3/17/2011 11:11:22 AM
those municipals should fire back by refusing to provide electrical service to TWC and Centurylink. This is nothing more than a big fuck you to Wilson and a couple other eastern NC cities that were also contemplating installing FTTH.
3/17/2011 12:08:22 PM
munincipal telecoms are fine but they should be required to pay the same fees and taxes as other providers, be required to stay in the black, and be required to submit to the same regulations and laws surrounding deployment. (ex: no special treatment for pole access)
3/17/2011 12:30:33 PM
As long as municipal networks are subject to the same whole sale / resale laws that allow earthlink to do what they do with TWC, and such muni-networks do not generate political ties that make the building or extending of private networks difficult or illegal, I see no reason why municipalities shouldn't be able to build their own networks if TWC et al aren't providing enough service. That said, municipal networks should have to pay any taxes above them just like any other provider would. Wilson shouldn't get a free pass out of federal taxes on telecommunications simply because it's Wilson and not TWC building the network.
3/17/2011 12:36:11 PM
^^TWC is the one bullying special treatment on joint-use of poles. the municipals listed own the utility poles they attach their systems to, in addition to being forced to let TWC attach their cable and then backdoor them on the attachment rate through lobbying.the "operating in the black" is a touchy subject. TWC is selling packages in Wilson for half of what they sell for in Raleigh, encouraging residents to stick with TWC and causing economic problems with the city due to lack of customers. why can't Wilson subsidize their cable with tax revenue to counteract TWC subsidizing their service in Wilson through their increasing rates in other cities?I'd like some clarification on what regulations cities are supposedly exempt from. I'm wondering if they're talking about NEC exemption or something along the lines of financial reporting regulations.
3/17/2011 2:35:50 PM
Government outcompeting private industry??? Shocking!
3/17/2011 11:35:30 PM
munincipal telecoms are a bad idea and as all cities are chartered under the authority of the state, it is the state's responsibility to stop city government from implementing bad ideas.
3/18/2011 1:51:16 AM
<insert standard Libertarian answer here>I mean, ^ there
3/18/2011 7:04:01 AM
I, too, do not agree with the government selling such services.
3/18/2011 9:12:22 AM
3/18/2011 10:39:01 AM
3/18/2011 12:27:24 PM
"munincipal telecoms are a bad good idea" ... It is to the city's (and citizen's) benefit to implement infrastructure that helps improve economic development - i.e. utilities. If it is the will of the citizens, and by virtue of the fact elected officials are doing it, it is, municipalities should be allowed do it. The General Assembly is pandering to the telcoms.
3/18/2011 9:58:41 PM
Oh yes, the age old rule of democracy. When an elected legislature does what you like, it is the will of the people; when you don't agree with it, they are just pandering to special interests. Well, the city council is pandering to special interests, the state legislature is defending the people as tax payers.
3/19/2011 1:31:56 AM
I, too, hate civilization.
3/19/2011 3:06:16 AM
3/19/2011 9:57:40 AM
If the voters of the state don't want to pay for cities that screw up their finances this way, why shouldn't they be able to stop it? It's more like saying there should be no public roads because it deprives tax payers of their tax dollars which could be spent on other things such as police and fire protection. The difference is, we aren't talking about roads but internet, a service already being provided to those in question by private business. So a apt metaphor would be: cities should be prevented from building roads parallel to existing private roads because that is a waste of money that could be better spent either building roads where none exist, paying teachers, police officers, firemen, paying down debt, or simply lowering taxes. [Edited on March 19, 2011 at 10:09 AM. Reason : .,.]
3/19/2011 10:06:34 AM
Are you saying that you think that by towns developing their internet infrastructure it is going drive them into bankruptcy? Please ... They do it because they think it creates a better economic climate. If they thought that the commercial companies were serving the needs of their citizens, they wouldn't be doing it. And, it is indeed like roads ... it is infrastructure. I think they have every right to do it.
3/19/2011 10:17:00 AM
3/19/2011 10:35:16 AM
3/19/2011 10:41:01 AM
3/19/2011 12:22:40 PM
Taxes aren’t what keeps TWC networks slow and expensive. They just don’t want people switching to netflix or hulu or torrents.It’s blatantly obvious that it’s not economic reasons why the municipalities can offer better internet services. It’s sad the self-proclaimed libertarians let the corporations fool them into being on their side.
3/19/2011 12:31:12 PM
3/19/2011 12:58:45 PM
3/20/2011 2:24:14 AM
3/20/2011 12:54:26 PM
^^TWC is the one that currently has a monopoly, and the municipals are offering competition. These municipals are not funding their infrastructure buildouts through tax revenue either; they took massive loans out to build the infrastructure and are paying down the debt through the profits from charging customers that sign up for their service. The fact that what they are offering in Wilson is cheaper and better than anything I could possibly get from TWC, ATT, or any dish service in Raleigh proves just how off-base your complaints are. Municipals willing to build out their own FTTH systems is the only thing that will push existing telecoms to make real improvements to their infrastructure and get us away from significantly capped upload speeds.[Edited on March 20, 2011 at 1:56 PM. Reason : Raleigh is denser and would have a higher client base for high-speed internet than Wilson]
3/20/2011 1:53:02 PM
3/20/2011 2:57:30 PM
counties are state institutions, towns are not
3/20/2011 3:07:38 PM
3/20/2011 7:37:31 PM
Your only argument is that government will eventually fuck up everything, and your evidence for this argument is that TWC is such a competent company that there is no way a municipality could outperform them?I don't know why you're talking about right-of-way; the state owns the land the major roads through these towns, and the existing utility easements that these towns have do not apply to anyone else that attaches to their poles. They do have joint use agreements with TWC and other telecom providers, but that only covers the actual cost of the pole space. TWC is still responsible for getting their own easement from the individual property owners. If you're talking about the municipals possibly dropping the joint-use agreement; they can't.
