The Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration clarified in its third quarterly progress report to Congress this week that it will be dolling out the entirety of the grant money during the next ten months.
The year 2010 is going to be a busy time for the period for both the NTIA and the Agriculture Department’s Rural Utilities is the other agency, the two government entities charged with distributing $7.2 billion of federal funding.
“NTIA will not conclude the first round of BTOP funding at the end of 2009 as originally targeted, but is on course to do so in February 2010,” states the report (PDF).
NTIA and RUS announced this month that they will limit the remaining grant awards to one more round of funding, which they write in the report “will begin early in 2010.”
One of our clients was just notified today that their application has passed Round One of the RUS BIP / NTIA BTOP broadband stimulus application process.
Round Two is coming up quickly with the RFI in a couple of weeks and a NOFA this winter (with a 60-day application time) inside sources say.
Do you need help with Step Two? How about Round Two?
Aspen Wireless can help, contact us.
UPDATE: Thursday, August 13, 2009
The application closing deadline for the Broadband Initiatives Program (BIP) and Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) is extended until 5 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) on August 20, 2009, for any electronic applications pending as of 5 p.m. ET on August 14, 2009.
There are no changes to the filing instructions for paper applications. For more information see Federal Register Notice: Broadband Initiatives Program (BIP) and Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) Extension of Application Closing Deadline for Pending Electronic Applications.
The Notice is being provided for informational purposes only. If there is any difference between this document and the Notice officially published in the Federal Register, the Federal Register Notice is controlling.
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/frnotices/2009/FR_BroadbandExtension_090813.pdf
FROM THE OFFICIAL RELEASE:
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utilities Service
RIN 0572-ZA01
Broadband Initiatives Program
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Telecommunications and Information Administration
RIN 0660-ZA28
Broadband Technology Opportunities Program
AGENCIES: Rural Utilities Service (RUS), Department of Agriculture, and National
Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of Funds Availability; extension of application closing deadline for pending
electronic applications.
SUMMARY: RUS and NTIA announce that the application closing deadline for the Broadband
Initiatives Program (BIP) and the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) is
extended until 5 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) on August 20, 2009, for any electronic applications
pending as of 5 p.m. ET on August 14, 2009. There are no changes to the filing instructions for
paper applications.
DATES: An applicant that is submitting an application for the BIP and BTOP electronically
will be permitted to complete electronic submission of its application until 5 p.m. ET on August
20, 2009, so long as its application was pending in the Easygrants® System as of 5 p.m. ET on
August 14, 2009 (application closing deadline).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For general inquiries regarding BIP, contact
David J. Villano, Assistant Administrator Telecommunications Program, Rural Utilities Service,
e-mail: bip@wdc.usda.gov telephone: (202) 690–0525. For general inquiries regarding BTOP,
contact Anthony Wilhelm, Deputy Associate Administrator, Infrastructure Division, Office of
Telecommunications and Information Applications, National Telecommunications and
Information Administration, email: btop@ntia.doc.gov, telephone: (202) 482–2048.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
On July 9, 2009, RUS and NTIA published a Notice of Funds Availability (NOFA) and
Solicitation of Applications in the Federal Register announcing general policy and application
procedures for the BIP and BTOP. 74 Fed. Reg. 33104 (2009). In the NOFA, RUS and NTIA
encouraged all applicants to submit their applications electronically and required that certain
applications be filed electronically through an online application system at
http://www.broadbandusa.gov. 74 Fed. Reg. at 33118. RUS and NTIA established an
application window for these grant programs from July 14, 2009, at 8 a.m. ET through August
14, 2009, at 5 p.m. ET (application closing deadline).
Over the last several days, the online application system (Easygrants® System) has experienced
service delays due to the volume of activity from potential applicants. The agencies have added
additional servers to address these capacity issues. Nevertheless, in an effort to give applicants
that have already started the electronic application submission process prior to the application
closing deadline an opportunity to complete the submission of those applications, RUS and
NTIA announce that an applicant with an application pending in the Easygrants® System as of 5
p.m. ET on August 14, 2009, will be given until 5 p.m. ET on August 20, 2009, to complete the
electronic submission of its application. Please note that an applicant must have completed the
following steps, at a minimum, to be recognized as having a pending application in the
Easygrants® System:
1. Log into the Easygrants® System at www.broadbandusa.gov;
2. Select “Start a new application” under “Apply for a new grant/loan;”
3. Select one of the two choices for available funding opportunities;
4. Select “Continue;” and
5. Select “ok” when prompted “Are you sure you want to apply for the program.”
All other requirements for electronic submissions set forth in the NOFA remain unchanged.
There are no changes to the filing instructions, requirements, or application deadline for paper
submissions.
Dated: August 13, 2009
_/s/____
Jonathan Adelstein
Administrator
Rural Utilities Service
_/s/____
Anna M. Gomez
Acting Assistant Secretary for Communications and Information
National Telecommunications and Information Administration
It’s our fault, we found errors in the methodology USDA RUS had on the map and notified the USDA about them so they pulled it. It’s okay – it’ll be back soon hopefully, but folks need to map broadband, census and households so it only helps a bit.
From broadbandusa.gov:
The “BIP Map of Non-Rural Areas” has been removed until further notice, as some of the non-rural areas were incorrectly represented. Please refer to the definition in the NOFA for which areas should be considered “rural areas”. We apologize for the inconvenience while we make critical enhancements to the map.
This can be additionally layered with households and businesses and census/demographic data. All of this data is done down to the block level, like we have been doing for years for our clients.
What is best is we can provide this information (as open and public information) by the time the states get to review BTOP/BIP grants… and we do it for a fraction of the cost of others.
State Broadband Data and Development Grant Program Online Workshop
On July 24, 2009, the Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) will host an online workshop on its recently announced grant program to fund collection of state-level broadband data, as well as state-wide broadband mapping and planning. This initiative will provide consumers with better information on the broadband services available to them and inform efforts to increase broadband availability nationwide. The workshop is intended to present information and answer questions about the grant application process for potential applicants.
