Tuesday | 2 December, 2008
NYC to bypass muni Wi-Fi
Multimillion-dollar technology fund financed by cable and communications companies could provide affordable fiber-optic cable connections to NY homes.
Matt Hamblen 30/07/2008 09:12:56

New York City wants to provide faster and cheaper Internet access, especially to its low-income residents, without going the route of municipal Wi-Fi that has proved to be the bane of so many US cities.

Instead, a multimillion-dollar technology fund financed by cable and communications companies could be used to provide affordable fiber-optic cable connections to homes, especially the 400,000 residents of public housing, an aide to New York City Council member Gale Brewer said Tuesday.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and other members of the city's 15-member Broadband Advisory Committee will be hearing the recommendations of a private consultant, Diamond Consultants, at a briefing Wednesday, said Kunal Malhotra, a Brewer spokesman.

While the consultant may offer a concrete plan for broadband in the city, Malhotra said it is already clear to the advisory committee that wireless networks won't be used. "We're not going to go the direction of a Minneapolis or Philadelphia in New York," Malhotra said in a telephone interview Tuesday. "We don't think municipal Wi-Fi will succeed."

Instead, New York may try to expand on a technology fund that already includes US$4 million from Verizon Communications, which is building a fiber-optic network in the city subject to setting aside the money for providing Internet access to underserved neighborhoods, Malhotra said. The fund could be expanded with $4 million each from the city's two cable providers, Time Warner Cable and CableVision, he said. "That would be an instant US$8 million," Malhotra said.

Malhotra said Brewer and others believe that all of New York's 8 million city residents need cheaper Internet access, but there is growing attention to the needs of lower income residents. The city's approach to addressing the Digital Divide isn't as concerned with the type of access technology, wired or wireless, but is more focused on providing computers and Internet access, as well as training to use the computers to help in developing job skills, he said.

Officials in the mayor's office could not be reached to comment in advance of the Wednesday briefing.

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