3/20/2011 8:29:08 PM
in nc, the local govt commission has to approve the issuance of municipal debt and has the authority to take over a town's finances to prevent insolvency. nc towns are some of the most fiscally responsible in the country; municipal debt service is not a valid concern
3/21/2011 1:13:02 AM
Passed through the house yesterday.
3/31/2011 8:27:57 AM
3/31/2011 9:20:26 AM
So, Lumex, which is it? Did the city spend heavily to "build telephone poles, pave streets" or do they not own "the right of way, sets the fees and grants access"? You can't have it both ways. Either the city owns the streets and poles and therefore the right-of-way to lay fiber, or they don't. Perhaps you should do some research before outright contradicting yourself.
3/31/2011 11:44:36 AM
I want government to subsidize internet. It makes far more sense than the other stuff we subsidize.
3/31/2011 11:52:12 AM
Subsidies don't have the intended effect. They haven't made gas or corn cheaper. We pay people to produce less. It reduces competition. It causes prices to go up. If there's one thing you don't want to be subsidized, it's internet.
3/31/2011 11:59:36 AM
^^ If you insist of subsidization, then direct to user subsidies, such as through vouchers, rule out the possibility of it all ending in tears. Having the city try to provide the service has a good chance of burning through the taxpayer subsidy while making internet cost the user more money out of pocket.
3/31/2011 12:07:01 PM
But the reason people ever wanted muni broadband is because it offer collective buying power to get a modern network. I understand the resistance and people screaming to make sure this isn't subsidized. I just don't believe the bill, I don't think it will do want it says, I think it will disadvantage muni broadband efforts that sufficiently pay for themselves.The public option in the health care bills (that failed) was another example of collective bargaining through government. People watched the wording like hawks to make sure it would be revenue neutral, but they still dumped it. The reason is simple, the companies don't want it, they want an inefficient industry because profits can be made there.People have every right to lobby for the government to act as an instrument to deliver a service.
3/31/2011 12:38:08 PM
3/31/2011 1:19:04 PM
3/31/2011 1:28:09 PM
if the government would get off it's lazy ass and regulate broadband like a real utility instead of claiming "competition", the rates would come down drastically and shit would actually get built. We built a fuckton of electric and telephone infrastructure in this country by utilizing federal REA funding, and that has worked really well for us. It's a shame that the rest of the world is going to surpass us before we do the same for high speed internet infrastructure.
3/31/2011 4:19:31 PM
The rest of the developed world already has surpassed us. TWC has gotten consistently worse. I hear even more complaints about AT&T in this area.
3/31/2011 4:21:17 PM
^^YesWhy Broadband Service in the U.S. Is So Awfulhttp://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=competition-and-the-internet
3/31/2011 5:48:10 PM
3/31/2011 6:19:17 PM
eleusis, you regulate a real utility by having regulators impose a price ceiling. Take a look at message_topic.aspx?topic=606124 where TWC is rolling out their new wideband service with 30mbps. They are doing so in hopes that you will pay more for it than you are currently paying for regular Road Runner. A price ceiling would have outlawed such hopes, and most certainly TWC would not have bothered. Lumex, broadband in the US merely price differentiates a different way from everyone else. We charge different prices based upon bandwidth, so most sign up for 1mbps unlimited DSL and call it a day. Meanwhile, our Canadian, British, and European cohorts get 24mbps DSL with a 15GB cap. Americans could pay more for a wider pipe, and foreigners can pay $5 per gigabyte of cap. As for line sharing requirements, that is fake competition. Sure, you get to choose what letterhead appears on your bill. But the network you are connecting to is still wholly owned and operated by one company which gets to choose how much capacity to build. Sure, it operates under a regulated price ceiling imposed by the government, which is where the lower rates comes from, but everything else is window dressing. And thanks to that regulated price ceiling, the network owner chooses to never spend any money upgrading back-haul capacity, opting instead to impose ever lower monthly caps, which means significantly denser London is still using copper back-haul while comparatively rural Raleigh has Fiber to the Node for its DSL subscribers.
3/31/2011 7:01:37 PM
3/31/2011 7:01:53 PM
3/31/2011 7:08:07 PM
What you are referring to is called "Cost-Plus Regulation", and they manipulate profit margins by fixing the price.
3/31/2011 11:41:48 PM
http://gigaom.com/broadband/how-it-feels-to-have-been-passed-over-by-google/Mar. 31, 2011, 5:00am PT
4/1/2011 2:51:03 PM
Why do I somehow doubt that the "libertarians" here would be saying that the state should be able to put the screws to municipalities if it was, say, California requiring a city to recycle x percent of its trash?You'd say "it is the state's city's responsibility to stop city state government from implementing bad ideas," charter or no.[Edited on April 1, 2011 at 5:52 PM. Reason : ,]
4/1/2011 5:52:17 PM
Don't sell it then. Just make it free and raise city sales tax.
4/2/2011 11:34:44 AM