San Francisco leaders voice concerns about Wi-Fi project
Agency members want to avoid a restrictive franchise deal
December 19, 2005 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service -
San Francisco's plan for citywide Wi-Fi ran into some friction Friday from a local regulatory agency.
The government of the City and County of San Francisco is readying a request for proposal (RFP) for the wireless network, which is intended to provide free or affordable Internet access throughout most of the city. Several possible partners, including Google Inc., EarthLink Inc., Motorola Inc. and a local nonprofit project called SFLan, have already expressed interest in the project through an earlier request for information. The San Francisco plan would become one of the largest rollouts yet of government-initiated broadband, a concept that has generated heated political discussion in the past several months.
At a hearing Friday, some members of San Francisco's Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFCO) grilled Chris Vein, director of the city's Department of Technology and Information Services (DTIS), about the process of deciding how to build and operate the network.
LAFCO, made up of San Francisco county supervisors and members of the public, has a broad oversight role, including approval of district boundaries and annexation of land as well as contract approvals. The agency's aim in the hearing was to stimulate discussion, supervisor and LAFCO member Jake McGoldrick said in an interview after the meeting.
County Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi and other LAFCO members said they fear a deal like San Francisco's current franchise agreement with cable operator Comcast Corp., in which the board of supervisors has been presented with already negotiated franchise deals that it must approve or vote down. DTIS handles cable franchise administration and other communications and IT responsibilities for the city as well as spearheading the Wi-Fi project.
Vein, Mayor Gavin Newsom's point person for the project, said the city might propose a franchise agreement or another type of deal but would include the board of supervisors in the process.
"Our intent is to have those discussions with you before we get to the point of having to say, 'Here it is, respond to it, and if you don't like it, tough,' " Vein said. Elements such as the length of the agreement or the terms for renewal could be modified to give the public more control, he said.
The hearing also aired views on the political debate over public broadband, with Mirkarimi and McGoldrick each saying municipal ownership should be given the benefit of the doubt.
The city should be seeking the best possible service for city residents and visitors, McGoldrick said.
"My first blush on this would be [to make it] publicly controlled, publicly governed,
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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