| 9/30/09 - Western Blue, Northern and Central
California's experienced IT solution integrator, in a consortium with
Siskiyou County, local firms, the Karuk Tribe, the College of the Siskiyou,
national technology experts and the State of California announced a $23
million federal ARRA rural broadband wireless stimulus bid.
In a public-private partnership, the Siskiyou County Broadband Consortium
led by the Siskiyou County Economic Development Council submitted an
application which includes requests for $12 million in "middle mile"
funding, plus $10 million and $1 million for "last mile" and "a public
computer center" respectively under the Department of Commerce's National
Telecommunications and Information Administration's (NTIA) Broadband
Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) and Department of Agriculture's
Rural Utilities Service (RUS) Broadband Initiatives Program (BIP).
County supervisor Jim Cook applauded the Siskiyou County Economic
Development Council's coordinated application for nearly $23 million
dollars in federal stimulus funds to make lower cost broadband Internet
connectivity a reality, enhancing service to schools, government
organizations and communities throughout Siskiyou County, embarking on a
path to stimulate economic opportunity and growth for this region. The
SCEDC has partnered with local businesses Root Automation and SnowCrest,
the Karuk tribe and the College of the Siskiyou, along with Sacramento
technology firm Western Blue, and microwave industry leader, Ericsson,
Inc., plus the State of California to bring together a collaborative
approach. Jim Cook commented, "It has taken time to get traction on this
issue and bring all the players together to build a strong county led team
to address this issue. We are pleased to see this kind of collaboration
and view it as a positive step towards a successful Siskiyou County
future."
According to John Thomas Flynn, former chief information officer for the
State of California and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and an advisor
to the consortium, "California's world renowned natural beauty, while
priceless, presents significant challenges to extending broadband
connectivity. It is fitting that that this consortium is being led by
Siskiyou County, with its beautiful yet rugged mountains, deserts, and
other challenging terrain because it represents a rare opportunity where
bridging the rural digital divide here, may be replicated anywhere."
Siskiyou County, geographically the 5th largest county in the state of
California covering more than 6,347 square miles and larger than the state
of Connecticut, is located in the northernmost section of California with a
population of approximately 44,301 people, 21,947 households and 2,452
businesses. The county has 32 local k-12 schools and local education
agencies which serve some 6,200 students, as well as a local community
college. The county also contains 96 institutions that support local, state
and federal emergency, health and support services; as well as Tribes, and
represents a strong anchor tenant base for the new network. At this time,
there really is no middle mile service offering in the county for 100mbps
or greater connections.
The Consortium will provide an open, middle mile broadband infrastructure
that will allow internet service providers points of connectivity to
broadband access. Focusing on the problem of enhancing the middle mile
instead of the technology of fiber optics, the terrain of Siskiyou County
will become an asset for hosting a microwave network instead of a hindrance
to building a fiber network. Once complete, in a matter of months, not
years as the microwave network infrastructure is already in place, this
design and delivery method can be easily repeatable in other unserved or
underserved regions of California as well as the nation.
The cornerstone of the Consortium's Middle Mile strategy is partnering with
the State of California's Chief Information Officer, Teri Takai, who
oversees the Public Safety Communications Division (PSCD). PSCD manages the
State's 260 microwave towers, a number of which are located in Siskiyou
County, and on which the state has agreed to lease tower space to allow
deployment of microwave radios linking final mile providers in Siskiyou
County and their customers to an existing carrier's terrestrial fiber
backbone, a state-of-the-art high-capacity broadband fiber optic network
with a major fiber route running directly through Siskiyou County.
The Siskiyou County Last Mile infrastructure project will deliver broadband
services to end users in Siskiyou County in currently under/unserved areas
in the central portion of the county. The limited availability that does
exist in underserved areas currently costs on average more than double that
charged in metropolitan areas. This new deployment means that 4,495
additional households will have access.
Finally, the community computing center project will provide access to
broadband technology in 12 different locations throughout Siskiyou County
communities by adding technology advisors and additional time availability
in local libraries and free public Wi-Fi access in the city parks in the
County Seat community of Yreka.
Siskiyou County's unemployment rate, consistently nearly double that of the
state average, currently stands at 18.10%. This multistage broadband
deployment has the potential to create over 1,000 jobs.
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