Local News
City begins free wireless Internet
03:46 PM CST on Tuesday, November 29, 2005
To help boost its stalled economy, hurricane-ravaged New Orleans is
offering the nation's first free wireless Internet network owned and run
by a major city.
Mayor Ray Nagin said Tuesday the system would benefit residents and
small businesses who still can't get their Internet service restored
over the city's washed out telephone network, while showing the nation
"that we are building New Orleans back."
The system started operation Tuesday in the central business district
and French Quarter. It's to be available throughout the city in about a
year.
Hundreds of similar projects in other cities have met with stiff
opposition from phone and cable TV companies, which have poured money
into legislative bills aimed at blocking competition from government
agencies -- including a state law in Louisiana that needed to be
sidestepped for the New Orleans project.
The city had been working on a Wi-Fi network before Hurricane Katrina
struck Aug. 29, and police already were using the wireless system to
monitor street security cameras.
Nagin said Katrina, which knocked out communications throughout the
region, frustrating coordination of relief efforts, showed the need for
a more-advanced system.
In case of another storm, the network will be able to connect telephone
calls via the Internet.
"What we learned is a network like this is important as a backup in
case all other communications fail," the mayor said.
The system uses hardware mounted on street lights. Most of the $1
million in equipment was donated by three companies: Intel Corp., Tropos
Networks Inc. and Pronto Networks. The companies also plan to donate
equipment for the citywide expansion.
The network uses "mesh" technology to pass the wireless signal
from pole to pole rather than each Wi-Fi transmitter being plugged
directly into a physical network cable. That way, laptop users will be
able to connect even in areas where the wireline phone network will take
time to restore.
The system will provide download speeds of 512 kilobits per second as
long as the city remains under a state of emergency. But the bandwidth
will be slowed to 128 kbps in accordance with a limit set by Louisiana's
law once the city's state of emergency is lifted at an unknown future
date.
The service will remain free for residents and businesses after the
state of emergency ends.
Phone and cable TV companies have fiercely opposed attempts at creating
new taxpayer-owned utilities. The companies contend competition from
government-run Internet service stymies their incentive to invest in
upgrading their networks and services.
Critics have said commercial networks are often too expensive for the
lower-income residents being targeted by the free or low-cost services
now being considered by hundreds of municipalities around the country.
But David Grabert, a spokesman for Cox Communications, a major cable TV
and high-speed Internet provider in the New Orleans area, said the
Atlanta-based company welcomes the competition.
"This is a relatively slow-speed service, and we don't look at it,
at this point, as major competition for our high-speed service," Grabert
said. "We're ready to compete with all comers."
Many cities have partnered with private companies to build and operate
their networks. Philadelphia, for example, is developing a citywide
system that will be run by Earthlink Inc., unlike the New Orleans
owned-and-operated system.
Nagin, who was Cox's top executive in New Orleans before his election in
2002, said the city system would be "just one of several options"
residents would have to get Internet service.
At 512 kbps, the New Orleans network is about seven times the speed of
dial-up service, but slower than high-speed services provided by
telephone and cable TV companies. Users will have to sign up with the
city for an account.
Greg Meffert, the city's technology director, conceded that private
providers might have problems with the system.
"In the end, my job is to work for the city and what the city
needs," he said. "I'll stand behind that."
(Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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