A new report on Muni Broadband & Digital Inclusion:

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*MEDIA ADVISORY*

Deepa Arora
Media Relations
Santa Clara University
500 El Camino Real
Santa Clara, CA 95053-1500
Phone: 408-554-5125, Fax: 554-5464
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Oct 18, 2006

*Silicon Valley community panel calls for public input on equal access to
municipal broadband*

SANTA CLARA, Calif. - Oct. 18 2006. A community panel organized by Santa
Clara University's Center for Science, Technology, and Society and the
Broadband Institute of California urged greater public participation in
planning broadband networks that are being commissioned by local governments
around the country. The panel also asserted that truly equal access to
municipal broadband can only be achieved by providing underserved groups --
seniors, low-income, rural residents, the disabled, and non-English speakers
-- a free or discounted tier of service with the same speed, privacy, and
security available to households that pay full price.

The panel's recommendations come as Silicon Valley, San Francisco, and other
cities wrestle with how to build and price their own high-speed Internet
networks to make broadband more accessible to residents.

The panel's recommendations came from a unique process of public
consultation known as a consensus conference, which has been used worldwide
to help the public make better-informed judgments about technology policy
issues than those that are often expressed in public hearings and polls. The
twelve members of the panel, including representatives from groups with the
lowest rates of broadband access in the country, studied background papers,
convened a public hearing where the panelists questioned experts from
government, industry, and community groups, and deliberated like a jury
before arriving at their recommendations by consensus.

"We often hear that the public doesnt know or care enough about technical
issues to make good decisions about them," said Al Hammond, conference
co-organizer and Director of the Broadband Institute of California. "These
residents not only learned about the issues, they introduced new ones that
we 'experts' haven't considered," Hammond said.

"The panel was enthusiastic about cities commissioning municipal networks,
preferably from private companies that have the expertise to build and
operate the networks," said Chad Raphael, conference co-organizer and
associate professor of communication at SCU. "But the community members felt
strongly that the public needs to have more say about shaping access to the
networks that we will all rely on one day for our phone, TV, and Internet
service."

The project was supported by a wide group of stakeholders on the municipal
broadband issue. An advisory panel with representatives from the telephone
industry, Silicon Valley technology companies, and community organizations
oversaw plans for the project. The panel's public hearing drew presenters
from AT&T; the major partners responsible for building Silicon Valley's
wireless network, including Wireless Silicon Valley (a project of Joint
Venture: Silicon Valley Network), Cisco Systems, and SeaKay; and advocates
for technology access, including the California Community Technology Policy
Group and Great Valley Center. The conference was funded by the Community
Technology Foundation of California and the California Consumer Protection
Foundation.

The panel's full report, available at *www.broadbandforall.org* , *
www.scu.edu/sts* , and lawadmin.scu.edu/law/bbic/ also included specific
recommendations for how to provide security and privacy, offer equipment and
training to get the underserved online, and reach the disabled, rural
residents, and non-English speakers in particular.

*About Santa Clara University's Center for Science, Technology, and Society*

The Center researches and promotes the use of science and technology for the
common good. Through research, education, and public events, the Center
brings together scholars, industry leaders, and public advocates to
collaboratively serve humanity by leveraging its unique strengths.

*About the Broadband Institute of California*

The BBIC is a public policy institute at the Santa Clara University School
of Law specializing in applied research and education in the areas of law,
technology and public policy. Through its research, publications and
conferences, the BBIC seeks to identify, document, address and publicize the
broadband and advanced network technology needs of California and the impact
of state and federal policies on California's needs.

*About Santa Clara University*

Santa Clara University, a comprehensive Jesuit, Catholic university located
in California's Silicon Valley, offers its 8,397 students rigorous
undergraduate curricula in arts and sciences, business, and engineering,
plus masters and law degrees. Distinguished nationally by the second-highest
graduation rate among all U.S. masters universities, Californias oldest
higher-education institution demonstrates faith-inspired values of ethics
and social justice. More information is online at *www.scu.edu* .

*About the Funders*

The* Community Technology Foundation of California* helps underserved
communities secure social justice, access, and equity through the
application of information and communications technologies.

The *California Consumer Protection Foundation* administers consumer trust
funds and distributes grants in the public interest.







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Executive Director, CTCNet Chicago Chapter
Co-Founder, Chicago Digital Access Alliance
Co-Chair, Illinois Community Technology Coalition
President, Association For Community Networking

Support the efforts of the Chicago Digital Access Alliance:
http://www.digitalaccessalliance.org
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