i2-news - NLR and Internet2 Applaud FCC’s One Gbps Conn ectivity Goal For Community Anchor Institutions
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NLR and Internet2 Applaud FCC’s One Gbps Conn ectivity Goal For Community Anchor Institutions
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- From: Lauren Rotman <>
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- Subject: NLR and Internet2 Applaud FCC’s One Gbps Conn ectivity Goal For Community Anchor Institutions
- Date: Tue, 16 Mar 2010 13:10:13 -0400
NLR and Internet2 Communities Applaud FCC’s One Gigabit Per Second Connectivity Goal For Community Anchor Institutions Expansion of Existing Research and
Education Networks Are Key to Accelerating FCC National Broadband Plan
Vision Ann Arbor, MI and Cypress, CA - March 16,
2010 -- The Internet2 and National LambdaRail (NLR) communities strongly
commend the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for emphasizing the
importance of providing advanced broadband to community anchor institutions in
its National Broadband Plan. The FCC plan outlines the goal of providing these
institutions with one Gigabit per second (Gbps) connections as well as support
for the development of a “Unified Community Anchor Network” (UCAN) that could
be built leveraging existing non-profit research and education networks like
Internet2 and NLR and their partner regional networks. UCAN would be dedicated
to providing high-capacity nationwide connections for universities, schools,
libraries, community colleges, healthcare providers, public safety entities,
public media and other “community anchor institutions” across the country. The FCC plan recognizes that these
institutions have broadband needs that are substantially different than the
needs of residential consumers and require far different capabilities in order
to fulfill their missions and spur economic growth and opportunity. As the FCC
recognizes in its plan, the nation does not have to start from scratch to
connect the over 200,000 community anchor institutions across the country. The FCC National Broadband Plan states, “In the
past, the connectivity needs of research institutions have been met by
non-profit research and education (R&E) networks such as Internet2 and
National LambdaRail. R&E networks played a central role in the development
and growth of the Internet itself through ARPANET and later NSFNET. Today,
similar R&E networks provide high-speed (10 Mbps-1 Gbps) connectivity to
66,000 community anchor institutions. But more can be done—it is estimated that
only one-third of anchor institutions have access to an R&E network today.
This model should be expanded to other community institutions . . . . Expanding the R&E network model to
other anchor institutions would offer tremendous benefits.” Almost fifteen years ago, universities banded
together to create a structure of university-led non-profit R&E networks at
the national, regional and state levels. National R&E backbones operated by
Internet2 and NLR together with over 30 regional R&E networks connect an
estimated 66,000 community anchor institutions across the country with very
high performance, open networks engineered to meet the vast bandwidth needs of
these organizations. As the FCC plan suggests, building on the
extensive investment the research and education community has already made in
national network infrastructure and leveraging the human expertise and
collaborations they have already developed would greatly accelerate the
delivery of UCAN to all of the nation’s community anchor institutions. The
R&E community detailed such a recommendation in a filing to the FCC in
January 2010 (see: www.bit.ly/b767KX) Glenn
Ricart, NLR president and CEO, said,
“At NLR we’ve seen based on our own experience how state, regional and national
networks can collaborate to create a seamless, national broadband platform that
has helped produce a quantum leap in research and education productivity. We applaud the FCC for recognizing
that equipping our community anchor institutions with 1-Gigabit or higher
connectivity to each other and to state and national resources will similarly
enable our schools, libraries, healthcare providers and other community-based
organizations to be more productive and to deliver an enhanced array of
services. NLR enthusiastically
supports the FCC’s bold vision for a National Broadband Plan and stands ready
to work with all parties to consider how the existing network assets and
expertise of the research and education community can contribute to making UCAN
a reality.” Doug Van Houweling, Internet2 president and CEO, said, “For
over twenty years, students, faculty and researchers in our community have been
using emerging broadband technologies to work together in virtual classrooms
and collaborate in global laboratories. The FCC's National Broadband Plan will
help enable the same life-changing technologies at community anchor
institutions nationwide. We look forward to working with the FCC to ensure that
this visionary plan benefits fully from the existing network investments,
leading-edge applications development, and technical expertise residing in the
research and education community." Peter Siegel, CIO and
vice provost of Information & Educational Technology for
