Re: [ashfield-broadband] Digest for ashfield-broadband@googlegroups.com - 1 update in 1 topic

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Ben Markens

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Jul 6, 2015, 8:53:02 AM7/6/15
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Hi 

I'm pretty sure that this is Rosh Hashanah
Likely to affect some neighbors 

Best regards, Ben
Sent from a wireless device. Please excuse terseness, spelling and auto correct. Feel free to call my mobile. 1-413-531-7567

On Jul 6, 2015, at 8:49 AM, "ashfield-...@googlegroups.com" <ashfield-...@googlegroups.com> wrote:

David Kulp <dk...@dizz.org>: Jul 05 10:31AM -0400

Hi folks. As reported in the Ashfield News (if you didn't get it Friday it
will be in your mailbox on Monday for 01330 residents and others should get
it early next week), we made it to 40%! But because of a communication
error, the date for the STM was missing from the article. (embarrassing,
sorry!) Mark your calendars now for the *Special Town Meeting on broadband
authorization for September 14*. The meeting is scheduled for September
primarily because the SB didn't want to hold a meeting on such a big
decision during the summer when many people were away and the FinCom wanted
more time to review details.
 
Two neighboring towns recently had tremendous, unprecedented support for
their votes. Let's hope that we can do the same! Here's an article:
 
http://www.gazettenet.com/home/17596786-95/hilltown-voices-large-turnouts-in-chesterfield-and-goshen-approve-wiredwest-broadband-fiber-optic-ne
 
And here's an article in the Wall Street Journal on home values with
reference to western MA:
 
 
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB11064341213388534269604581077972897822358?mod=e2tw
 
How Fast Internet Affects Home Prices
[image: Tom Cairns and real estate agent Carla Ness tour a home in western
Massachusetts. Mr. Cairns has been looking for a home and one requirement
is it have high speed Internet access.]
ENLARGE
 
Tom Cairns and real estate agent Carla Ness tour a home in western
Massachusetts. Mr. Cairns has been looking for a home and one requirement
is it have high speed Internet access. Photo: Michelle McLoughlin for The
Wall Street Journal
By
Ryan Knutson
Updated June 30, 2015 6:35 p.m. ET
 
In May, Kara Burke and Tom Cairns thought they had found their ideal house:
a nicely-updated older three-bedroom home in Worthington, Mass.
 
But they didn’t make an offer because it didn’t have high speed Internet.
 
“We wouldn’t choose a house that didn’t have electricity,” Ms. Burke, 26
years old, said as she explained why. “It’s right on par with those things.”
 
As the Internet becomes central to the way Americans work and live, the
digital divide is taking on greater economic significance. Students without
Internet access at home may struggle to keep up with school assignments.
Towns with less access find themselves falling behind economically,
researchers say. Now, the availability of speedy Internet service is
starting to affect Americans’ biggest purchase: their homes.
 
Real-estate agents across the country say more buyers like Ms. Burke and
Mr. Cairns are turning their noses up at homes without fast Web access.
Some studies suggest those buyers are having a keen effect on home prices.
A nationwide study released on Monday by researchers at the University of
Colorado and Carnegie Mellon University finds fiber-optic connections, the
fastest type of high speed Internet available, can add $5,437 to the price
of a $175,000 home—about as much as a fireplace, or half the value of a
bathroom.
 
David Mans, a real-estate agent outside Boulder, Colo., said after he
started noting in his online listings whether properties had Internet
availability, he got fewer calls about properties that didn’t have it. “I
have situations where people won’t even look at it if it doesn’t have
broadband,” Mr. Mans said.
 
What people want in a home can vary a lot, and values can depend heavily on
broader market forces. But real estate professionals say there are certain
features that can be a deciding factor—like an extra bathroom or pool. And
broadband is starting to figure into that same calculus.
 
Telecom companies by law are required to make telephone service available
to every residence in their service areas, but the same isn’t true for all
high speed Internet providers. Phone lines can deliver DSL service,
typically slower than 10 megabits a second. Satellite service is usually
even slower. Fiber and some cable can deliver speeds of up to 1,000
megabits a second.
 