The State Broadband Data and Development Grant Program is a competitive, merit-based matching grant program that implements the joint purposes of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and the Broadband Data Improvement Act (BDIA). The Program will provide up to approximately $240 million in grants to assist states or their designees to develop state-specific data on the deployment levels and adoption rates of broadband services. These data, including publicly available state-wide broadband maps, will also be used to develop the comprehensive, interactive national broadband map that NTIA is required by the Recovery Act to create and make publicly available by February 17, 2011.
The workshop will be recorded and made available online at www.broadbandusa.gov. Grant applications for this program will be accepted through the online grants.gov system until August 14, 2009.
Pre-registration for the workshop is required and NTIA recommends registering no later than two hours in advance. Potential applicants are invited to email questions about the grant program to broadbandmapping@ntia.doc.gov in advance of the workshop.
Register for the Broadband Mapping Online Workshop, which will be held on July 24 at 1pm.
REGISTER FOR A SESSION:
Fri Jul 10, 2009 9:00 AM PDT
After a decade of broadband consulting we guessed 95% right, but did the NOFA surprise you?
- DEADLINE: August 14th
- MAPPING: Census Block Level
- DEFINITIONS: Rural, Remote, Underserved and Unserved
- ENGINEERING: Signoff over $1 Million
- E-FILING: Registration Req’s
We will show you how to successfully address these and other vital issues so you meet the deadline in an expediant and accurate way so as not to get thrown out. Discussion + Q&A!
ALL-IMPORTANT MAPPING
We’ve been doing demographic and broadband analysis at the block level for years and we will show you some of the mapping methodologies that will help ratify your business case, engineering and prepare your grant for success.
- Households, Population, Income, etc
- Define “Rural” and % of Rural
- Distance from Urban Markets
- Identify Existing Broadband: Cable, DSL, Wireless, Cellular
- Cross-referencing with existing databases
- Determine Unserved and Underserved
- Determine BTOP or BIP Eligibility
- Output in Map and Spreadsheet form
REAL STRATEGY
We possess the strategy and our record speaks for itself. Every RFP response we’ve written has won and every grant/loan submitted has been awarded! We can’t guarantee success; our expertise and breadth can make a positive contribution to your broadband plan. Did you know that you can include grant preparation and planning as a reimbursable part of your application if awarded?
REAL HELP
Do you need more resources to hit the deadline? Can we help fill in the gaps? Provide a sanity check?
- Business Planning
- Financial Modeling
- System Engineering: Wireless, Cable, Fiber; Middle and Last Mile
- Mapping Census + Broadband (Cable, DSL, Wireless, Cellular)
- Grant/Loan Strategy + Narratives, Preparation and Assembly
- Project Management RFP Management / Proposal Vetting
REAL LEADERS
Fmr Obama Campaign Tech Policy Committee w/ Larry Strickling.
Highly successful on RFP and USDA RUS loan & grant applications.
We get Senators, Congress, Governors and Counties to back our clients.
Created “National Broadband” in 2002 for broadband to 38 rural states.
The first Wall Street Journal (cover-page) article on rural Wi-Fi in 2001.
We provide comprehensive services ranging from business to technology.
We engineer financials and technology, integrating experience for results.
Customers range from CenturyTel to Walmart to hundreds of WISPs.
REGISTER FOR A SESSION NOW:
Broadband USA site now has active link to NOFA:
HIGHLIGHTS of the NOTICE OF FUNDS AVAILABILITY
Related downloads:
A summary by Knight Foundation, Knight Center for Digital Excellence on the NOFA.
A summary, strategy and recommendations for changes by New America Foundation on the NOFA.
KEY POINTS
USDA and NTIA have developed a two-step application process:
- In step one, the goal is to create a pool of viable and potentially fundable applications.
- Step two is to fully validate the submissions in step one and identify the most highly qualified applications for funding.
BTOP funds are available through 3 categories:
- Broadband Infrastructure
- Public Computer Centers
- Sustainable Broadband Adoption.
Broadband Infrastructure category consists of Last Mile and Middle Mile in unserved and underserved areas.
Broadband definition: two-way data transmission with advertised speeds of at least 768 kbps downstream and at least 200 kbps upstream.
Public Computer Center will expand public access and capacity at entities that permit the public to use these computing centers.
The Sustainable Broadband Adoption category will fund innovative projects that promote broadband demand.
- $1.2billion for Last Mile Projects.
- $400M for grants Remote Area projects.*
- $800M for loans or loan/grant combos for Non-Remote projects.*
- $800M for loans or loan/grant combos for Middle Mile projects.
* Remote area means an unserved, rural area 50 miles from the limits of a non-rural area.
All awards under NTIA BTOP and USDA BIP must be made no later than September 30, 2010
For-profit corps that are willing to promote the goals of the Recovery Act and comply with the statutory requirements are eligible.
Eligibility factors:
- 1) application;
- 2) completion w/2 yrs;
- 3) technical feasibility.
Nondiscrimination and Interconnection Obligations:
- i. adhere to the principles contained in the FCC’s Internet Policy Statement
- ii. not favor any lawful Internet applications and content over others
- iii. display any network management policies and provide notice to customers of changes to these policies
- iv. connect to the public Internet directly or indirectly, such that the project is not an entirely private closed network
- v. offer interconnection on reasonable rates and terms to be negotiated with requesting parties
Conditions will apply for the life of the awardee’s facilities used in the project.
The scoring criteria for BIP and BTOP:
- 1 Project Purpose;
- 2 Project Benefits;
- 3 Project Viability;
- 4 Project Budget and Sustainability.
As follows;
- Project Purpose 25 pts: Proportion of Rural Residents Served in Unserved Areas 5 pts Rural Area Targeting 5 pts Remote Area Targeting 5 pts.
- Title II Borrowers (5 points). Recovery Act and other governmental collaboration (5 points).
- Broadband speed: Last Mile Projects of 20+ megabit per second service will be favored; 100+ megabits per second service for Middle Mile.
- Pts for demonstrating affordability and providing choice of provider.
- Pts for 25% discounts to “all critical community facilities in the proposed funded service area”.
- Critical community facilities: public facilities that provide community services essential for supporting the safety, health, well-being.
* Critical community facilities: emergency response and other public safety activities, hospitals and clinics, libraries, schools and more.
- Project Viability (25 points).
- Applicant’s organizational capability (12 points); Community support (2 points); Ability to promptly start project (10 points).
- Disadvantaged small businesses (1 point).
- Project Budget and Sustainability (25 points).
USDA and NTIA intend to announce the awards starting on or about November 7, 2009.
Unserved area:
- census block where at least 90% of HHs lack access to facilities-based, terrestrial broadband service @ 768 kbps.
Underserved area:
- 1. no more than 50% of the HHs in the area have access to facilities-based, terrestrial broadband service @ 768 kbps.
- 2. no fixed or mobile broadband service provider advertises broadband transmission speeds of at least 3mbps.
Some guideline updates were posted on the NTIA BTOP and USDA RUS websites for their ARRA Broadband Stimulus grant and loan programs for grants and loans. Below are the links.
Our Thoughts :: The $100 Billion Issue: Cisco Lobbies to Clarify “Buy American” Clause
in Federal Stimulus Package
Courtesy of colleague Liz Zucco via stimulatingbroadband.com
04/16/09 As seen in a publicly disclosed e-mail message from Cisco Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ: CSCO) to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), the San Jose based networking equipment market leader is lobbying against a strict interpretation of the “Buy American” provisions of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA).
We believe the Cisco statement to the federal agency is extremely significant. Far more than the $7.2 Billion in “broadband stimulus” funds in ARRA could be subject to the Buy American clause. We believe that upwards of $100 Billion in information technology (IT) appropriations are contained in all of the tech-related programs and funding lines in the Act. As outlined below, we believe that strict application of ARRA provisions meant to apply to roads, bridges, and public buildings can not reasonably be applied to the IT / telecom sector if appropriations from the Act are going to be spent on technology deployments, as intended.
Our analysis of IT funding portions of the Act agrees with that of several legal and market research analysts who have done detailed reviews of the legislation. We believe the approximate $100 Billion IT figure is reached when considering total appropriations, additional to the $7.2 Billion, for: healthcare record computerization, smart grid electric distribution control technology, federal computer system upgrades, public safety communications, intelligent transportation system (ITS) tech within the massive funding for road and bridge construction, computer learning and educational technology, and possible broadband rewiring of subsidized and public housing.
The e-mail message, reproduced on the NTIA’s public disclosure site reports that Cisco’s Jeffrey A. Campbell had an Ex Parte telephonic discussion with NTIA Senior Advisor Mark Seifert on March 23, 2009 to lobby NTIA against strict interpretation and enforcement of the Buy American language contained in Section 1605 of the Act (Section below).
Mr. Campbell, based in Cisco’s Washington office, is the firm’s Senior Director for Technology and Trade Policy, within the corporate Global Policy and Government Affairs division. As stated in his e-mail, he specifically sought clarification from NTIA that any network facilities built with BTOP funds not be ”...constituted a “public work” which would subject them to the “Buy American” requirement.” Alternatively, Campbell sought “a public interest waiver of the “Buy American” requirement…for all electronics equipment used in broadband networks.”
The report by the retained lobbyist who initiated the telephone discussion, and its public disclosure, are both mandated by the Obama Administration’s new disclosure rules for lobbyists seeking to influence any federal agencies relative to grant or loan expenditures from the ARRA. President Obama issued a Memorandum on March 20 which contained the strictures. As reported by the government watchdog group The Sunlight Foundation, the disclosure regulations set off a firestorm of concern on K Street when they were promulgated.
Our analysis:
1. To date we have only seen published stories on the Cisco meeting in Brad Reese’s column on Cisco in Network World, and on Democratic Underground. Cisco itself has not commented yet, although its government affairs site routinely stakes out free trade positions, as is common in the high tech sector. We believe the Cisco argument will receive far greater review and feedback from not only other electronics manufacturers, but from the telecom carriers that purchase their products, and from the bevy of trade associations representing the American high technology industry in Washington. Cisco itself has been instrumental in supporting the work of as many as 32 technology trade groups, including TechNet, in addition to its own robust lobbying presence.
2. The reality is that many components of any microelectronic array, and most semiconductors found in virtually any networking equipment, are fabricated abroad. Virtually no telecom network operating today in the United States, supporting either a public service provider or an enterprise, could function without the existence of global supply chains feeding into the final hardware product. We hope that review of the Act’s Sec. 1605 by NTIA will reasonably look at the realities of global manufacturing and trade in the telecom sector, as do current domestic content regulations of the USDA’s Rural Utilities Service.
3. Cisco and its supported high tech trade groups, like TechNet (the folks that lobbied for a 100 Mpbs national broadband goal back in 2002), have been in the forefront of pushing for a progressive national broadband policy for years. Cisco understands the equation of greater broadband deployment equals greater economic activity and higher employment levels in the American economy. Cisco’s push for clarification of the “Buy American” provision is a reasonable and an ultimately practical request. The goal of an effective national broadband strategy is within reach, in large measure thanks politically and technically to Cisco.
The Buy American language of ARRA is found under Section 1605 of the Act:
BUY AMERICAN SEC. 1605. USE OF AMERICAN IRON, STEEL, AND MANUFACTURED GOODS. (a) None of the funds appropriated or otherwise made available by this Act may be used for a project for the construction, alteration, maintenance, or repair of a public building or public work unless all of the iron, steel, and manufactured goods used in the project are produced in the United States. (b) Subsection (a) shall not apply in any case or category of cases in which the head of the Federal department or agency involved finds that — (1) applying subsection (a) would be inconsistent with the public interest; (2) iron, steel, and the relevant manufactured goods are not produced in the United States in sufficient and reasonably available quantities and of a satisfactory quality; or (3) inclusion of iron, steel, and manufactured goods produced in the United States will increase the cost of the overall project by more than 25 percent. (c) If the head of a Federal department or agency determines that it is necessary to waive the application of subsection (a) based on a finding under subsection (b), the head of the department or agency shall publish in the Federal Register a detailed written justification as to why the provision is being waived. (d) This section shall be applied in a manner consistent with United States obligations under international agreements.
Credit: Colleague Liz Zucco via StimulatingBroadband.com
Connected Nation doesn’t know how to do the mapping properly, but they’re the only one publicly proposing they have the knowledge and resources.
Our partners do have the resources and have proven scientific results on the most accurate broadband mapping that includes wireless, copper, cable and even fiber.
In the interim, here are the notes from Connected Nation’s ex=parte meeting with the NTIA as filed on the NTIA’s BTOP website.
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/broadbandgrants/comment.cfm?e=A5975F90-E10E-4695-9F5A-821F0686B521
NOTICE OF MEETING
On March 4, 2009, Tim Sloan, Dennis Amari, Alfred Lee, and Jim McConnaughey of NTIA’s Domestic Policy Office initiated a meeting with Brian Mefford and Phillip Brown of Connected Nation. The purpose of the meeting was to discuss Connected Nation’s methodology for creating maps of broadband services availability and adoption in various States. During that discussion, Connected Nation made the following points:
