Philly moves forward with Wi-Fi plan

The city of Philadelphia detailed its plan to blanket the city with Wi-Fi after signing its final contract with EarthLink, which will build and operate the network on behalf of the city.

The city said Wednesday that pricing of the broadband service will be kept below $20 per month. Economically disadvantaged users will be charged $9.95 a month, while other Internet service providers will be charged a wholesale rate that allows them to sell access for $20 a month or less to retail customers, the city said.

Comcast, which offers cable modem service in Philadelphia, offers a three-month special on its broadband service for $19.99. After that, the price shoots up to $42.95 per month for customers who also subscribe to its cable TV service and $57.95 for those who don't subscribe to its cable TV service. But Verizon Communications, which sells DSL (digital subscriber line) service in Philadelphia, offers a comparable broadband service for $14.95.

Still, city officials say that the new Wi-Fi network will offer consumers more choices without risking taxpayer money. As part of the deal with the city, EarthLink will build, manage and maintain the wireless network.

The next step in the process requires the city council of Philadelphia to approve two ordinances. One ordinance will allow EarthLink, which won the contract back in October, to deploy wireless transmitters and receivers on city streetlights. The other ordinance is a management agreement between the city and Wireless Philadelphia, the nonprofit organization established to oversee the wireless project.

"We will work closely with City Council as they consider these ordinances necessary to make this exciting program a reality," John F. Street, mayor of Philadelphia, said in a statement. "Building a wireless network is another major step forward for our world-class city. It's tremendous news for Philadelphia."

Pending approval from the city council, EarthLink will begin installing the wireless equipment right away. Initially, it will set up a small 13-square-mile pilot network. But eventually, it will deploy wireless equipment on approximately 4,000 streetlamp poles, covering 135 square miles of the city with Wi-Fi. EarthLink will pay the city a fee for access to the streetlights.

Also as part of the deal with the city, EarthLink will provide free hot spots in 22 locations around Philadelphia, and provide the city with 3,000 free or discounted Wi-Fi accounts and 700 discounted T-1 accounts to be used at the city's discretion.

Wireless Philadelphia will receive about 5 percent of the access revenue that EarthLink generates from the service. The group will use this money along with other monies raised to invest in educational and social programs to help Philadelphia citizens.

The city also plans to use about $2 million received from EarthLink for the rights of way to the streetlamps to help implement initiatives designed to bridge the digital divide, including the purchase of about 10,000 discounted computers for low-income residents and training programs.

More from News.com on this story's topics

Networking

Create an email alert | RSS feed

Mobile/wireless

Create an email alert | RSS feed

802.11/Wi-Fi

Create an email alert | RSS feed

Verizon Communications

Create an email alert | RSS feed

Comcast

Create an email alert | RSS feed

EarthLink

Create an email alert | RSS feed

See more CNET content tagged:
Philadelphia, EarthLink Inc., city, Comcast Corp., broadband service

8 comments (Page 1 of 1)
Let the graft begin...
by fafafooey March 2, 2006 6:57 PM PST
"Also as part of the deal with the city, EarthLink will provide free hot spots in 22 locations around Philadelphia, and provide the city with 3,000 free or discounted Wi-Fi accounts and 700 discounted T-1 accounts to be used at the city's discretion." - Those free hot spots will end up in locations near or owned by Da Mayor - Half of those free/discounted accounts will go to employees of Da Mayor and City Council - Most of the 700 discount T-1 accounts will end up in businesses donating hefty sums to Da Mayor But that's what you get in a corrupt city like Philly, with single party rule and the unions holding their puppet strings...
Reply to this comment View reply
Let the graft begin...
by fafafooey March 2, 2006 6:57 PM PST
"Also as part of the deal with the city, EarthLink will provide free hot spots in 22 locations around Philadelphia, and provide the city with 3,000 free or discounted Wi-Fi accounts and 700 discounted T-1 accounts to be used at the city's discretion." - Those free hot spots will end up in locations near or owned by Da Mayor - Half of those free/discounted accounts will go to employees of Da Mayor and City Council - Most of the 700 discount T-1 accounts will end up in businesses donating hefty sums to Da Mayor But that's what you get in a corrupt city like Philly, with single party rule and the unions holding their puppet strings...
Reply to this comment View reply
An ambitious plan, but will it work?
by J.G. March 3, 2006 2:10 AM PST
I've been following the low-cost Internet access issue for years. This plan is quite ambitious. My concern is that the contract with Earthlink allow little wiggle room. If it doesn't, Earthlink will attempt to increase its take, and possibly fees, as soon as it can.
Reply to this comment
An ambitious plan, but will it work?
by J.G. March 3, 2006 2:10 AM PST
I've been following the low-cost Internet access issue for years. This plan is quite ambitious. My concern is that the contract with Earthlink allow little wiggle room. If it doesn't, Earthlink will attempt to increase its take, and possibly fees, as soon as it can.
Reply to this comment
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
RSS Feeds
Add headlines from CNET News.com to your homepage or feedreader.
Google
Yahoo
MSN
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Today's Top Stories
Early player leaves as Facebook goes corporate
Video: Monday QuickCast, 1st edition
RIM unveils BlackBerry Bold/BlackBerry 9000
HelioVolt claims CIGS solar-efficiency mark
Virtual worlds for preschoolers? They're here
Most Popular Stories
Google to launch Friend Connect for the social Web
FBI probe nets counterfeit Chinese networking parts
Stolen Mac helps nab burglary suspects
RIM makes a Bold BlackBerry debut
A modest proposal to fix Dell's customer service
Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Verizon Communications (0.00%) 0.00 37.91
Comcast (0.00%) 0.00 21.68
EarthLink (0.00%) 0.00 9.23
Dow Jones Industrials (-0.94%) -120.90 12,745.88
S&P 500 (-0.67%) -9.40 1,388.28
NASDAQ (-0.23%) -5.72 2,445.52
CNET TECH (-0.64%) -11.13 1,724.28
  Symbol Lookup
Detroit auto show
Detroit auto show

Detroit auto show
advertisement
On TV.com: MILEY CYRUS photographs
Advanced
search
Advanced
search
Visit other CNET Networks sites: