Wilson, North Carolina first got attention on the state level about two years ago when they were well on their way to constructing a municipally run fiber optic network to deliver fast broadband, television, and telephone services to area residents. Time Warner, the incumbent provider, had bypassed Wilson for some of the highest speed upgrades. This is a situation not unknown to StoptheCap! readers like those in Rochester who face their own slower speed Road Runner service. Competition in nearby cities Buffalo and Syracuse have prompted Time Warner to upgrade speeds in those communities, but not in Rochester.
When Wilson city officials didn’t listen to the warnings from Time Warner officials, legislation introduced in the North Carolina legislature suddenly appeared which would essentially shut down Wilson’s project, and others like it, across the state.
The story below, from 2007, illustrates the divide, and the pro and con positions. Now, two years later, the same issues are back, along with a new industry-sponsored bill to once again find a way to get rid of municipal networks in North Carolina. Why StoptheCap! focuses on this issue is to help educate you about how this industry works, what alternatives are available, and give you the power to articulate to everyone why competitive, uncapped broadband service is essential to every community, at reasonable prices. This isn’t a right or left issue. It’s also one that should concern every person, no matter how much broadband service the use at the moment.
Video #1 “As long as they wote on it. Who is they? Goverment always having you best intrests in mind.