•A reliable map depicting the availability and adoption of broadband services is critical to the development of orderly, transparent, and measurable projects to address unserved areas or to foster broadband service demand. A Geographic Information System (GIS) format at the street level is used for mapping and “gapâ€Â (identifying unserved or underserved areas) analysis.
•Mapping the availability/adoption of broadband service should be coupled with efforts to stimulate broadband demand in order to induce broadband service providers – both wired and wireless—to supply deployment data. Non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) are important to legally protect confidential and proprietary information. Other useful mapping includes statewide maps that depict (average) actual upload and download speeds.
•If Federal funding of broadband mapping includes a requirement for non-Federal matching funds, the government should allow matching funds to be provided over multiple years. The government should also limit the use of in-kind payments as matching funds.
Broadband Stimulus Public Comment Round Closes at Midnight, 60 Day Target Set for Grant Guidelines…
Courtesy of colleague Peter Pratt stimulatingbroadband.com
04/13/09 The public comment period for input to the two federal agencies writing grant guidelines for the total $7.2 Billion in broadband stimulus funding contained in the American Recovery and Renewal Act of 2009 (ARRA) closes today, April 13, at 12:00 midnight (EDT), local time in Washington DC. A federal agency spokesman further stated today that a target date of June 12 has been set for issuance of funding guidelines for the broadband grants and loans.
Mr. Mark Tolbert, Spokesperson for the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) of the US Department of Commerce, confirmed for StimulatingBroadband.com late this afternoon that the public comment portal at the NTIA website would close this evening at midnight.
Importantly, Tolbert also confirmed that NTIA has set a “target of approximately 60 days” from today for official promulgation of its Notice of Funds Availability (NOFA). The NOFA will provide grant and loan applicants for all ARRA broadband stimulus funds, with guidelines for how to apply, and what selection criteria will be used for evaluation of applications. Tolbert also stated that there will not be another public comment round, nor period for reply comments as is common in proceedings of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), between now and the release of the NOFA on or about June 12.
Mr. Tolbert’s statement, giving this 60-day target cycle for issuance of the NOFA from today’s comment deadline is more specific than the range recently given by NTIA Policy Advisor Mark Seifert on April 2 to a House Subcommittee. In testimony to the Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet, chaired by Congressman Rick Boucher (D-VA), Seifert stated that NTIA estimated release of the grant guidelines would take “a couple of months”.
In filed written testimony, Seifert stated, “A Notice of Funds Availability (NOFA) will be published as expeditiously as possible, likely in the next couple of months, that will describe in detail how the application process will work, how we will evaluate the applications, as well as how grantees will be held accountable, including requirements for progress reports and job creation measurements, to ensure that taxpayer investments are protected.”
“We will be releasing a Notice of Funds Availability,” stated Tolbert this afternoon in a telephone interview “which will spell out criteria and instructions which lead into the application process.”
The NTIA’s Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) portal has been receiving public comments, which are made jointly to NTIA and to the Rural Utilities Service (RUS) division of the US Department of Agriculture, since opening on March 10. Over this 34-day period, just over 1,150 comments had been posted to the public comment site by Monday afternoon.
Just over 180 comments have been filed today alone, up to 5:30 pm (EDT). Comments posted today come from a diverse range of commentators, as has been typical of the previous postings. Comments today included those filed by New Jersey Governor John Corzine, by Motorola, Inc. (NYSE: MOT) the large American manufacturer of wireless infrastructure and personal wireless terminals and cell phones, by the Administration of Pennsylvania Governor Edward G. Rendell, by the City of New York, by several telecommunications wireline and wireless carriers, and by Mayor Mark Hipsher of Grainger County, Tennessee.
The broadband stimulus provisions of ARRA appropriated a total of $7.2 Billion for grants, loans, and loan guarantee funds to be dispersed by the 2 federal agencies.
Courtesy of colleague Peter Pratt stimulatingbroadband.com
Aspen Wireless Technologies is present in the Halls of the House for the Congressional Subcommittee Hearing on USF Reform.
Follow @wirelesscott on Twitter for real-time information from the event including statements and questions of the Congressional Telecom Sub-Committee’s members as well as testimony from the panelists.
UPDATE: Below are updates from @wirelesscott as broadcast in real-time via Twitter from the USF Reform Hearing (chronologically correct, start to finish):
###
At USF reform hearing at house energy I hope we can make this happen!!! Congress is very clear that USF needs to change.
USF reform to include public safety issues (e911 etc)... Thoughts?
FreePress says “make bold changesâ€Â in a 10year change to capital repayment and minor subsity model to save est’d 2/3 $
Tech policy institue fellow Scott walsten says do reverse auctions and make it a bid process for subsidy of least cost infrastructure option
Chairman Boucher asks how the $7.2B broadband stim can make it more feasible to deploy broadband. Has 1mbps minimum REQUIRED deploy get USF$
Boucher says thwre is an oversight committee for stim $ via ntia and USDA rus, also advising these committees / Administration support
Rep stearns from FL is sticking it to re telco, ya!!!
Rep Barton from Texas wants to repeal USF and calls it a snake that should be killed…
Rural areas cost $266mo to provide service as last resort carrier
Verizon believes that more granular USF (demographic) “mappingâ€Â below zip code level
Verizon says costs of middle mile are possibly driving cost greater than last mile ($100mo) in costs per customer
Verizon complains they can’t determine cost for wireless system costs per user… I call bullshit
Verizon and AT&T want competitive bidding (AT&T wants one-time capital awards)
Rep walden from Oregon made a joke about outhouses in this district and desirig flushing… The crowd laughs heartily.
Rep Weiner New York wants competition foe real and competitive bids with multiple winners. He is asking great questions
Rep Terry from Nebraska wants accountability
Rep Rush from Illinois is concerned over the costs from telephony to incarcerated persons, Chair Boucher agrees
He also asks if broadband is required just like electricity and water. The board unanimously agrees, the economist wants healthcare first
Rep Shimkus asks about wireless broadband for inclusion. The board says yes but asks to segment the two in compensation and minimum speeds
Questions about reliability of audit processes and costs by all, but the telco thinks they get the short end of the stick
Rep Butterfield north carolima asks about subsidizing services or devices for low income. Panel believes not from usf but important issue
Adjourned!
Just had excellent 1:1 meeting with Rep Walden of Oregon…
###
END POSTS @wirelesscott, begin tweets by @meitweet from a session panel at The Cable Show 2009 #CS09
###
Roger Sherman: House commerce committee will move other items first. Expect subcomm to look at SHVIRA, ICANN, USF. #cs09
Rosenworcel: will be looking at future of media writ large, DTV oversight, BTOP oversight. #cs09 

