Executive Summary:
Broadband resources are essential to any contemporary community,
cultural or commercial development. They
have the potential to dramatically enhance the viability of our public sector
knowledge industry and creative economy institutions, and to support public
policy regarding workforce & economic development
New fiber-optic resources are being installed
throughout the Bronx at this moment.
However, current indications are that the systems, as currently planned, will not be competitive with the Next Generation Broadband capabilities being implemented elsewhere in the world. There are also questions of how the roll-out
will be managed, and whether its design and long term capabilities will serve
the broadest public interest.
It is unfortunate that these
broadband resources are often planned outside our comprehensive urban planning,
architectural and development processes.
It certainly will be essential to have knowledgeable, skillful,
integrated planning of these resources if their benefit is to be optimized.
These new systems are utilizing the public right
of ways for their distribution network under public franchises. As we build our next generation of
infrastructure and public sector knowledge industry and creative economy
institutions there is every reason, in every undertaking, to integrate
broadband resources with new investment and development.
Every undertaking accomplished in the absence of
such a policy is a waste of tremendous potential that might otherwise be
realized with minor incremental cost.
BronxNet, working with a team of experts listed below,
has developed a presentation that will explain:
1. How
this opportunity can be realized
2. The
benefits of doing so
3. The
ingrained habits and policies that inhibit this accomplishment
We look forward to assuring that the Bronx becomes an exemplar
of ways that correctly designed and implemented broadband resources can enhance
community, cultural and commercial development.
BronxNet’s Team:
Dr. Norm Jacknis - Director, Cisco IBSG Public
Sector; former Chief Information Officer/technology commissioner of Westchester
County
Bruce Lincoln - Entrepreneur-in-Residence, Center
for Technology, Innovation & Community Engagement, School of Engineering
and Applied Sciences, Columbia University
Bice C. Wilson, AIA – Principal, Meridian Design
Associates, Architects, P.C.
Chuck Sherwood, Senior Associate, TeleDimensions
Inc.
Intelligent Public Way??
The success of our local, state, federal and global Public Policies for Economic Development, Healthcare and Education is dependent on the availability of dependable, robust ubiquitous broadband resources.
Even so, it is a little known fact that Data, Telecommunication and Media Production Systems are not included in US Industry Standard Contracts for Planning, Architecture & Construction. In fact, these industries anachronistically treat them as optional systems, outside the ken and expertise of citizens and the Design profession. We’re still delegating this part of our lives to Ma Bell, but she doesn’t exist anymore.
These resources are necessary for success in crucial 21st century development strategies, such as:
1. Tele-medicine
2. Interactive, Multi-media Distance Learning
3. Workforce development
4. New Business Incubation
5. Collaboration-at-a-Distance
6. Virtual Presence / Teleconferencing / Tele-work
7. Tele-community / Tele-family
Where It's Not, We Can't
Ignoring the design of these systems as part of the integrated development design process is short-sighted, and cannot continue. These voice, video and data pipelines are the nervous systems by which the world is connected.
They are the medium that gives our citizens a voice, educates them and connects them, weaves them together and sends them forth, expands the realm of possibilities.
In terms of community, cultural & commercial development, these voice, video and data pipelines are the difference between success and failure – between the 21st century economy and the digital slums.
To fail to provide our citizens with broadband resources is essentially to leave them without connections to contemporary development, and is to handicap them, and the economy that relies on them, in a world that’s only getting more competitive.
In short – Where these resources are not, our people can not, our economy can not, and our nation can not.
We can do much better:
- By integrating the design of this vital public sector nervous system with that of our communities,
- By leveraging every infrastructure project in other rights-of-way so as to create a ubiquitous system of public wireways
- By creating public policy for their existence, shape & accessibility,
- By creating common standards and expectations,
- By pursuit of a public/private roll out of these systems in a dependable streamlined, well planned and capitalized context.
Leveraging Every Infrastructure & Public Sector Investment
The vast majority of municipal telecommunications infrastructure follows the routing of our transportation infrastructure rights-of-way. This transportation infrastructure is set to grow tremendously in the coming years.
Every investment in roads, highways, and mass transit right-of-way has the capacity to help accommodate our much needed broadband distribution at the least possible cost while providing the highest reliability and service quality.
The public sector already manages a vast network of knowledge industry and creative economy institutions – libraries, colleges, cultural districts, economic development zones, etc.
Both the private and the public sector will be investing financial and human capital in the development of our broadband resources.
There is every reason to leverage each investment in infrastructure and every improvement in public knowledge and creative economy institutions to further these resources.
Broadband Synergies with Public Sector Knowledge Industry & Creative Economy Engines
The public sector has tremendous sunk capital, as well as the hopes of our communities, invested in a network of Knowledge and Creative Economy institutions: Libraries, Public Colleges & Universities, Cultural Districts, Community Colleges and Workforce & Economic Development Agencies.
Integrating Broadband Resources among these networks could unleash a huge upwelling of creative productivity - the stuff of our futures.
This surge of activity would be broadly distributed across the country, leveraging existing institutions and cultural networks.
A fundamental re-framing of our broadband resources is overdue. These resources make extensive use of public rights of way, public spectrum and public air space. While less visible than roads, rail and air transport systems they are increasingly central to all forms of development. Hence we might call them the Invisible Public Way.
This network is less constrained by geography than other means of transport. It can become ubiquitous if it is designed to be capable of evolving that way. [the ubiquity argument]
A whole new generation of Broadband places wants to develop - sensory organs on the new broadband nervous systems, allowing communities to learn how to skillfully use these new resources, and supporting the development of their new enterprises.
If we seek to enable all Americans to initiate new community, cultural and commercial activities, regardless of location, then ubiquitous access to substantial symmetrical information exchange must be a success criterion for our National Broadband Strategy.
Development of Broadband Resources Needs Transparency & Careful Design
The Design of the voice, video and data/telecom nervous system of U.S. cities is an anachronistic process needing reform at local, regional, state and federal levels.
It is outside of the current comprehensive planning process, and delegated to telecom & cable utilities that generally come into the process reluctantly and late, and have very different interests than the communities they serve.
The urban design community has no effective means to discuss or affect its planning in the context of community, cultural and commercial development planning.
The mapping by telecom/cable companies is occult, proprietary information. The FCC’s mapping is known to be inaccurate and so general as to be useless.
Urban designers and regional planners don’t even think of this as an issue in their world.
The current utility monopoly structure for these services is crumbling but still dominant. It limits competitive pressures that might cause innovation and world class systems to be developed. This system occupies the space where broadband resource planning and deployment might happen, without filling the need in the public interest.
The current players in this arena have no incentive to provide services to areas needing community, cultural and commercial development. They cherry pick the established need areas, redline extensively, and are fighting to continue providing service levels far below world standards.
All of this is inconsistent with the practices of other developed and developing nations around the world.
Authors
Principal Author:
Bice C. Wilson, A.I.A.
Principal
Meridian Design Associates, Architects, P.C.
www.meridiandesign.com
Contributing Authors:
Michael Max Knobbe
Executive Director
BronxNet
www.bronxnet.org
Dr. Norm Jacknis
Director, IBSG Public Sector
Cisco Systems, Inc.
www.cisco.com
Chuck Sherwood
Senior Associate
TeleDimensions Inc.
www.teledimensionspublicsector.com
Noah A. Wilson
Student of Sustainable Economic Development
Warren Wilson College
Have a look at teledimensions' Integrated Broadband Infrastructure PP. Rita has asked us to weave it in, and to help refine it's presentation.
http://www.teledimensionspublicsector.com/downloads/21st%20Century%20Broadband%20rev2.pdf