The 583-mile infrastructure project will directly connect more than 237 hospitals, schools, libraries, military bases, local governments, last‐mile service providers, and other anchor institutions to a high‐speed broadband network—as well as create, it is estimated, hundreds of local jobs.
The NTIA grant contributes up to 80 percent of the total project funding. The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) and Praxis Associates, the project’s private partner, will provide the remaining funds. In December, the CPUC, through its California Advanced Services Fund, awarded the project up to $19.3 million in state matching funds. The project also received essential in‐kind support from Inyo, Kern and Mono Counties.
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Community support for the project was a region‐wide effort, spearheaded by local county officials and elected representatives of the region, including County Supervisors, State Legislators, and members of Congress.
Praxis Associates, a fiber‐optic network development firm, worked with local governments in developing and designing the proposed regional network, which, upon completion, will attain broadband speeds of up to 40 Gigabits‐per‐second. “The Digital 395 Project 's open‐access network will bring new economic opportunities to the region,” stated Michael Ort, CEO of Praxis Associates, “and we are pleased to be a partner in the project.” Project completion is estimated to take between two and three years.
According to many familiar with the project, the deployment of the Digital 395 infrastructure compares to the Los Angeles Owens River Aqueduct and Highway 395 in its scope, scale and regional significance. A summary of the project is also available at CBC’s website at www.digital395.com, and from the White House web portal at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the‐press‐office/2010/08/18/vice‐president‐biden‐announces‐recovery‐act‐investments‐broadband‐project.
About CBC
California Broadband Cooperative, Inc. is a not‐for‐profit California Consumer Cooperative Corporation formed for the purposes of owning and operating the Digital 395 network, which will provide high‐speed broadband services to its members on a wholesale, open‐access basis. As a cooperative, the organization will be under the direction of a Board of Directors representing key institutions and constituents in the Eastern Sierra.
Contacts: Robert Volker ‐‐ rvolker@digital395.com
Michael Ort ‐‐ mort@praxisfiber.com


Comments
4 comment(s)I live here wrote on May 20, 2011 10:55 AM:
Nothing for the Valley wrote on Aug 28, 2010 11:21 AM:
And about the other writer and cell towers, you don't need fiber for cell towers. If you did, we wouldn't have any here at all. "
zoot wrote on Aug 27, 2010 7:05 AM:
Waste wrote on Aug 26, 2010 8:10 AM: