Make sure to tag everything with your name.  

From: Nate Burke 
Sent: Sunday, August 28, 2016 12:30 PM
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Ownership of wire / fiber in a building

If you can get the contract to be the 'riser management' company, would that 
allow you to set high rates and discourage anyone else from coming in?  We've 
run into that in a few class A buildings.  'Oh, you need a cat 5 run from floor 
3 to floor 5, that will be $5000, and we are the only company allowed to do 
work in the riser.  


On 8/28/2016 11:19 AM, Justin Wilson wrote:

  I have typically ran across the terms “Franchise rights” and “Riser rights” 
when it comes to buildings.

  If you have franchise rights you are the only one with rights to provide your 
product to that building.

  Riser rights just gives you access to to raceways, risers, etc. for running 
your cable.   You could get exclusive access to such things, but I don’t see 
that as often as franchise rights.  I think this is mainly due to a franchise 
fee is typically higher and more beneficial to the building owner.  

  A telco can cry foul and play the fact that telephones are an essential 
service. Even if they can’t legally do anything, they can pressure the building 
owner enough where it becomes an issue. I have seen tenants want to order 
landline phones in buildings where a WISP had exclusive rights.  The tenant is 
going to be favored by the building owner almost every time. 

  My advice get exclusive access to any pathways for cable in regards to your 
services with the ability to sublet.  If you can get it, get an exclusive 
franchise for providing data services. 

  Justin Wilson
  j...@mtin.net

  ---
  http://www.mtin.net Owner/CEO
  xISP Solutions- Consulting – Data Centers - Bandwidth


  http://www.midwest-ix.com  COO/Chairman
  Internet Exchange - Peering - Distributed Fabric

    On Aug 28, 2016, at 10:26 AM, Paul McCall <pa...@pdmnet.net> wrote:

    I know that has been discussed several times in the past, but I recall a 
few variables so I will re-ask the question.
     
    If our company goes into a building and wires (either pre-construction of 
post construction), will a contract legally cover us so that nobody else can 
come around and claim rights to use that to distribute a service also?
     
    Does that “ruling” change it we install conduit as well?
     
    We have a bunch buildings to get “wired” over the next 60 days and I want 
to protect ourselves if at all possible.
     
    Paul
     
    Paul McCall, President
    PDMNet, Inc. / Florida Broadband, Inc.
    658 Old Dixie Highway
    Vero Beach, FL 32962
    772-564-6800  
    pa...@pdmnet.net
    www.pdmnet.com
    www.floridabroadband.com



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