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Entries by Cara Snider (41)

Wednesday
Apr112012

Cordova Telephone: Where Rural Meets Cutting Edge in Alaska

Remote Cooperative Offers Broadband, WiMax, and Wi-Fi, while Questioning FCC Changes

This past January, Cordova, Alaska, made headlines for getting 20 feet of snow in nearly as many days. The town on the edge of Prince William Sound was declared a disaster area, and utility workers and emergency personnel scrambled to keep roads open and essential services running. But Cordova's residents are used to weather-related hurdles, and for Cordova Telephone Cooperative and Cordova Wireless Communications, weather and topography is a daily consideration that effects everything from line repairs and service to the co-op's business plan. “Weather-related situations like this are common here in Cordova,” said Paul Kelly, general manager and ceo of Cordova. “We’ve learned to rise above them with ingenuity, hard work and stubbornness.”

According to Kelly, being rural doesn't mean Cordova's member companies can't provide first-rate services. In fact, the location has required Cordova to get creative in order to offer broadband connectivity, cellular services, mobile broadband through WiMax, and even internet hot spots via a newly-launched WiFi Cloud in the town of Cordova. “Being in a remote community like Cordova, we will always face challenges concerning access to facilities,” Kelly said. “We use a combination of bush planes, four-wheelers, boats, helicopters and luck to access a great deal of our territory and remote sites. We also rely on bear spray to protect us when we arrive.”

This past August, CTC completed a $12m project, three years in the making, by rolling out 100 miles of undersea fiber optic cable. Kelly said this “finally connected our rural community to the rest of the world in a reliable way.” He explained that Cordova is a remote community which, despite being on the mainland, has no road to it. “We’ve relied on satellite to fulfill our community’s internet needs for many years, but have been working toward this accomplishment for some time,” Kelly said. Now the new fiber optic cable stretches from Cordova to Valdez, and it was deployed from a 200-foot barge over a “mere three days,” as Kelly said.

Marketing and public relations director Cathy Long said that the community is now better connected to the surrounding towns and the rest of the world, thanks to the undersea cable. Member companies now “have speeds and broadband capacity second to none—even better than many places in the lower 48,” Long said.

Completion of the fiber optic line also has bigger implications for the rural Alaskan cooperative: “This accomplishment now qualifies us for the 'new rules’ that the FCC has imposed in the USF and ICC reform order, as well as allows us to deliver the Internet and wireless experiences the modern-day customer has come to expect or take for granted,” Kelly said. Until now, the cost of transport was always the co-op's biggest challenge, but with the cable connection, that burden has been lessened.

The financial reprieve couldn't come at a better time, either, as changes to rural funding make the future uncertain. “We feel we are well positioned to weather the storm we saw coming,” Kelly said, “and our investment in facilities over the past several years will protect us from a good portion of the damage this order will cause the industry. We are also filing for a waiver in hopes of protecting our wireless company.”

But the RUS/ICC changes are already having an impact. “Lost funding will result in fewer jobs at CTC and CWC, and has already resulted in less investment being made in our network,” Kelly said. “Until we are told our past and future investments are protected and recoverable we have no choice but to severely curtail investment and employment.” He said that, like other rural telecom companies, Cordova was disappointed by the FCC's rural funding changes, but says the cooperative is “positioned better than most coming into this change.” Candidly, however, Kelly said, “We do expect our revenues to be impacted in the years to come, especially on the wireless side, and intend to file a waiver with the FCC concerning this order. We feel there is pertinent information that has not been taken into account when writing this new order, and hope to be a poster-child for rural telcos providing service in remote and isolated areas.”

Long reserved her strongest comments for the new FCC order, which she said conflicts with what rural telecom has been doing for decades. “For 90 years, rural telecoms—mostly cooperatives—invested as they were supposed to, using USF and RUS loans to connect rural America at prices comparable to urban areas,” Long said. “Now the FCC commonly refers to what we have done for 90 years as waste, fraud and abuse, yet the OIG audits performed prior to the formulation of the NBP identified almost no waste, fraud and abuse of the USF system whatsoever. The telecom industry was nearly 90% broadband capable and had been building out for years in a very responsible manner. That fact was grossly ignored in the NBP [National Broadband Plan] and credit has not been given by the administration for all the great work performed leading up to the FCC order.”

Nearly 100% of Cordova's member companies have had true broadband access to their businesses or homes for the past six years—“long before any National Broadband Plan,” Long said. Now, CTC “typically provides up to a 4-to-1 meg service to the home but can provide speeds up to 100 megs if there is a need,” Long said. “Take rates are very good and getting better each day as more people discover the Roku devices and over the top TV.”

The cooperative has also been working to expand into non-traditional services through wireless broadband and its wireless subsidiary, Cordova Wireless Communications. CWC just built a 100-foot cellular tower on Naked Island, and now it can provide GSM cellular service all across Prince William Sound. Long explained that “because Cordova’s economy is primarily based on commercial fishing, and many of its residents are commercial fishermen, this is a huge and needed accomplishment” for the community.

CTC's new WiMax service also allows for mobile broadband in Cordova, with plans to expand (via the Naked Island tower) to the Copper River Flatts fishing grounds. The area is also blanketed by the company's Wi-Fi Cloud. Long said these “hotspots are able to seamlessly hand-off to each other, similar to the way cell phone towers do. All this, and we are providing both WiMAX and WiFi Cloud access to all our broadband internet customers as a free service.”

Going forward, Long and Kelly both said that future investment was uncertain, due to the precariousness of rural funding. “Until we know our past and future recovery on investment under the rules is protected, CTC has no plans for future investment in-plant, and our wireless company will soon follow,” Long said. “There is never a business case to be made for investing in the most rural of rural areas without universal support.”

Tuesday
Apr102012

For FreedomPop, 4G Mobile Broadband is Land of the Free

Start-up MVNO Promises Free Data Access, Has Few Details on Business Strategy

When it comes to telecom services, nothing beats free... at least from the consumer side. But “free” in itself doesn't constitute a solid business plan, especially when the competition in mobile data networks is so fierce. But for MVNO start-up FreedomPop, “free” is both the marketing gimmick and the business strategy for the company's cheap and unlimited data plans via 4G mobile broadband. The yet-to-be-launched service has already garnered national headlines for its promise to connect everything from iPhones and other smartphones, to laptops and other hot spot devices. Last year, Skype co-founder announced his plan to start the unlimited data network, but specifics about the company are still few and far between. For now, it's clear that FreedomPop wants to create a buzz based on their unlimited, sharable data plans, but one question has yet to be answered: how will FreedomPop actually make enough money to be sustainable?

FreedomPop's vp of marketing Tony Miller says that, at launch, the company will initially offer up to 1 GB of connectivity free, with overages of one cent per megabyte. That level of free connectivity may be scaled back, as the company gains subscribers. Users will also be encouraged to share data, so that when one subscriber nears his data limit, he can borrow data allowances from a friend. As incentive, FreedomPop will award bonus gigabytes to users who sign up their friends. FreedomPop's real money will be made in the customer who continually exceeds data limits and runs into metered data (though the company has acknowledged that the real threat is the customer who regularly hits free data limits and never runs over).

Part of FreedomPop's ability (dare we say “freedom”?) to offer such discounted connectivity comes from the fact that the company didn't have to build its own network. Instead, FreedomPop buys wholesale from Clearwire. In doing so, FreedomPop says it will disrupt the price points of other wireless broadband providers and likely drive them to offer cheaper services. FreedomPop's website, while thin on the details, claims that the company “is the nation's first wireless Internet provider committed to delivering 100% FREE 4G mobile broadband Internet access” so that consumers can finally “replace” their “at home DSL and cable broadband Internet service today.”

That's the real war that FreedomPop is hoping to start, of course... that an MVNO start up could and should replace “traditional” providers. It remains to be seen whether FreedomPop will be successful— much less sustainable—but a combination of providers like FreedomPop could certainly put pressure on phone companies, cable companies, and other mobile broadband networks to lower rates.

But FreedomPop, which considers itself an “anti-carrier,” in a very clogged telecom industry, says that free 4G data access is just the beginning. Miller told GigaOm that the company plans to also incorporate social networking into their bandwidth-sharing business model, as well as offer value-added services. There is a potential for VoIP, too, Miller said. FreedomPop plans to launch services sometime this year.

Of course, FreedomPop isn't the first MVNO to try and lure customers away from traditional carrier via free access. NetZero recently announced it would offer a free data package, along with purchase of its new hot spot devices. Cary, North Carolina-based Republic Wireless (who's tagline is “the mobile network that runs on freedom”), also offers an unlimited data plan on its Wi-Fi and 3G hybrid network. Neither provider has succeeded in attracting a substantial number of customers, but some critics think this is where FreedomPop might have an edge: its association with Skype may make it more familiar to consumers.

