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Despite strong opposition from giant telecommunications corporations,
a growing number of cities across the United States are preparing plans to provide
free, high-speed wireless Internet access to their low-income residents.
While medium-size cities such as San Francisco and Philadelphia are already
moving fast to set up wireless Internet systems--also known as Wi-Fi--New York,
the country's largest city, is also aiming at reconnecting poor communities
by creating free Internet access for poor communities and small businesses.
Such moves are being increasingly challenged, however, by big telecommunications
corporations that perceive community-based free Internet networks as a threat
to their economic interests. Companies including Verizon, Comcast, and SBC-Yahoo
are making billions of dollars by investing in DSL and fiber-optic cable links
to connect American homes to the Internet.
Some 86 percent of households with incomes above $75,000 a year have broadband
access, compared to just 38 percent of those with an annual incomes less than
$30,000, according to the Center for Neighborhood Technologies, a Chicago-based
group devoted to sustainable development-related work in urban areas.
The U.S. Congress is currently considering a bill, sponsored by Texas Republican
Pete Sessions, that seeks to stop cities from providing broadband networks under
most circumstances.
As many as 14 states have already passed laws that prevent public entities
from competing with private corporations in providing telecommunications services,
according to the American Public Power Association (APPA), a not-for-profit
utilities group that supports municipal broadband initiatives.
Similar bills are also under consideration in eight other states, including
Texas, Iowa, and Colorado.
Aiming to keep pace with corporate efforts to influence lawmakers in Washington,
activists are leaving no stone unturned to gather support for free or low-cost
broadband access for urban communities.
Supporters of community-based wireless networks point out that on the global
communications scene, the United States has fallen far behind other industrially
advanced nations in using broadband and related technologies.
The 30-member Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD),
for example, reports that last year the U.S. ranked 11th in the world in the
prevalence of high speed Internet connections in proportion to population.
About 8.2 million U.S. households signed up for high-speed Internet access
in 2004, bringing the total number of U.S. households with broadband to 31.9
million--a 35 percent year-on-year increase, according to Jupiter Research,
a monthly newsletter about Internet marketing research.
Jupiter predicts that up to 69 million households--78 percent of U.S. online
homes--will have broadband by 2010 if providers continue to lower their prices.
Around 43 percent of online households in the United States were connected
via broadband last year. Comcast held the largest market share at 22 percent.
SBC-Yahoo accounted for 13 percent, Time Warner 12 percent, and Verizon 10 percent.
The Verizon Corporation, which has four million subscribers nationwide, has
sharply criticized a proposal offered this week by New York City assemblyman
Jim Brennan to create free Internet access by establishing a government broadband
network for the public.
"If municipalities want to get involved in Wi-Fi, we feel it is the failure
of the marketplace, and that is not the case in New York," a Verizon spokeswoman
told a local newspaper. "There is competition and DSL is available all
throughout New York City."
Last November, Verizon also tried hard to derail Philadelphia's plans for its
community Internet networks. But a last-minute deal between the company and
Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell saved the city's project. The deal allows Verizon
to take priority in setting up its own citywide networks.
Despite legal and political obstacles posed by corporate interests, efforts
to build municipal Internet projects continue to grow with the support of community
activists, local governments, and some private companies.
In a countermove to Sessions' bill, Republican senator John McCain and Democrat
Frank Lautenburg have proposed legislation favoring free Internet networks.
APPA's research shows that currently over 620 broadband services are being
offered by publicly operated facilities all over the country.
"If the efforts are successful, people will be able to pay five dollars
a month--not 50 dollars a month--for high speed Internet," says Jeff Perlstein,
executive director of Media Alliance, a non-profit group that supports community
Internet networks. "Plus our schools, community centers, and fire and police
departments will be served by truly state-of-the-art information technology."
Perlstein was referencing plans for the city of San Francisco, but could have
been speaking about any number of U.S. cities.
Whether community groups and local governments will be able to overcome corporate
challenges against the initiatives to build low-cost or free Internet networks
remains to be seen.