Just got this in an e-mail blast.
8/19/2010 11:42:31 PM
As long as they don't give the money to Time Warner, this is a great idea all around.I would support state funds for more towns to do like Wilson does with their Green Light.[Edited on August 20, 2010 at 12:25 AM. Reason : ]
8/20/2010 12:24:33 AM
This is a good question. Should broadband access be a free utility? It doesn't fit the economic definition of a free utility. Unlike roads, broadband access is easily excludable. As such, theory would direct we not create a free utility, as billing for use is easy, merely a natural monopoly akin to electricity. In effect, subsidization through taxes is unnecessary, all economics dictates is that we declare TWC a regulated monopoly. Public subsidization is a rare feature of regulated monopolies in the industrialized world, usually they just jack up the regulated rates (think power, natural gas, water, etc), which leads us back to a free utility. But that is not what we are talking about, is it? As this is probably $255 million over ten years, that is a measly $25 million a year. As such, what we are talking about is not broadband for all paid for through tax dollars, but market internet for 90% of us which must pay the full cost of both our internet and then through taxes subsidize internet for the 10% of customers sufficiently politically connected to obtain the state's reduced-rate service. As such, unless tax payers are willing to spend a hundred times that, we should spend zero on broadband investments. Let the rate payers pay like they do for all other natural monopolies. Public money should only ever be in the form of vouchers for the poor.
8/20/2010 12:58:23 AM
I don't think anyone is talking about free broadband in this thread...
8/20/2010 1:01:12 AM
Reading comprehension? Hence the "But that is not what we are talking about" and the "state's reduced-rate service" But, fine, read whatever you want to read, moron.To your post: as they are not spending nearly enough for the state to start their own internet service, all they can do is just give the money to TWC, which will take home every dollar as quarterly profits. [Edited on August 20, 2010 at 1:08 AM. Reason : .,.]
8/20/2010 1:05:44 AM
Although my questions were more principle-based, and thus hopefully addressable as is, I did find some more details from the website to share which I thought could help inform the discussion.http://www.governor.state.nc.us/NewsItems/PressReleaseDetail.aspx?newsItemid=1303
8/20/2010 1:15:22 AM
Nope, don't like it.
8/20/2010 8:49:33 AM
I heard on NPR that our proposal came in 9th out of 10, but while we barely made the cut, it is still enough for us to get about $400 million to be used for education in NC.http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/school-funding-competition-education-department-secretary-arne-duncan/story?id=11472062
8/24/2010 11:37:34 PM
8/24/2010 11:45:36 PM
http://blogs.newsobserver.com/business/state-nets-2-million-extra-for-weatherization
8/31/2010 1:46:53 AM
no. internet is not a public service, people don't deserve it for free, and our government shouldn't be wasting the money. let's spend this money on real infrastructure issues.
8/31/2010 4:44:42 AM
I do think broadband internet should be available in every municipality, without being owned by a private provider. It's becoming firmly incorporated with a modern lifestyle, replacing other city services and institutions - like libraries and post offices.I do not think it should be free, but I'm not against it being a public service.
8/31/2010 9:06:37 AM
[Edited on August 31, 2010 at 9:55 AM. Reason : +]
8/31/2010 9:55:21 AM
8/31/2010 10:34:18 AM
Except that's what our entire system of federal funding is based off of: states bending to the will of the federal government. If you do what they tell you to do, you get a small fraction of the money you send to them back. If you don't, you lose.
8/31/2010 10:45:47 AM
Yeah as long as NONE of this Federal Grant money goes to Time Warner Cable, I am happy about it!
8/31/2010 11:17:19 AM
I don't see what the problem is. More people will be able to access more information easier and faster than they could before. I always thought it was a good thing. I don't think it should be a free service, but I see no problem with a state expanding the coverage of broadband. I just wonder who will provide the service. I do have a problem with TWC basically being allowed to have a monopoly in the state on cable services, when a few other states, like Florida, have proved that you can have a free cable market and that competition in the markets will allow for a reduction or prices and increase in quality.But the concept of allowing more people more access to more information is a good thing. Obviously, a lot of people will just open Facebook accounts and just browse porn and youtube. But from the looks of it, the very same who bitch and complain about people making uneducated votes are bitching about an expansion of a service that can allow people to do their own research and make their own educated decisions in elections, rather than going through the horrible biased liberal media (or Fox News, depending on where you stand).
