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Webinar on Access to Broadband

Webinar on Access to Broadband. June 13, 2012 Moderated by: Diane Cherry Institute for Emerging Issues. Webinar Instructions. All participants have been muted to avoid echo on the call. We are taking questions throughout the presentation, so please use the chat feature.

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Webinar on Access to Broadband

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  1. Webinar on Access to Broadband June 13, 2012 Moderated by: Diane Cherry Institute for Emerging Issues

  2. Webinar Instructions All participants have been muted to avoid echo on the call. We are taking questions throughout the presentation, so please use the chat feature. If your question is for a particular panelist, please let us know in your question. If your question is not answered in this webinar please send it in and we will get them answered and sent back out to all participants.

  3. Outline IEI Overview Who is Gen Z & Why Focus on Gen Z? Panelists & Discussion Angie Bailey, Director, NC Broadband, North Carolina Department of Commerce Hunter Goosmann, Executive Director, ERC Broadband Ron Walters, Executive Director, Pangaea Gail Roper, Chief Information & Community Relations Officer, City of Raleigh AlyKhalifa, President, Gamil Design, Co-founder, Designbox and SPARKcon

  4. Institute for Emerging Issues Established in 2002 Housed at NC State University Dedicated to seeding innovations through civic engagement, cooperative leadership and informed problem-solving in education, health, the natural and built environments, and the economy

  5. Who is Gen Z? Latter half of the millennial generation born between 1990 and 2002 They will be 18 to 30 in 2020 1.5 million Gen Zers in N.C. Ethnically Diverse Digitally/Technology savvy Globally Aware

  6. Why Focus on Gen Z? These youth grew up in an age when the Internet always existed. As an example: Of teens aged 13-18, 93 percent go online on a regular basis, and 74 percent have broadband in their own home. Teachers that facilitate peer learning through technology and put emphasis on critical thinking will produce graduates ready to take on innovation.

  7. Eight Ideas Generated at Forum Rethink standardize testing Cultivate mentorships Emphasize public speaking and conflict management skills Invest in Technology Entrepreneurial Education Universal wireless/broadband access Promote service-learning Teach risk taking

  8. Panelists & Discussion Angie Bailey, Director, NC Broadband North Carolina Department of Commerce Overview of broadband in North Carolina. Differences in technology types. Technical assistance directors & coverage areas.

  9. Projected Internet Growth • Cisco's Visual Networking Index Forecast • 1. More devices/More connections: • 18.9 billion network connections by 2016 vs. 10.3 billion in 2011 • 2. More Internet users: • By 2016, 3.4 billion projected Internet users, about 45 % of the world's projected population • 3. Faster broadband speeds: • Average fixed broadband speed is expected to increase nearly fourfold, from 9 Mbps in 2011 to 34 Mbps in 2016. • 4. More video • 5. Wi-Fi growth: • By 2016, over half of the world's traffic is expected to come from Wi-Fi • http://www.technolog.msnbc.msn.com/technology/technolog/internet-traffic-explode-thank-your-phone-tablet-802896

  10. Key Federal Initiatives • ARRA funding for broadband improvements • Projects to be completed in 2013. • Over $250m awarded in NC including significant middle mile infrastructure, FTTH projects. • National Broadband Plan released by FCC http://www.broadband.gov/ • Goal No. 1, next decade: At least 100 million U.S. homes should have affordable access to speeds of at least 100 Mbps up and 50 Mbps down • Goal No. 3, next decade: Every American should have affordable access to robust broadband service, and the means and skills to subscribe if they so choose. • Part of National Broadband Plan Implementation: • Reform of the Universal Service Fund – to include broadband

  11. Broadband Availability in NC • Each state collects data for National Broadband Map • http://broadbandmap.gov/ • NC Broadband Map: www.ncbroadband.gov • Household availability data is collected by combination of census block, street segment or address-level data, in accordance with NTIA national mapping program • NC Spring 2012 Data Collection: % of NC Households with broadband available: • *99% at speeds of 768kbps down, 200 up • *94% at speeds of 3mbps down, 768 up • Calculations include: DSL, cable modem, fiber, fixed wireless. Fiber coverage estimated at < 3%.

  12. What Should We Focus On?Key Challenges • Last Mile – unserved pockets • Unserved number > estimates due to census block granularity • Most pockets close to existing infrastructure. • Those unserved after stimulus projects built out unlikely to find easy solutions • NC does have significant middle mile resources to support solutions • Broadband Speeds, Capacity, Technologies • Deployment costs for higher bandwidth technologies, limited spectrum, data caps • (estimated bb data transfer for Netflix movie: 0.3 GB – 2.3 GB (HD)/hour) • 1 GB = 1024 MB • “Strategic Bandwidth Advantage” • “Big broadband” for economic competitiveness, application development • Broadband Adoption, Digital Literacy, Relevancy Gap • 2011 NC Citizen Survey (www.ncbroadband.gov): • Citizens who use the Internet Anywhere: Educ. Attainment: • Less than High School: 43%, College Degree 94%

