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Public WiFi policy lessons being learned now in PA - pay attention OHSubmitted by Norm Roulet on Sun, 11/28/2004 - 16:17.
Many private businesses in NEO are making life better for area residents and visitors by making their Internet access free to others via WiFi. I'm writing this posting from Talkies, in Ohio City, in a room full of others so unwired, and none of us would be here if the owners weren't so progressive. Unfortunately, most NEO leaders are not as forward thinking as our small business champs, or progressives leaders like in Philadelphia, developing large-deployment mesh public WiFi strategies for all their residents. WiFi offers immediate economic development impact at many levels, bringing the IT savvy creative class out into the streets and to area businesses, on even the most dismal NEO evening, and making them appreciate the region as progressive and desirable. A smart regional WiFi strategy may have much greater impact bridging the digital divide for residents who cannot afford or gain access without concerted public initiative. REALNEO is supporting effort to create a WiFi mesh for all of East Cleveland, where residents are struggling with so much in life. But, in planning this, we must all realize making computing and Internet access a civil right, so to speak, smacks of socialism in the face of monopoly access providers like Adelphia and SBC, which want to charge as much as possible to those who can pay, and deny access to those who cannot. Accept this truth as we attempt to unbundle economic development from the current monopoly stranglehold on Internet access, as we shall soon face challenges like being faced by Philadelphia, and Ohio in not as progressive as Pennsylvania and so even more likely to fail at the hands of entrenched business interests. Read what's up in PA: Philadelphia Faces Wi-Fi Woes - Proposed law could prevent Stephen Lawson, IDG News Service - Tuesday, November 23, A proposed Pennsylvania law now on its way to the governor's One provision of House Bill 30 (HB30), a wide-ranging Philadelphia's city government is studying plans to deploy Wi-Fi The $7 million to $10 million project is intended to HB30 would eliminate three of the five possible business "It will make it more difficult. It will not kill the The city could provide the service for free, but it is Preventing Competition? The language on government-supplied broadband in the bill "It's one of many efforts being made by Verizon to Verizon disputes that charge. The carrier has invested $8.5 Local governments that get into the broadband business risk Verizon, as well as a state senator who supported the bill, However, Philadelphia CIO Neff believes the language isn't Governor Edward Rendell, a Democrat, had ten days to act on
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