8/31/2010 11:50:17 AM
8/31/2010 12:15:23 PM
hooray, fiber to nowhere that has to be installed on inflated Davis-Bacon wages.
8/31/2010 2:01:10 PM
8/31/2010 2:16:05 PM
I must have failed to read the section of the Constitution that says the federal government is to provide Internet access to the population.
8/31/2010 7:03:17 PM
Supplanter, what the fuck did those last two posts of yours have to do with this thread, lol?
8/31/2010 10:46:11 PM
8/31/2010 10:57:04 PM
there are rumors that more rural broadband funding is going to be awarded in NC in addition to what's been listed so far in this thread. Hopefully someone will get busy improving WiMax technology so we can make use of all this middle mile fiber they plan on putting in.
8/31/2010 11:33:10 PM
9/1/2010 12:23:34 AM
aaronburro:
9/1/2010 1:16:10 AM
needed*
9/1/2010 3:20:48 AM
Electricity, water, gas, trash pickup.Yeah, I could see internet added to that list. The only downside is when the state/federal government decides to start handing out local monopolies for internet service like they do with power. Also note that none of those are free and technically speaking you don't need any of them to survive, but they benefit greatly from government investment and regulation and have been hugely important in creating our current civilization. I could see internet being added to that list very easily, but only with strict anti-censorship guidelines put in place to protect the rights of American citizens.Although, to be fair I'm not sure if trash pickup or water belong on that list, since I don't know if you can actually opt out of paying the city for trash pickup if you don't use the service and I think water is considered a necessity by the government.So Electricity, Gas, and Internet. Yeah, I could see them getting lumped into this sort of category. Private companies providing a federally mandated service.
9/1/2010 10:40:29 AM
I pay $50/month for 768k download, and I'll defend the free market and my right to do so until I can no longer stream animated gifs!
9/1/2010 11:01:12 AM
In less than 5 years the wireless networks will be able to handle broadband access suitable for home use for most users. (maybe not gamers, but gamers can move or pay more, I do not think tax dollars should subsidize gaming) This is a complete waste of tax money. I liken it to spending a thousand dollars to put in Ethernet cables throughout your house in the late 1990s when reliable wi-fi routers were less than $100 a few years later.
9/1/2010 11:31:07 AM
there are huge portions of this country with no cell phone coverage, especially in the Appalachian mountain regions where the majority of this stimulus money was awarded. Besides, cellular networks still need more middle mile fiber in order to get from the towers to the major pipelines.
9/6/2010 11:07:43 PM
^ Well in that case I think voice cellular and 1x data should be more important that high speed internet to the mountains.
9/7/2010 12:00:29 AM
^^straight upi was in cullowhee this weekend and i was floored at how limited it was for me to communicate using cell/internetit's been ages since i lived in the mountains, but i had forgotten how remote even "normal towns" can beearlier in this thread, i posted that quote from "o brother," and it seems all the more relevant since i got back.... i know that if you go to centralized areas, there is better communication, but there are a lot of places that aren't far off the beaten path that can't even get cell phone serviceno i don't think all of it should be solved by federal/state intervention, but good gravy, some of these places wouldn't have seen basic services/health/nutrition had the feds/state/ and nc state not seen fit to go out there and share education with our mountain neighborsthis post isn't a ratification of the original post, but living in raleigh, i've forgotten how easy it is for me to connect to the outside world
9/7/2010 12:14:58 AM
9/7/2010 12:35:29 AM
It was a program similar to this (REA) that got power lines installed across most of the United States. Back then, people probably thought it was a waste of taxpayer money too. I think the programs were more efficiently run back then and money was more wisely spent, but that is a topic for another conversation.
9/7/2010 11:48:31 AM
http://www.newsobserver.com/2010/09/23/698902/nc-state-gets-funds-to-host-climate.html
9/23/2010 5:41:45 PM