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The Philadelphia Wi-Fi Project Necessary? The Answer Is
An Unequivocal Yes
The Evening Bullentin - April 6, 2006
by Blondell Reynolds Brown
When Mayor John F. Street
first announced his vision to turn Philadelphia into the
country's largest wireless "hotspot", it was easy
to see why this proposal received so much attention. It
was different. It was "hip." It would help cement
Philadelphia's image as a city on the move.
But as a Council member and someone with responsibility
to my constituents as taxpayers, the questions we had to
ask were much more direct. How will it actually work, how
much will it cost and will it truly benefit every person,
no matter what their income or neighborhood? Will minority
and women owned businesses be included? And perhaps most
importantly, is the project even really necessary?
I am happy to say that the more I've learned about the program,
the more I like it. Let me go further: despite all of the
accolades Wireless Philadelphia has received, we still must
do more to remove the mystique around this unprecedented
initiative.
Making the entirety of Philadelphia wireless accessible
will revolutionize the way our children learn, how our businesses
operate, how government provides services, and it will create
jobs. That's why I am proud to be a co-sponsor of the legislation
with Councilman Frank DiCicco.
Let me address the most important question first: is it
necessary for the city to be wireless and, if so, is it
necessary to have the government involved?
The answer to both is an unequivocal yes.
The internet is a necessary technology today, like the telephone
in the 1930s and television in the 1950s. Many consider
it the ultimate democratic technology because information
can be easily obtained and shared.
But it won't be truly democratic until everyone has access
to it. And the hard truth is that right now, too many people,
particularly low income people and seniors, don't have access
to it either because they can't afford it or because they
don't know how to use it.
The Mayor's plan addresses each of those issues.
Under the agreement reached between the City and EarthLink,
the operator selected to build and manage the network, there
will be special rates and accommodations for economically
disadvantaged users. Prices will start at just $9.95 a month
with market rate prices pegged around $20. That makes it
affordable for every user.
But having access to broadband wireless technology is not
useful if you don't have a computer. That's where the Wireless
Philadelphia program goes from being smart and forward thinking
to being brilliant.
As part of the agreement to build and operate the citywide
wireless network, EarthLink will actually PAY the city to
use the arms of our light polls - $2 million upfront and
5 percent of access revenue from the network after first
two years.
These funds will be used by Wireless Philadelphia, a non-profit
begun by the City, to provide training programs, ensure
access to affordable computers, support community groups,
promote municipal uses and promote tourism uses. So City
residents in every neighborhood will be able to not only
obtain the service, but actually use it. No other city is
doing anything as bold or far reaching.
And the best thing is that the cost to city taxpayers is
nothing.
The agreement reached between EarthLink and the City also
contains important protection to ensure participation of
minority and women owned firms. EarthLink and its sub-contractors
will be obligated to meet and to "strive to exceed"
significant minority participation rates. Minority-owned
business enterprises will have to represent at least 20-25%
of contracts, woman-owned business enterprises 5-10% and
disabled-owned business enterprises up to 1.5%.
We have requested a written plan that speaks to implementation,
mentoring and accountability regarding issue, and I am optimistic
because of EarthLink's record so far. To date, for the Wireless
Philadelphia project, 88% of EarthLinks' subcontractor invoices
have been from minority and women owned businesses and two
of the three completed purchase agreements are with minority
firms. That's an excellent record to build on.
So now, what's next?
The first thing that needs to be done is that my colleagues
on City Council and I need to pass legislation necessary
to approve the agreement to allow the use of the light poles
necessary to construct the network and a management and
services agreement between the City and Wireless Philadelphia.
After those are complete, a large test area will be constructed
within 3-4 months and the entire network will be built within
12 to 15 months.
Just think: in just over a year, every neighborhood, every
child, every business could have access to the internet
and all the promise it holds. It's an enormous opportunity.
We need to seize it for us, for our children and our city's
future.
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