Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

Andy Ringsmuth andy at andyring.com
Wed Jun 2 16:44:55 UTC 2021


>> On Mon, May 31, 2021 Mike Hammett wrote:
>>> Muni broadband does suck, but that's another thread for another day.
>>  Excluding cases where muni broadband doesn't suck, why does muni broadband suck?
>> 
>>  Personally I wouldn't mind more access to dark fiber à la Stokab, much like the dry copper pairs of yesterday.
>> 
>>  If the default state of muni broadband of is suck, what is the root cause? Is it a people problem and/or can something be done to improve on the default state?
> 
> 
> Muni broadband sucks for several reasons but the most important one is:
> 
> Competition. Municipal broadband eliminates it. If it's not obvious
> why, feel free to Google how competition and monopolization impact
> product quality. It's a pretty universal trait.
> 
> 
> If you were to structure muni broadband to enhance competition rather
> than limit it, you might get a different result. For example, if
> municipalities installed and leased fiber optic cables to every
> structure but didn't provide any services on those cables, relying
> instead on third parties directly billing the customer to do so, it
> could work out as well as having municipalities pay for roads and
> letting people buy their own cars and trucks to use on them.

In many municipalities, you can choose your electricity provider. And yet there are not multiple companies running power lines to every house.

It is easy to make the argument “muni broadband sucks because no competition” but it is much more difficult to back it up with hard data.

Take a look at Nebraska for instance. Here, by law, electricity is a public utility. And yet we have some of the lowest rates and highest uptime in the country. No competition, low prices, stellar service record.

I’m generally all for private enterprise. But when those private enterprises take public money, don’t do what they are supposed to do with it, squander it, and nothing changes, again and again, well, what’s that definition of insanity?


Here in Lincoln, Nebraska, we actually do have fiber available at every address in the city. And a private company did it. 100 percent underground, all 96 square miles of the city. They did it all in about two years. I can get 50Mbps synchronous for $45, 500 for $70 or gig for $99. TV and phone also if I want it. Local support too, not India. 

They now have fiber in 15 Nebraska cities and two in Colorado and are expanding rapidly. Why? A great product at a great price with outstanding customer service. Spectrum is losing customers like crazy as a result, and precisely zero people are shedding any tears (Spectrum salesmen excepted).

It can be done. Is it an investment? Yes. Just like anything else. Some investments have a quicker return on capital than others.



----
Andy Ringsmuth
5609 Harding Drive
Lincoln, NE 68521-5831
(402) 304-0083
andy at andyring.com

“Better even die free, than to live slaves.” - Frederick Douglas, 1863



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