Mitchell’s comments.

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Chattanooga Community Fiber Network Offers Fastest Speeds in US

Date: 17 Sep 2010 | posted in: information, MuniNetworks | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

Chattanooga’s publicly owned fiber broadband network, EPBFi, is now offering the fastest broadband connections available anywhere in the US.  Chattanooga operates the nations largest muni broadband network, with incredibly fast speeds at affordable rates.

The network operates in many nearby rural communities as well, ensuring that no one is left behind.  Read the full coverage at MuniNetworks.org.

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ILSR Congratulates Chattanooga for Fastest Broadband Network in United States

Date: 14 Sep 2010 | posted in: information, MuniNetworks, Press Release | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

The Electric Power Board (EPB) of Chattanooga, Tennessee, has announced a citywide 1 gigabit per second (1 Gbps) broadband tier, by far the fastest citywide broadband tier available in the U.S.   By the end of the year, 170,000 households and businesses in the region will have access to the fastest speeds available – at affordable rates. Christopher Mitchell, the Director of the Telecommunications as Commons Initiative at the Institute for Local Self-Reliance (ILSR), recently visited Chattanooga to tour and discuss their community-owned fiber network. Read More

ILSR Explains Broadband on “MN This Week” Radio Interview

Date: 21 Jul 2010 | posted in: MuniNetworks | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

Christopher Mitchell, Director of the Telecommunications as Commons Initiative, joins Curtis Beckmann on "MN This Week" to discuss broadband networks.  The 30 minute program discusses problems with existing broadband networks, the lack of competition, how and why communities have built their own networks, and a variety of other topical subjects.  Listen here.

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Cities Take On AT&T, Time Warner and Verizon

Date: 22 Jun 2010 | posted in: information, MuniNetworks | 2 Facebooktwitterredditmail

A battle is raging for control of the Internet and it is not taking place in Washington. Scores of cities, fed up with the recalcitrance and outright arrogance of their providers and Washington’s lack of action are taking their information future into their own hands by building their own high-speed networks. To Harold DePriest, head of Chattanooga’s municipally owned fiber network, currently the largest in the country, the issue is clear: “Does our community control our own fate or does someone else control it?”… Read More

Breaking the Broadband Monopoly

Date: 3 May 2010 | posted in: information, MuniNetworks | 1 Facebooktwitterredditmail

ILSR has released the most comprehensive and up-to-date report about publicly owned broadband networks: Breaking the Broadband Monopoly: How Communities Are Building the Networks They Need.

Across the country, hundreds of local governments, public power utilities, non-profits, and cooperatives have built successful and sometimes pioneering telecommunication networks that put community needs first.  This report details their successes, lessons learned, and barriers to copying the model.… Read More

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