Timing for Senate confirms for tech jobs: Rosenworcel and Kurth agree, “we hope it’s soon.” #cs09 

Fried: broadband maps won’t be completed, but we’d like to see money go to “mapped” states first. #cs09 

Sherman: confident that NTIA and RUS are doing the right thing, trusting the regulators. Rosenworcel: senate planning hearings, ... #cs09 

Rosenworcel: ... See BTOP as a “down payment on our broadband future.” #cs09 

Sherman: OneEconomy will be at hearing tomorrow; they have great ideas on sustainable programs. #cs09 

Hearings on privacy? Bill? Fried and Sherman agree that nothing is on schedule but issues include DPI, 1st v 3rd party, intent of use. #cs09 

Rosenworcel on privacy: hearings last yr made clear that companies want to monetize info and consumers aren’t sure how it’s being used #cs09 

Fried: shvira will likely include must carry and adjacent market carriage. #cs09 

Rosenworcel on shvira: also need to update statute for digital broadcast. #cs09 

Retrans consent: time for Congressional review? Fried: Barton is a strong opponent of must carry. The market works. #cs09 

Phone competition: VoIP interconnection is a roadblock. Does FCC have right to guarantee? Rosenworcel: need to focus on intercon. #cs09 

Rosenworcel: some state interconn actions are “disturbing,” hope FCC will step in. #cs09 

Kurth on VoIP: if FCC thinks it lacks authority, we’re happy to provide. #cs09 

Sherman: committee members agree that wieleine porting should be as seamless as wireless porting. #cs09 

Expanding USF for broadband? Rosenworcel: need to 1st rationalize the current system, especially high-cost fund. This is FCC’s job. #cs09 

Fried: should consider reverse auction. Sherman: waxman and others have asked about days collection on USF. #cs09 

Kurth: agree that fundamental reform must take place first. #cs09 

Randy May asking a question re reverse auction and NTIA. Fried: we’d like to see a process for bidding for stimulus grants. #cs09 

Rosenworcel: finally we’re having a more nuanced dialogue on broadband. Adoption is a problem, perhaps greater than access. #cs09 

Adam Thierer: potential for content regulation. Rosenworcel: TV is a powerful force for good and harm, Rockefeller is concerned. #cs09 

