| Southwestern
Community College and Drake Enterprises of Franklin
announced last week the formation of BalsamWest
FiberNET, a public/private partnership created
to facilitate the deployment of a high-capacity
fiber-optic network ring through Jackson, Macon,
Swain, Graham, Clay and Cherokee counties.
BalsamWest was formed to ensure that the southwestern
region of the state can participate fully in a
global economy by providing open and affordable
access to state-of-the-art infrastructure, according
to SCC's Laura Pennington.
"BalsamWest FiberNET will give the region
the tools it needs to educate and train the work
force of the future, support advances in health
care, improve the ability of local businesses
to succeed, and create opportunities to generate
good jobs for the future," said Pennington.
"Our region must have adequate infrastructure
in order to be part of the 21st century economy,"
David Hubbs, director of Internet Services for
Drake Enterprises and manager of Dnet Internet
Services said. "By the end of this decade
nine out of 10 jobs will require the use of computing
and communications technologies.
"Business, education, law enforcement, government
and the medical community will depend more and
more on access to affordable and reliable high
speed data transport," he continued. "Without
it, our region will not be able to compete. A
fiber-optic ring will fulfill this need with virtually
unlimited capacity and maximum reliability."
According to Pennington, BalsamWest will bring
virtually unlimited capacity to, from and through
the area.
The network is to be deployed in five segments
connecting the six westernmost counties of North
Carolina.
Construction of the first segment is under way,
connecting Jackson and Macon counties with a "fiber-optic
backbone."
As for SCC, the fibers will be used to connect
the college's campuses in the three-county area,
she said.
"Right now were are leasing infrastructure,"
she said. "It's very expensive and not always
reliable."
While SCC plans to offer Internet service to
its students and faculty, neither the college
nor BalsamWest will be in the business of Internet
service provider, Pennington said.
"We will be making the fiber available to
anyone in the region," she said. "But
we are not selling service; that's important to
note."
Both Pennington and Hubbs pointed out the collaborative
four-year effort to bring high-speed fiber to
WNC instead of relying on large service providers
like Verizon and BellSouth to provide the service.
"If we wait for the telecommunications giants
to determine when our region merits the investment,
it will be too late," said Hubbs. "With
a public/private partnership such as BalsamWest
Fiber
Net, our community can do this now. Drake Enterprises
is proud to be part of this effort."
When the first phase of the project is completed
in mid-November, business and homeowners could
begin to experience the benefits of faster, more
reliable Internet service when local ISPs like
Drake offer the service to its customers. Business-to-business
digital transactions, which are quickly becoming
the norm, will also be easier over the new fiber-optic
lines, she Pennington.
BalsamWest has selected the Education and Research
Consortium's Asheville MetaPoP as its upstream
connection to the Internet. BalsamWest's network
will connect the area west of the Balsams to the
Asheville MetaPoP, a second tier Internet network
access point funded through the efforts of Congressman
Charles Taylor.
"In a new model of innovation and collaboration,
BalsamWest FiberNET is creating an open infrastructure
available to the public, private and non-profit
sectors - a model other rural regions might want
to consider," said Pennington. "The
availability of this network promises to help
rural Internet service providers to better serve
home and business customers through better access,
lower prices and higher quality."
"Western North Carolina has much to offer
high tech companies but will be overlooked unless
it has access to this type of high-speed network
at prices comparable to metropolitan areas and
a highly-trained labor force," said Hubbs.
SCC's commitment to education and community development
has driven its involvement in improving telecommunications
infrastructure in the region - with the new Macon
campus being connected in the initial deployment,
said SCC President Cecil Groves.
"Infrastructure like this will allow the
college to tap into advanced teaching tools, provide
education virtually anytime, anywhere, and help
our public partners (such as the schools and libraries)
access resources anywhere in the world,"
said Groves.
The Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians, which
have an interest in the southwest region and a
technological vision for the future, have taken
formal steps to be part of this enterprise. Increased
government efficiency will be the Eastern Band's
first goal, said tribal planner Brandon Stephens.
As a partner in the corporation, the tribe will
also concentrate on using the availability of
high-speed fibers as an economic recruiting tool,
Stephens said.
"It used to be that if you built water and
sewer into an area, industry would come,"
he said. "That's not the case anymore. Now
you need the high-tech infrastructure."
Tribal leaders would also like to prevent out-migration
of area residents, he said.
"Right now people are getting high-tech
degrees and they are leaving us to find work,"
said Stephens.
BalsamWest is also exploring ways it can support
the work of AdvantageWest, which received funding
from the Rural Internet Access Authority for middle
mile infrastructure deployment in Jackson, Macon
and Clay counties. The $1 million grant was awarded
to AdvantageWest based upon strategies developed
through the Appalachian Access initiative, a three-year
effort led by SCC, the WNC Knowledge Coalition,
Appalachian Regional Commission, N.C. Rural Economic
Development Center and AdvantageWest.
BalsamWest invites companies from anywhere in
the world to tap directly into the ultra-high-speed
capacity of its fiber backbone and its connectivity
to the high performance supercomputing capacity
of the Asheville MetaPoP, said Groves.
"We can connect their employees in our area
with others anywhere in the world, allowing them
to work together in real-time just as if they
were in the same room," Groves said. |