Friday, August 20, 2021

Knowledge workers relocating to exurbs will encounter suboptimal advanced telecom infrastructure

Fringe outlying communities of major metropolitan regions were prized for their extreme privacy or more affordable housing before the pandemic, but were typically much less wealthy than the denser cities and affluent suburbs they surrounded.

The Great Reshuffling will likely make these far-flung exurbs richer and denser. The median household income across U.S. exurbs was $74,573 as of 2019, according to data from The American Communities Project. That likely ticked up over the last year as city dwellers in major job centers such as San Francisco and New York relocated to exurbs for the same or similar salaries.

The ‘Great Reshuffling’ Is Shifting Wealth to the Exurbs - WSJ

This population shift has implications for advanced telecommunications infrastructure that's often spotty in the exurbs. Knowledge workers relocating to the exurbs will often be in for a shock over the lack of fiber to the home connections where exurbanites are forced to get by with first generation DSL over aging copper phone lines or wireless connectivity.

Friday, August 13, 2021

“I’m done playing the game. It's time for blunt, factual reality. No more promises not kept."

In Clark County, in central Wisconsin, economic development director Sheila Nyberg has proposed a partnership with an electric cooperative to get broadband to the entire county. Revenue from the system would be used to pay off a startup loan, similar to the way electricity was brought to the countryside nearly a century ago. Clark County is one of the least connected counties in the state, and it showed when schools closed for COVID-19 and students didn’t have home internet access. 

For more than a decade, Nyberg said, federal money has gone to large internet service providers that have done little to improve coverage in areas where it's needed the most. 

"I'm tired of pretending that the big dog is the best dog in the room," she said. Nyberg said some type of local control, such as an electric cooperative, would be a better alternative. “I’m done playing the game," she said. "It's time for blunt, factual reality. No more promises not kept."

https://www.jsonline.com/in-depth/news/2021/08/12/u-s-needs-future-proof-approach-getting-high-speed-internet-all-broadband-wisconsin/7298391002/

Nyberg's comment raises an excellent point. Despite incumbents claiming to have invested upwards of $80 billion annually to improve America's advanced telecommunications infrastructure supplemented by billions in government grants and subsidies, it's still not enough to bring fiber connections to most every American doorstep. As Nyberg states, it's time for a new paradigm of publicly and consumer cooperative owned infrastructure. Investor owned providers have clearly shown they are not up to the task.

Thursday, August 12, 2021

Explicit fiber to the prem FTTP telecom infrastructure standard absent in infrastructure measure. But it contains language favoring it.


The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act passed out of the Senate this week falls short of the Biden administration’s “build back better” pledge by failing to establish an explicit fiber to the premises FTTP advanced telecommunications infrastructure standard to replace outmoded 20th century copper telephone lines.

Instead, the bill establishes a throughput-based service level standard inconsistent with the administration’s goal of building “future proof” telecom infrastructure. It’s a much-needed objective. The past four decades have shown that throughput-based standards tend to become quickly outdated as end user bandwidth demand inexorably grows. Only fiber infrastructure has the headroom to accommodate that demand well into the future.

However, language in the legislation indirectly favors fiber. It requires the National Telecommunications and Information Administration prioritize infrastructure funded by $42 billion of grants to states to “ensure that the network built by the project can easily scale speeds over time to meet the evolving connectivity needs of households and businesses.” Not a direct fiber infrastructure specification. But a good operational definition that could influence the NTIA to promulgate rules on funding eligibility and awards that favor a de facto fiber standard.

Additionally, the measure defines a “reliable” service standard that fits well with fiber. It’s “service that meets performance criteria for service availability, adaptability to changing end-user requirements, length of serviceable life, or other criteria, other than upload and download speeds, as determined by the NTIA in coordination with the Federal Communications Commission. (Emphasis added) It would also require the NTIA to develop and incorporate best practices “for ensuring reliability and resilience” of the infrastructure funded by the measure.