Thursday
Apr052012

For Consolidated Telcom, North Dakota is All Boom and No Bust

Co-op Capitalizes on Region's Boom, Expands Unregulated Services to Compensate for USF Losses

For telecom providers like Consolidated Telcom in North Dakota, this century's oil and natural gas boom has made quite the impact. Whether it's devising the company business plan or competing with oil company salaries and perks, nearly everything has changed. Most importantly, however, the boom has brought an unprecedented increase in new telecom customers and lists of subdivisions and businesses eagerly awaiting connectivity.

In fact, if you consult the Dickinson Press nearly any day of the week, you will find some mention of how the oil boom in North Dakota is impacting this relatively small community. Residents are renting out rooms to oil workers for extra income. There's more trash and litter. Increased traffic has led to deteriorating road conditions. And just last week, the state of North Dakota granted $12m to improve and expand "oil patch" schools and $5m to bolster emergency services and law enforcement. And then there's the telecom needs of this drastically changing environment.  

"Unlike the rest of the nation- we are in the midst of the biggest oil boom in the history of our state and possibly in the nation,” said Rhonda Dukart, marketing and public relations manager for Consolidated Telecom, based in Dickinson, North Dakota. “We are a small agriculture community in the southwest corner of the state. In the past years we have seen thousands and thousands of people from all over the country moving to our area. We do not have the infrastructure, housing, school capacity, law enforcement, city services just to name a few of the challenges we are facing.”

But the boom has brought a new pool of subscribers, too. Dukart says that Consolidated is “very grateful” for the growth that the oil and natural gas industry has brought to North Dakota, but it would be a bit easier if they could “just control the pace a bit.” For now, Consolidated is just trying to keep up—and trying to find ways to physically get to their new customers and lay the connections. “New housing subdivisions are popping up everywhere, and of course they do not have the infrastructure anywhere nearby to allow for water, sewer, utilities, roads etc... so trying to get to all these new subdivisions has been the most challenging thing our company has ever had to face.”

Consolidated ceo and general manager Paul Schuetzler said that “new subdivisions are cropping up in the Dickinson area faster than we can find them on a map. There is a real urgency to providing these areas with services as they have few or no options for quality services from other providers.”

And Consolidated was already growing on its own, prior to the oil and gas boom. The company just celebrated its 50-year anniversary and just completed an FTTH upgrade in all of the cooperative's towns. “We are now in the process of overbuilding with fiber to all of our rural areas as well,” Dukart said. “Given 9k square miles, much of which is extremely rough terrain, and a short construction season because of weather, this is a monumental task.” But the fiber connections are robust and allow the company to provide digital TV as well. According to Dukart, the fiber connections offer “up to 100 Meg broadband packages, over 220 channels of digital television and of course telephone service.”

Dukart said that broadband is available to about 90% of Consolidated's customers, with the remaining 10% of customers able to get broadband through Wild Blue Satellite. Take rates for broadband are about 75%, Dukart said.

Of course, one boom always brings many others, and Dukart says that competition is everywhere now. “We have competition in ALL areas and ALL services,” she said. “Midcontinent [a regional cable provider] is our biggest competitor in all of our cooperative towns, Century Link is our competitor in our two CLECs, and of course all the wireless providers are competitors, now offering all services. Everywhere we turn we face competition.”

In some cases, the astounding increase in competition has also impacted Consolidated's own personnel. Dukart explained: “Along with this influx of people comes everyone scrambling to keep their employees, as oil companies pay much higher wages than most any employer in the area. We have lost several great employees to companies offering higher salaries, etc., and if they can find employees that already have a place to live, they make salary offers that are very hard to refuse.”

As a rural provider, Consolidated also expressed concern that recent USF/ICC changes will impact their business plans going forward. Bryan Personne, coo of Consolidated, said “Like all small telcos” the company would “see significant changes to its traditional revenue streams as a result of the USF/ICC funding changes” and that it will “attempt to fill the gap in lost funding by rolling out new unregulated services to its customer base.” Looking forward, Personne said that the company is looking to roll out “new supplemental services like security systems, wi-fi and mobile broadband using 700 Mhz licenses to expand its service offerings and take advantage of new technologies. We have a number of staff who are responsible for researching and developing new services for our customers.” Dukart added, “We have hired several technicians specifically for the security service and have just started the roll out of marketing materials.”

