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DAILY NEWS AND INFORMATION
FOR THE GLOBAL GRID COMMUNITY / SEPTEMBER 15, 2003: VOL. 2 NO. 37
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Breaking News -
Networking:
Drake, SCC Construct Fiber-Optic
Backbone In North Carolina
Southwestern Community College and Drake Enterprises of Franklin announced
last week the formation of BalsamWest FiberNET, a public/private partnership
created to facilitate the deployment of a high-capacity fiber-optic network
ring through Jackson, Macon, Swain, Graham, Clay and Cherokee counties.
BalsamWest was formed to ensure that the southwestern region of the state
can
participate fully in a global economy by providing open and affordable access
to state-of-the-art infrastructure, according to SCC's Laura Pennington.
"BalsamWest FiberNET will give the region the tools it needs to educate and
train the work force of the future, support advances in health care, improve
the ability of local businesses to succeed, and create opportunities to
generate good jobs for the future," said Pennington.
"Our region must have adequate infrastructure in order to be part of the
21st
century economy," David Hubbs, director of Internet Services for Drake
Enterprises and manager of Dnet Internet Services said. "By the end of this
decade nine out of 10 jobs will require the use of computing and
communications technologies.
"Business, education, law enforcement, government and the medical community
will depend more and more on access to affordable and reliable high speed data
transport," he continued. "Without it, our region will not be able to compete.
A fiber-optic ring will fulfill this need with virtually unlimited capacity
and maximum reliability."
According to Pennington, BalsamWest will bring virtually unlimited capacity
to, from and through the area.
The network is to be deployed in five segments connecting the six
westernmost
counties of North Carolina.
Construction of the first segment is under way, connecting Jackson and
Macon
counties with a "fiber-optic backbone."
As for SCC, the fibers will be used to connect the college's campuses in
the
three-county area, she said.
"Right now were are leasing infrastructure," she said. "It's very expensive
and not always reliable."
While SCC plans to offer Internet service to its students and faculty,
neither
the college nor BalsamWest will be in the business of Internet service
provider, Pennington said.
"We will be making the fiber available to anyone in the region," she said.
"But we are not selling service; that's important to note."
Both Pennington and Hubbs pointed out the collaborative four-year effort to
bring high-speed fiber to WNC instead of relying on large service providers
like Verizon and BellSouth to provide the service.
"If we wait for the telecommunications giants to determine when our region
merits the investment, it will be too late," said Hubbs. "With a
public/private partnership such as BalsamWest Fiber Net, our community can do
this now. Drake Enterprises is proud to be part of this effort."
When the first phase of the project is completed in mid-November, business
and
homeowners could begin to experience the benefits of faster, more reliable
Internet service when local ISPs like Drake offer the service to its
customers. Business-to-business digital transactions, which are quickly
becoming the norm, will also be easier over the new fiber-optic lines, she
said.
BalsamWest has selected the Education and Research Consortium's Asheville
MetaPoP as its upstream connection to the Internet. BalsamWest's network will
connect the area west of the Balsams to the Asheville MetaPoP, a second tier
Internet network access point funded through the efforts of Congressman
Charles Taylor.
"In a new model of innovation and collaboration, BalsamWest FiberNET is
creating an open infrastructure available to the public, private and non-
profit sectors - a model other rural regions might want to consider," said
Pennington. "The availability of this network promises to help rural Internet
service providers to better serve home and business customers through better
access, lower prices and higher quality."
"Western North Carolina has much to offer high tech companies but will be
overlooked unless it has access to this type of high-speed network at prices
comparable to metropolitan areas and a highly-trained labor force," said
Hubbs.
SCC's commitment to education and community development has driven its
involvement in improving telecommunications infrastructure in the region -
with the new Macon campus being connected in the initial deployment, said SCC
President Cecil Groves.
"Infrastructure like this will allow the college to tap into advanced
teaching
tools, provide education virtually anytime, anywhere, and help our public
partners (such as the schools and libraries) access resources anywhere in the
world," said Groves.
The Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians, which have an interest in the
southwest region and a technological vision for the future, have taken formal
steps to be part of this enterprise. Increased government efficiency will be
the Eastern Band's first goal, said tribal planner Brandon Stephens.
As a partner in the corporation, the tribe will also concentrate on using
the
availability of high-speed fibers as an economic recruiting tool, Stephens
said.
"It used to be that if you built water and sewer into an area, industry
would
come," he said. "That's not the case anymore. Now you need the high-tech
infrastructure."
Tribal leaders would also like to prevent out-migration of area residents,
he
said.
"Right now people are getting high-tech degrees and they are leaving us to
find work," said Stephens.
BalsamWest is also exploring ways it can support the work of AdvantageWest,
which received funding from the Rural Internet Access Authority for middle
mile infrastructure deployment in Jackson, Macon and Clay counties. The $1
million grant was awarded to AdvantageWest based upon strategies developed
through the Appalachian Access initiative, a three-year effort led by SCC, the
WNC Knowledge Coalition, Appalachian Regional Commission, N.C. Rural Economic
Development Center and AdvantageWest.
BalsamWest invites companies from anywhere in the world to tap directly
into
the ultra-high-speed capacity of its fiber backbone and its connectivity to
the high performance supercomputing capacity of the Asheville MetaPoP, said
Groves.
"We can connect their employees in our area with others anywhere in the
world,
allowing them to work together in real-time just as if they were in the same
room," Groves said.
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