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posted by martyb on Thursday September 08 2016, @10:48AM   Printer-friendly
from the sharing-the-right-of-way dept.

AT&T is fuming at the approval and likely passage of a Nashville, TN, ordinance that would allow Google Fiber to bypass previous obstacles to utility pole access:

Officials in Nashville, Tennessee have voted to give Google Fiber faster access to utility poles, approving an ordinance opposed by AT&T and Comcast. AT&T has already said it would likely sue the city if it implements the new rule. [...] Google Fiber is available in parts of Nashville, but expansion has been slow in part because of how long it takes to get access to utility poles. When Google Fiber attaches wires to a utility pole, other ISPs must first move their own wires to make the pole ready for new wires. The Nashville Electric Service, which owns most of the poles, must also review applications and inspect AT&T's and Comcast's line work before letting Google Fiber attach to any pole. AT&T also owns some of the poles in the city.

The One Touch Make Ready ordinance would let a single company—such as Google Fiber—make all of the necessary wire adjustments itself without having to wait for incumbent providers to send construction crews. Google Fiber applauded the vote last night, saying that "Improving the make-ready construction process is key to unlocking access to a faster Internet for Nashville, and this Ordinance will allow new entrants like Google Fiber to bring broadband to more Nashvillians efficiently, safely and quickly."


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 08 2016, @02:34PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 08 2016, @02:34PM (#399166)

    The argument might hold with their cloud or software services, but physical infrastructure involves a significant capital investment and multi-year contracts for things like access to these poles.

    There's no point in Google discontinuing services, they'd still have to pay out full terms on the access contracts and they won't easily pay off all the glass they've strung up if nobody's paying for access.

    Even if they did - another telco would snatch up that physical plant within seconds.