University of Colorado researchers compared more than 520,000 home sales
between 2011 and 2013 against government data on the type of Internet
access available. It built on a 2013 study by the same researchers that
found a similar effect on home prices in New York state. The researchers
expanded their study with funding from The Fiber to the Home Council
Americas, a group made up of municipalities, small telecom companies, and
others like Google <http://quotes.wsj.com/GOOG> Inc.
<http://quotes.wsj.com/GOOG>that support the expansion of fiber networks.
 
The results mirrored the findings of a 2014 study by the University of
Wisconsin at Whitewater that found access to the Internet could add $11,815
to the value of a $439,000 vacation house in Door County, Wis.
 
The impact is most acute in rural areas, where Internet speeds tend to drop
dramatically. As of 2013, 92% of urban areas had high speed Internet,
compared with 47% of rural areas, according to the most recent data from
the Federal Communications Commission. The FCC defines high speed as 25
megabits per second or more.
 
John Wilczak was getting wireless high speed Internet via Verizon
<http://quotes.wsj.com/VZ> <http://quotes.wsj.com/VZ>’s cell towers at his
home in Santa Ynez, Calif., a town of about 4,400 near Santa Barbara. Cable
and phone companies sell high speed Internet downtown, but they hadn’t
built along his street. Mr. Wilczak’s Verizon service worked like a
cellphone plan. Once when friends brought their children for a week-long
visit, the children blew past his 50 gigabyte monthly cap and he was hit
with a more than $900 bill.
 
Mr. Wilczak recently moved to a new house and dropped Verizon in favor of a
local wireless Internet company without data caps. He said at least half of
the 40 people who considered buying his old house weren’t interested in
part because it lacked reliable Internet
 
Unreliable Internet almost derailed Adam Frost’s online business selling
wooden toys made in European workshops. Mr. Frost tried using satellite
Internet when he first moved to New Salem, Mass., about seven years ago
from a New York City suburb, where he was paying about $60 a month for high
speed Internet.
 
“We were told there was adequate Internet access when we got up here, and
then discovered there really isn’t,” Mr. Frost said. The satellite service
would go down during bad weather, and he consistently went over his monthly
data limit.
 
‘We’re already feeling the negative impacts of not having adequate
broadband.’
—Monica Webb, WiredWest cooperative
 
Mr. Frost decided to pay Verizon $600 a month to install a dedicated copper
wire to his house for more reliable service. But it still isn’t fast
enough, especially as online services grow more data intensive. Last year
it took him 24 hours to download a software update for his computer, and
just as the download was nearly finished, his connection crashed and he had
to start all over.
 
In Western Massachusetts, where Mr. Frost lives, local officials are trying
to solve the problem by building their own high speed networks. To
accomplish that they’re borrowing a tactic developed a century ago when the
region was struggling to gain access to electricity. More than 40 towns
have formed a cooperative of Municipal Lighting Plants, a type of public
utility first invented to build electricity infrastructure, and are raising
funds to build out fiber connections.
 
Monica Webb is the chairwoman of the cooperative, called WiredWest. So far
this year, 19 of those towns have passed bond measures to fund
construction. More than 40% of residents in 14 of those towns have already
paid a deposit for service.
 
“Some might call us a coalition of the desperate,” Ms. Webb said. “We’re
already feeling the negative impacts of not having adequate broadband.”
 
Ms. Burke and Mr. Cairns, who passed on the yellow three-bedroom house in
May, decided not to make any offers until they see which towns commit to
the project.
 
“After we looked at I think maybe 10 houses we were like, ‘It doesn’t
really matter. We can’t pick a house because we don’t know which towns are
doing this,’ ” Ms. Burke said. “The towns that don’t pass it we absolutely
will rule out. It’s not a question.”
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Jean Cherdack

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Jul 7, 2015, 4:23:24 PM7/7/15
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It is Rosh Hashanah and I know it will certainly affect us.  Holidays are very early this year.

Regards,
Jean

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