Carriage disputes. Fried believes it’s hard for government to step in. #cs09
For a decade our company has focused on making broadband work as a consulting firm specializing in all things broadband. The founders of Aspen Wireless have been featured on the cover of the Wall Street Journal, founded the Nation’s first National Broadband network, successful muni wireless networks, assisted in various Homeland Security deployments and served on the Obama Campaign Tech Policy Committee.
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Airspan has been a worldwide leader in broadband wireless since 1992, and their products have been deployed by more than 300 customers, in more than 100 countries. Airspan has one of the most comprehensive product and solution portfolios in the industry.
Airspan’s portfolio includes both Point-to-Multipoint (PMP) and Point-to-Point (PtP) products providing cost effective solutions to wide variety of applications. Today their products are being used in a great number of diverse applications ranging from delivering wireless DSL to homes, businesses and schools in urban and rural settings to providing communication solutions to the oil and transportation industries.
It’s not often that a solution comes along that can truly outperform others in the same category, but that is exactly the case with Orthogon Systems. Orthogon’s OS-Gemini and OS-Spectra point-to-point 5.8 GHz wireless Ethernet bridges work where other products do not. In fact, wherever point-to-point wireless is a candidate for Ethernet connectivity, Orthogon systems offer unique advantages.
Compared with alternative point-to-point wireless solutions, Orthogon systems are price competitive, faster to deploy and easier to use. At the same time, they offer more capacity, a higher level of link quality, over longer distances, while performing with significantly more spectral efficiency.
Redline Communications leads the industry in performance, ease of installation, and customer support. Their products provide reliable, cost-effective solutions for Ethernet, T1/E1, and converged IP and TDM transport for both point-to-point and point-to-multipoint deployments. Backhaul, public access, and private network operator solutions are available for the licensed 3.5 GHz band, and the unlicensed 5.4 GHz and 5.8 GHz bands.
Redline’s core technical differentiation combines more than ten patented enhancements with current orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) implementations resulting in a state-of-the-art, cost-effective solution that will immediately give service providers momentum and a leadership role in deploying their broadband strategy.
Since its founding in 2000, DragonWave has achieved customer recognition for quality, innovation, and technical advances in delivering wireless point-to-point networks for the transport of data, voice and video communication systems. With 14 patents, DragonWave has developed significant intellectual property, which they continue to grow and protect.
DragonWave’s Industry leading AirPair backhaul allows service providers to offer ultra low latency native IP/Ethernet & legacy TDM (T1/E1) services for a wide variety of middle & last mile applications. DragonWave’s AirPair Product line provides a wide variety of industry leading options for Scalable Bandwidth Delivery, Network Management, Service Adaptation and Network Configurations.
The most famous recent example of Multi-Tenant Use (MTU) use of Broadband Wireless technology was to provide a high-profile residential building in New York City with a 1 Gigabit wireless link to the Internet and subsequent distribution of that very fast Internet connection to all the residents of the building. As New Yorkers would say “What’s not to like?”
While most other MTU buildings aren’t quite that demanding, it’s entirely feasible to bring that same level of connectivity – 1 Gbps links over a path of up to 1 mile (in increments – longer links can be built in 1 mile “hops”) to MTU’s that aren’t quite so high-profile as the example, where most of the residents of the building were millionaires. To the building’s residents, the very high speed Internet service was a very welcome amenity and a considerable differentiation from other buildings where the residents are forced to deal with cable or telephone companies for relatively slow (by comparison) Internet connections.
Aspen Wireless can assist MTU owners and management with not only the off-building links to the Internet (or equivalent private networks), but also the critical issue of distribution within the building including making use of existing wiring or installing new wiring, or the increasingly popular option of installing Wi-Fi systems throughout the building to provide tenants with Wi-Fi access, and forgoing the expense of adding internal wiring systems.
A burning issue in Healthcare is to increase efficiency and cost-effectiveness by streamlining processes and increasing the use of Information Technology.
Broadband Wireless technology offers some help with the unique challenges of applying Information Technology to Healthcare.
One healthcare breakthrough is the conversion of X-Ray and other images to fully electronic delivery. Electronic display units have finally achieved sufficient resolution to be usable to view finely detailed images. But because of the detail, image files are very large and thus take a long time to transmit over typical data links; and suitably faster links are cost-prohibitive.
One solution to the problem of transmitting large images is to build a private Broadband Wireless network between a hospital or medical center and the buildings of related services nearby. Thus a doctor could examine images from a hospital’s imaging systems in his private practice office rather than physically visiting the hospital. The high speed Broadband Wireless links (speeds of 1 Gigabit per second, and faster, are easily achievable) can also support other Information services such as videoconferences, Voice Over Internet Protocol telephony to connect into a hospital’s Private Branch Exchange (PBX) telephone network, and much more.
Contact Aspen Wireless to learn more about how the unique capabilities and cost-effectiveness of Broadband Wireless technology meet Healthcare’s intense demands for cost-effectiveness and innovation.
Wireless technology in Public Safety applications has come a long way since some unknown law enforcement official said famously “You might be able to outrun my patrol car… but you can’t outrun my two way radio.”
Public safety’s use of wireless technology has evolved considerably from “mere” two way radio; use of Information Technology is now routine in the field, from using on-scene geographical databases during fire response, to chemical hazard databases, to distribution of images from security cameras of robbery suspects, and of course, much, much more.
While mobile data technologies such as as packet radio, CDPD, and most recently wireless telephony “3G” networks have helped link Public Safety units in the field to their resources, such solutions are often inadequate, or too costly for any but the most demanding applications.
Broadband Wireless networks owned and operated by Public Safety agencies are not only feasible, but surprisingly cost-effective and capable of meeting public safety requirements. Much as been written about the use of Wi-Fi networks for Public Safety, but there are Broadband Wireless systems that are far more capable, and secure, than Wi-Fi.
Aspen Wireless is qualified to discuss a large number of Broadband Wireless systems and technologies. For Federal Government agencies, Aspen Wireless has applied for its listing on the GSA schedule.
We were recently outspoken on the vital topic of smartgrids, broadband, spectrum and datatopic at the National SmartGrid conference in Spokane, WA where we identified the need for involvement in broadband and spectrum policy for the short-term goals for utilities implementing intelligence for the grid.
This agenda goes even further in our keynote address and respective smartgrid sessions at the DataCenter Dynamics conference in Washington D.C. where leaders from the EPA and DOE joined with the leaders from the datacenter industry to discuss both the needs of utilities in data storage and access as well as conservation for datacenters as a significant power consumer.