the University of California Davis, said, “When we consider the wealth of data coming online from across the community—electronic
medical records, vast sky survey and physics data, genome sequencing, as well
as data on the natural forces that surround us—we are at a real tipping point,
where researchers, policy makers, students, critical service providers, and
health care workers will be able to generate and depend on timely, effective,
and in many cases life saving, information that will be available
instantly. The FCC’s clear vision and goals are the catalyst for moving us
forward, by ensuring that the community anchor institutions are able to join
together in a sustainable way to create, use, and build on these unprecedented
and priceless sources of information.” Robert Musgrove, president of Pine Technical
College, said, “Our
rural community & technical colleges are the anchor institutions that are
critical in any effort to expand Internet2-level broadband into under-served
rural communities. The FCC’s National Broadband Plan recognizes that
reality and represents a major strategic step forward in bringing rural America
onboard to realize the benefits of high speed Internet connectivity. A unified
community anchor network is a solid and achievable tactic for this important
strategy.” Carol Willis,
manager of the Texas Education Telecommunications Network (TETN) which is
dedicated to serving the K12 community in Texas; and Kim Owen, advanced applications coordinator, North Dakota State University and the North Dakota
Statewide Technology Access for Government and Education network said, “The research and education community has for close to a decade
promoted the use of advanced networks among the K20 community by providing
state education networks access to nationwide research and education networks –
creating, in essence, a ‘National Education Grid.’ A unified community anchor
network that builds on this success represents an opportunity to not only reach
many more community anchor institutions in the US but also expand the diverse
collaborative community of K20 innovators and expertise developed by our
national initiative and others.” National Emergency
Number Association (NENA) CEO Brian Fontes said, “The transition to Next Generation
9-1-1 and emergency communications systems depends on access to specialized
high-capacity broadband networks like those operated by the research and
education community today. The development and availability of a community
anchor network for public safety is an important step toward making a
nationwide Next Generation 9-1-1 system a reality.” Carla
Smith, executive vice president of the Healthcare
Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) said, “Providing reliable high speed broadband that
builds on the success of the research and education community is critical to
improving the quality, safety of - and access to - healthcare and is necessary
to ensure the successful deployment of health information technology across the
US.” Christa Werle, electronic services coordinator for Sno-Isle Libraries in Washington state, said, “Increasingly, our patrons are coming to the library in search of media-rich interactive online content and experiences often not available in their homes. Simultaneously, in addition to traditional print resources, libraries are offering more downloadable and streaming content requiring robust broadband connectivity to access. Moving forward, the creation of UCAN will help libraries provide the online experiences that our students, job searchers, small-business owners, and families need and want.” Dr.
Timothy Lance, president and chair of NYSERNet, the regional research and
education network serving the State of New York, said, “The FCC has embedded in policy the role that community anchor
institutions and the networks that served them have played in advancing the
state of the art of networking, from the first public use of the Internet
protocol with NSFNET and creation of the original regional networks a quarter
century ago, to building the first ISPs by the regionals shortly thereafter, to
deployment of modern optical networks and network technologies today. This plan
helps sustain the extraordinary symbiosis here between this research and
education networking community and their mission driven ability to experiment
with the network’s future, and the carrier and technology community with which
we have worked.” # # # About Internet2 About National LambdaRail (NLR) Owned and operated by the U.S. research and education community and dedicated to serving the needs of researchers and educators, NLR is the innovation platform for some of the world’s most demanding research projects and a wide range of public-private partnerships. NLR’s coast-to-coast, high-performance network infrastructure offers unrestricted usage and bandwidth, a choice of cutting-edge network services and applications, and customized support for individual researchers and projects. For more information, please visit www.nlr.net. Media Contacts: Internet2 Lauren Rotman 202.331.534 National LambdaRail Kristina Scott
650.678.9034 |
- NLR and Internet2 Applaud FCC’s One Gbps Conn ectivity Goal For Community Anchor Institutions, Lauren Rotman, 03/16/2010
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