Like so many of the cooperatives we talk to, Consolidated also works in the community to support the efforts of local colleges and universities, schools, and businesses. Dukart said that one of the things Consolidated is most proud of is the recent construction of the Badlands Activity Center at Dickinson State University—a local university that the telecom company has worked with on many occasions. Dukart said that Consolidated's main effort was to build community support for the stadium's construction: “The marketing manager was a key player in getting a yes vote out of a very conservative community to use sales tax to assist in the funding of the new facility. This took about nine months of continued effort to inform the community of the benefits of tearing down a very old outdated stadium that no longer provided for the needs of both the athletes and the fans.” The end result was “a beautiful new $16m dollar facility that is a 'jewel' in our community and a tool to attract students and athletes to our college.” The Badlands Activity Center was constructed with a combination of state and local funds.

Consolidated acknowledges that the company's outlook is somewhat different than others in the industry, with greater opportunity for growth and a constantly expanding customer base. “Our situation is different than many of the telcos that I visit with on a regular basis,” Dukart said. “I am very grateful for that and we look at our enormous challenges as opportunities to shine. We have just celebrated our 50-year anniversary and I believe we can boast that we have been successful because of our commitment and dedication to our customers. We have the most outstanding employees and that is not just saying the 'right words.' It is a sincere belief that our commitment to serve is possible because of the quality of our employees.” In the end, Dukart said that the co-op's core values “is what separates us from the competition and ensures we will be here another 50 years.”

Wednesday
Mar282012

Time Keeps Ticking Away for Fiber Projects in Minnesota

ILECs and Co-ops Discuss Hurdles to Deploying Stimulus-funded Broadband

In Minnesota alone, the Recovery Act of 2009 funded 18 fiber construction projects, for a total of $229m in grants and loans. But many of those expansion projects have hit snags, either due to bad weather, slow paper work, deadline difficulties, regulatory red tape, or shortages of fiber and other supplies.

This week Minnesota Public Radio ran a story detailing some of the fiber deployment issues in the state, and a variety of companies and projects had one thing in common: the need for deadline extensions, which better reflect current timeline estimates. And the RUS is extending those deadlines. Now all projects funded by the Recovery Act will have until 2015 to be completed. According to MPR News, the RUS found that “some awardees were so concerned about the original deadlines, they considered canceling their deals.” Extensions to 2015 were always possible, the RUS representative said, and now projects won't be rushed.

One Minnesota company experiencing delays is Farmers Mutual Telephone in Bellingham—a local telco that's building out its broadband network to include 1,500 homes in Lac qui Parle County in western Minnesota. The project is being funded by $10m of stimulus funds, but for a while Farmers Mutual had trouble securing fiber optic cable. MPR reported that, “A cable drought has been caused by high demand from a crush of stimulus-induced broadband projects nationwide coupled with a Japanese earthquake a year ago that destroyed a major fiber manufacturing plant.” The cable drought has had a ripple effect nationwide, too. Just last month we heard a similar account from Quitman, Texas-based Peoples Telephone, who was determinedly moving along with its broadband build.

Farmers Mutual finally received the cable it needed last October, but with Minnesota winters, that didn't leave much time for construction. Farmers Mutual general manager Kevin Beyer said that fiber orders from bigger companies were filled first, with smaller companies having to wait months to get the supplies they needed. “The first orders filled should have been ours since we ordered ahead of others,” Beyer said, “but the game got changed a bit. There was a reshuffling of who mattered.”

For the companies and cooperatives who didn't have trouble getting fiber, the cost of fiber optic lines and other supplies were often more expensive, due to demand. Doug Dawson, who owns a broadband project consulting company, said that in some cases, the fiber shortage has driven prices up 15-20%.

Dawson and his company, CCG, have managed the roll out of fiber projects around the world and in nearly every U.S. state. As for his planned project in Minnesota, Dawson wants to deploy fiber in Sibley and Renville Counties in the western part of the state, and he's had to be crafty to secure adequate amounts of fiber. Dawson told MPR: “We'll find the fiber somewhere for Sibley and Renville... but if somebody bigger and richer than us wants it, it's gone.” In other instances, Dawson said he's had to “go to other people who have built and have a half a mile on the shelf. People are getting chummy,” often swapping or trading supplies that are in hard to find.