Utilities have long been the unglamorous but critical business that makes the telecom industry a youngster by comparison. Utilities are appropriately cautious when they consider the use of new technology. After all, they know how to make their respective services and products perform reliably and by simple comparison, much of what is happening in the rapidly changing broadband industry doesn’t meet a utility’s metric for “reliable”.
In the last few years, that situation has quietly changed – there are lessons learned and new technologies in broadband and wireless that can demonstrably and cost-effectively deliver reliable “Utility-grade” service. But there is a methodology for choosing and deploying reliable systems and services that we uniquely understand.
Our experienced team is here to help utilities understand, identify, design, and implement “Utility-reliable” smartgrid and help address the complexities and integration with broadband systems and datacenters. We understand the whole picture, trust us to help you navigate your utility into the 21st century.
Aperto Networks is a leading provider of WiMAX-class multiservice broadband wireless access systems for global markets. It was founded to provide a breakthrough solution to one of today’s critical network bottlenecks – limited availability of last mile broadband access to millions of prospective users worldwide.
Aperto’s PacketWave system provides a family of base stations, subscriber units and associated radios and antennas in 2.5, 3.5 and 5 GHz frequency bands for point-to-point and point-to-multipoint deployments. Its scalable systems and patented technology support new wireless builds and complement existing wireline broadband access technology.
Using the Aspen Wireless mark and other Aspen Wireless Technologies LLC., intellectual property such as logos, slogans, trade dress, and graphic symbols on packaging, products, or services requires express written permission from Aspen Wireless Technologies LLC. Use of confusingly similar or disparaging terms is a violation of our intellectual property rights. © 2005 Aspen Wireless Technologies LLC.
It shocks most Americans to hear that there are still residents of the US (and Canada) that do not have a telephone and in fact cannot get a telephone line. Many… perhaps most of the residents that fit that description reside on Reservation Nations, and it’s appalling. While some strides have been made to provide at least basic telecommunications services on Reservation Nations, many residents of Reservation Nation remain completely unserved by telecommunications services.
Broadband Wireless is a superb fit for the unique requirements of providing to Reservation Nations:
Aspen Wireless can advise on suitable technologies, system architectures, and vendors, as well as assist in construction, training of local personnel in operating, maintaining, and extending the system, and the many other aspects of building a truly advanced Broadband Wireless telecommunications system.
In all phases of Homeland Security – prevention, monitoring, and response, effective communications is critical. Yet one of the most profound lessons of large-scale events of recent years is that current, conventional communications systems are simply not adequate to provide for the requirements of effective Homeland Security.
The solution from “the usual vendors” is that all that’s required is more money to build “more, and more of the same” systems. The solution from first response providers is that they need more spectrum to extend and enhance their existing systems. The solution from the wireless telephony companies is “just wait until we get our “3G” systems up and running.
Broadband Wireless systems are one fast-to-deploy, cost-effective solution to the evolving requirements of Homeland Security. For example, a Broadband Mobile Mesh Network can provide a scalable voice communications system at an Incident Site, with the network forming as fast as first response vehicles can arrive. Broadband Wireless offers unique capabilities:
As a technology-neutral and vendor-neutral Systems Integration comany, Aspen Wireless has access to a very wide variety of Broadband Wireless technologies, vendors, and capabilities it can combine into systems that can meet almost any Homeland Security communications requirement. We are in the process of applying for listing on the GSA Schedule.
It is a considerable understatement to say that when Enterprises lose access to their Intranets or the Internet, productivity plummets… if not halts completely.
Broadband Wireless is simply a tool to extend and enhance corporate Intranets and Internet access. From private high-bandwidth point-to-point links between campus buildings, to Broadband Access while mobile, to merely insuring business continuity with alternate-path connectivity to telecommunications providers, Broadband Wireless is a key tool for Enterprise Information Technology.
While Broadband Wireless can sometimes be as easy as “twenty minutes on the roof slapping up a radio”, Enterprises typically demand robust, reliable, and well-supported solutions for key systems. Aspen Wireless can help to evaluate the best types of Broadband Wireless technology for a particular Enterprise’s use and, if desired, manage the procurement, installation, and support for Enterprise Broadband Wireless.
Yes, we can help your company or municipality (city, county, state) get $7.2B in ARRA Broadband Stimulus Funds via NTIA BTOP and USDA RUS. But also remember there are billions more ARRA funs available for investments in education, healthcare and infrastructure we can help with too!
Please fill out our contact form with your request and we will get back with you to set up and interview with your executive staff to discuss the approach and your potential to stimulate your company or economy with ARRA Broadband Stimulus funds.
http://www.aspenwireless.net/contact/
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Aspen Wireless has written winning RFP responses for its customers. These responses have won various towns and cities, both small rural and world-renowned places in the USA. Our engineering and response services combined with the right business approach between your company and the municipality, has won over incumbents like Earthlink/Google, AT&T/Siemens, Qwest and others.
Municipal Broadband Wireless systems have become popular in the last few years to address the need for universal access to the Internet at Broadband speeds, both in economically disadvantaged areas as well as areas simply not served Broadband by conventional cable or telephony companies. Many municipal governments regard the availability… or lack of a availability of Broadband Internet Access as not only an economic development issue, but also a quality of life issue.

The techniques, technologies, and systems for providing Broadband Wireless Internet Access on a Municipal scale are hardly new. Broadband Wireless systems have been deployed successfully for many years by, among others, Wireless ISPs. What is new is that there is now political will to make investments with public financing to deploy such systems, making universal Broadband Internet Access truly possible.
Municipal wireless systems can be difficult to deploy… and even difficult to sort out competing proposals from different vendors, each offering their own unique technologies. Some vendors, especially those offering “simple and robust” Wi-Fi Mesh technology often run into unexpected obstacles that can compromise a Municipal Broadband Wireless system’s overall usefulness.
Aspen Wireless, as a technology-neutral and vendor-neutral Systems Integration company with deep experience in the Broadband Wireless industry, is in a unique position to assist in preparation for Municipal Broadband Wireless systems:
Education is one of the most innovative users of Internet-related technology. After all, the Internet was born from a project to link disparate computer systems at colleges throughout the US. It is now considered essential to have Internet access in the vast majority of classrooms for reference, current events, and learning experiences that are possible only with the Internet, such as “paired classrooms” in two different countries and cultures.

Broadband Wireless technology can play a key role in almost any educational institution or organization. Some examples:
Contact Aspen Wireless to learn more about how Broadband Wireless technology can generate significant savings and enhance the learning experience in your educational institution.
Over the last decade our company has focused on making broadband work as a professional broadband consulting firm specializing in all things broadband. Our team is world-renowned team recognized for our accomplishments in broadband. Depend on our methodologies and expertise to properly enable broadband technology for your initiative.
We identify with your industry, guaranteed. Inside is a comprehensive list of market verticals, each with a specific narrative describing the positive impact your business and economy. Whether you are providing ‘Megabits to the Masses’ or require kilobits of mission-critical data reach its destination, we have the experience and knowledge to springboard your initiative.
STIMULUS UPDATED
Our services for the grants and loan process include business and technology, market analysis, strategy, engineering, broadband mapping (census block), proposal vetting, RFP authoring/management, narratives and more. We’ve built a decade of trust and reputation on our professional services, trust us to navigate you to the goal.
Whether it’s broadband itself or applications like smartgrid, we posses deep knowledge of the nuances facing each aspect in business, technology and implementation. As a technology-neutral company, let us help you navigate the options, dispel the myths and come up with a sustainable and unique design plan for the future that meets the exact needs of your initiative.
Celebrating 10 Years of Leadership
“Aspen Wireless has been instrumental to our successful ARRA RUS bid in Round One! They are easy to work with and were a critical member of our grant application team. The results speak for themselves – Rivada was selected as one in 18 out of 2,200 RUS BIP/BTOP applicants Nationwide to proceed to the second phase and the first company in the Nation certified as 100% complete and qualified on its app to the US Dept of Agriculture.” ~Rob Needham SVP, Rivada Networks