  13. Sample MapBroadband Availability Data – Coverage versus Households • .

  14. NC Broadband, NC Department of Commerce • .

  15. Community/County-Level Broadband Planning Efforts • Key Issues: • Understand broadband coverage (last-mile) and middle mile resources • Consider undertaking more granular citizen surveys– to identify pockets of demand • Know your local broadband providers • Inquire about future deployment • Look at: (1) How many public Internet access sites are available in your community? (2) What digital literacy resources are available in your community? • Encourage broadband adoption • Encourage a broadband focus for your community • www.ncbroadband.gov (“My County”, NC Broadband Map)

  16. Panelists & Discussion Hunter Goosmann, Executive Director, ERC Broadband Overview of how North Carolina has spent its stimulus money Role of MCNC as the state’s IT backbone Regional work of the ERC

  17. ERC SUMMARY • Regional middle mile network and leader in network connectivity • Supports education, government, healthcare, and economic development • Expand regional fiber optic infrastructure and work with providers to expand coverage into underserved areas WHO WHAT HOW • Non-profit network dedicated to supporting Western North Carolina • 500+ mile network between Franklin and headed to Boone • Asheville Point of Presence and 3000 sqft data center • Partner to NOAA / National Weather Service / National Climatic Data Center • One of Four Top Tier providers of NEXRAD weather data for the country

  18. ERC SUMMARY

  19. BTOP Stimulus Summary – June 2012 * Golden LEAF supported project with $24 million matching funds * Total $144 million project * Approx 2500 miles fiber * Impacts 69 counties (67 underserved) * Serve needs of CAIs * Goal is to increase capacity and lessen access price * Goal to expand private sector partnership See: http://www.ercbroadband.org/index.php/btophttps://www.mcnc.org/btop

  20. Panelists & Discussion Ron Walters, Executive Director, Pangaea Overview of how Polk and Rutherford counties brought broadband to their area Lessons learned

  21. . Mission:  PANGAEA Internet’s nonprofit mission is to deliver affordable, reliable connectivity and services for our region.  This mission will enhance economic development, improve the quality of life, and create a broad platform of innovation enabling underserved areas.

  22. Funding PartnersSince 2003, received more than $3M in funding: Polk County Community Foundation Polk County Government & Schools Rural Internet Access Authority (e-NC Authority) Rutherford County Government and Schools AdvantageWest Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation Golden Leaf Foundation Cooper-Riis Healing Farm Facebook Ann L. Turner & Geoffrey M. Tennant Foundation

  23. Network

  24. Services Traditional internet bandwidth (unlimited speeds) Education Health Care Government Economic Development Wholesale to Residential Internet Service Providers Wide area fiber optic networks (e.g., school, medical, legal networks) Fiber leasing

  25. Customers: 85 customers with more than 130 locations in Polk and Rutherford Counties Education Polk and Rutherford County Schools Thomas Jefferson and Lake Lure Classical Academies Isothermal Community College – Polk and Rutherford Government Polk and Rutherford County Governments Towns of Lake Lure, Forest City, Rutherfordton, and Tryon

  26. Customers Health Care St. Luke’s Hospital Rutherford Regional Medical Center Medical offices, pharmacies, health clinics Commercial Upgrade from DSL, Cable Modem, or T-1 service Huge impact for economic development infrastructure Residential Internet Service Providers Skyrunner

  27. Case StudyMill Spring Agricultural Development Center Renovated 1920’s Brick Schoolhouse Agricultural Development, Farmland Preservation, Education, Community Service, Business Development 10 PANGAEA Fiber Optic Customers Spotlight: Turner HD Media

  28. Impact Nearly 200 miles of fiber in two counties Extremely reliable network: Two downstream internet bandwidth providers Diverse fiber routes to Charlotte Back up equipment and power sources Local support on call 24x7 Sustainable with strong positive cash flow and substantial cash reserve

  29. Impact Very low cost structure Non profit w/very small staff Capital costs funded through grants and partner funding Disciplined focus on bandwidth and transport only Customized bandwidth pricing less than 50% vs. competition Economic development and job growth, including use of local subcontractors Community owned non-profit that is focused on the community, not shareholders

  30. Panelists & Discussion Gail Roper, Chief Information & Community Relations Officer, City of Raleigh The City of Raleigh’s IT plan including the Digital Connectors program

  31. Panelists & Discussion

  32. Digital Connectors Free program founded by One Economy. Teaches digital literacy skills to youth ages 14-21 from low income households. Participants take skills they learn in the one year program and then train family and friends. More information: http://www.govtech.com/education/Raleigh-NC-Program-Makes -Teens-Tech-Gurus.html

  33. Panelists & Discussion Aly Khalifa, President, Gamil DesignCo-founder, DesignboxCo-founder, SPARKcon Open source pledge to donate bandwidth to achieve City of Raleigh IT program goals

  34. Questions? Please feel to ask any questions using the chat feature.

  35. www.emergingissues.org Please send any unanswered questions to: Diane Cherry Institute for Emerging Issues ddcherry@ncsu.edu 919-513-7072 Interested in other ways to invest in Gen Z? Our next webinar is on July 11th at 3:00 pm on communication skills.

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