At Winnebago Telephone Cooperative—based in Lake Milles, Iowa, but with a network that expands into southern Minnesota—the delay involved environmental permits. To get all the necessary paper work completed and permits granted, Terry Wegener said it took his company a few extra months to start construction. “We wanted to start in April,” Wegener said, “but we didn't get to start until August because of the environmental permitting.”

Other fiber projects like those planned by the Arrowhead Electric Cooperative and Lake County, say that staffing issues at the RUS are delaying paper work and permits. “We look at it this way,” said Lake County Commissioner Paul Bergman, “they [the RUS] got 300 approved applications and the great leaders in Congress didn't give them more people. There has been a strain on them but it's not really their fault. It's like a mob scene going into a concert and there is only one security person.”

But there have been some federally-funded networks completed in Minnesota, too. Halstad Telephone has been one of the most talked-about success stories, at times receiving national attention for its quick progress. When the RUS sent out letters to awardees last October, hoping to speed the process of deployment along, the agency only listed six completed projects in the country—and two of them were built by Halstad Telephone. One of the reasons for the small telco's progress was that the company chose not to wait for stimulus dollars and went ahead with its planned network expansion in portions of Norman and Polk Counties, and areas across the border into North Dakota. To date, the North Dakota networks are completed, and the one in Minnesota (which will reach 1k households and farms) is slated to be finished this fall.

Halstad ceo Tim Maroney said the company was fortunate to be selected for RUS funds early, and the company was able to procure fiber before the big rush. “We just jumped on it. We didn't wait for the money to come. We started the engineering and negotiations. We took a chance,” Maroney said.

As for those still waiting to break ground, this year's early spring is nothing short of ironic. “It's unfortunate that out of all the years, when we have all this construction to do, we have this weather. Come on. What horrible luck,” said Joe Buttweiler, Arrowhead Electric's director of broadband projects. “On the flip side, extra time to plan and make sure you're organized is not a bad thing either.”

Wednesday
Mar212012

Crown Point Telephone to Build Out Fiber in Ticonderoga, New York

Telco Creates CLEC Subsidiary to Bring High-Speed Internet to Adirondack Community

Crown Point Telephone, a family-owned telco in the Adirondack region of New York, announced this week that it had created a CLEC subsidiary to build a fiber-optic network to the town of Ticonderoga. Construction will begin immediately, and the network will provide broadband service to business, educational institutions, and municipal users.

The subsidiary—Bridge Point Communications—will build out the network in two phases, to be completed in 2013. According to Crown Point president Shana Macey, “Phase I of the fiber route will be under construction in the summer and fall of this year. Starting (this) week, you will be seeing our trucks in our community. Phase II will begin the following year, in 2013.”

In the second phase of the fiber build, Bridge Point will be installing fiber lines in the Ticonderoga hamlet area, to reach residential and business customers beyond town limits. Fiber lines will connect back to another Crown Point subsidiary—Crown Point Network Technologies—where the company's Internet trunk is located.

While Ticonderoga is a small town of just 5k residents, the surrounding areas are also starved for fiber connectivity. In fact, most towns and communities in the region are unserved or underserved by broadband, and for those homes and businesses that do have high-speed, the connection is usually through a cable provider or phone company DSL. One example is Lake Placid, where high-speed is available through Time Warner, but residents argue the price makes it unfeasible for most private subscribers and small businesses. The same is true in other pockets of the Adirondacks, where Charter Communications provides service. High-speed via Time Warner or Charter can cost residents upwards of $1k per month for a 5 Mbps connection.

In Ticonderoga, Verizon is the incumbent carrier, but the telecom giant has not built out its FIOS network there.

Macey said that Crown Point has been working on network plans for the past year and that the broadband network “will revolutionize the way our region communicates. Ticonderoga was chosen as our first point of entry, the link to local businesses that will make our rural communities as competitive as any major city in the world.” Currently, Crown Point believes that the new broadband offerings will be attractive to businesses such as International Paper's Ticonderoga Mill, North Country Community College's Ticonderoga campus, Ticonderoga Central School District, Inter-Lakes Hospital, and others.

The new CLEC subsidiary will have eight employees, and the total cost for the project is estimated to be well below $1m, according to Macey. Crown Point Telephone was established in 1896, and the company currently provides 1 Mbps, 3 Mbps, and 6 Mbps broadband connections within its service territory.