As the world begins its migration to a digital economy, each vertical is affected by broadband and the applications that ride over it. Aspen Wireless is acutely aware of those applications and the marriage between the network’s reliability, security, scalability and the success of the application.
We identify with your industry, guaranteed. Below is a comprehensive list of market verticals, each with a specific narrative describing the positive impact your business and economy. Whether you are providing ‘Megabits to the Masses’ or require kilobits of mission-critical data reach its destination, we have the experience and knowledge to springboard your initiative.
Find your industry below and click to understand how we identify with your needs and will help you realize successful solutions. We have experience in working with customers in each market vertical:
Aspen Wireless Networks has provided a wide range of services over the last decade for clients from business to technology and all areas in-between. Our pride comes from knowing that our deep knowledge and experience in the industry provides our clients long-term success and satisfaction with our services.
Our firm has worked with hundreds of broadband providers over the past decade, in addition to having been operators ourselves.
We work with Cities, Counties, States and Service Providers alike because the ARRA Broadband Stimulus, especially NTIA BTOP Grants, require effort from both sides to get your fair share.
We have a high success rate on loans submitted to USDA RUS where have been involved, with funding up to $34 million on a single loan. We hang out with the FCC, attended the NTIA meetings and have policy friends in Washington D.C. We offer all the services and expertise you need to invigorate your local economy or operation with ARRA Broadband Stimulus Funds via NTIA BTOP Grants and USDA RUS BIP Grants/Loans – and we realize what few others do, that up to $100 Billion in IT stimulus is available!
More on Loan and Grant Development »
We have been providing broadband mapping, census mapping and RF mapping services for years down to the block level. We have access to data sets for cable, DSL and wireless (WISP) and cellular data in addition to broadband studies which allow us to provide highly accurate and compelling broadband mapping service. For many years we have been leaders in providing demographic overlays to ratify business plans and financial models, in addition to creating target customer maps and pre-qualifications. And all of this, down to the census block level.
Our services include business technology analysis, strategy, feasibility/market studies, loan/grant proposals, proposal vetting. RFP authoring and management (for Municipalities) as well as RFP responses (for Service Providers). Our work has won bids for our clients against industry incumbents as well as awarded millions of dollars in USDA RUS loans and grants.
More on Grants, Loans and RFPs »
Not only system and network engineering, business engineering. Nothing compares to real experience to ensure that paper engineering turns out as expected. We know the market, business factors, technology and future trends – let us validate your concept and “engineer” your business to success.
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The resources poured into engineering your business and network demand to be deployed by skilled professionals. Allow our network of certified Systems Integrators to deploy your system professionally so it will serve as a solid foundation for your business.
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The learning curve is tough in the fast paced broadband market and there is no time to spare or reputation to stake on failure. We will train your executive staff as well as technical team with the knowledge necessary to succeed in the wireless space.
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Stay ahead of the curve by having Aspen Wireless Technologies provide ongoing support for your system. Whether engaging our expertise after deployment, or with our Virtual Technology Officer (VTO) program – let us support your success and overcome hurdles.
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We engineered and built a centralizing intelligence that provides all necessary functions for your system to keep it operating smoothly. This ‘command and control’ allows us to provide a managed service to compliment the VTO program and our world-class support.
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National ambitions? Absolutely.
Campus interconnection? no problem.
Innovative new concepts? we love a challenge!
Whether it’s broadband itself or applications like smartgrid – we specialize in the business and technology aspects from planning to execution with deep knowledge and years of leadership experience.
As a technology-neutral company we will select the best next-generation technologies to ensure your network achieves the requirements of your initiative. If you have a technology or vendor preference we will happily work to with them to ensure the same success using the partners you trust.
Transmission line technologies including fiber, telco copper, utility copper and cable provide unsurpassed quality and speeds and best of all, we work with them all.
Wireless opens doors. Doors that lead to areas unserved as well as doors to mobility in an increasingly connected world. Of all the expertise, we know wireless better than the back of our hands. It belongs married to the best of the wireline technologies.
Broadband is only the beginning. As we have long believed and as our Administration has acknowledged in the stimulus bill, broadband is the foundation to provide connectivity and imagination to our economy. Whether connecting users, schools, hospitals or the smartgrid; broadband is only as good as the applications that successfully ride over it.
For a decade our company has focused on making broadband work as a consulting firm specializing in all things broadband. The founders of Aspen Wireless have been featured on the cover of the Wall Street Journal, founded the Nation’s first National Broadband network, successful muni wireless networks, assisted in various Homeland Security deployments and served on the Obama Campaign Tech Policy Committee.
Aspen Wireless Networks has provided a wide range of services over the last decade for clients from business to technology and all areas in-between. Our pride comes from knowing that our deep knowledge and experience in the industry provides our clients long-term success and satisfaction with our services. Our firm has worked with hundreds of broadband providers over the past decade, in addition to having been operators ourselves.
No matter the business model, technology or regulation we are absolutely committed to success in meeting our client’s needs. Our deep knowledge coupled with our experience with a wide range of broadband transport and applications provides you a significant edge. Whether you are providing ‘Megabits to the Masses’ or require kilobits of mission-critical data reach its destination, we will provide successful and proven consulting services guaranteed to springboard success in your initiative.
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