A18 News Blue Mountain Eagle BROADBAND Continued from Page A1 Trail Electric Cooperative about hanging the cable on the co-op’s power poles, but no price has been established, Green told the Grant County Court on Nov. 8. Making connections A big question for many has been how broadband ac- cess would be distributed from the main cable to individual homes and businesses. Com- missioner Boyd Britton asked Green if the new broadband network would connect with rural homes in the county by underground fiber or wireless. The answer depended on a number of variables, Green said, including the density of homes in an area and whether the coalition that will build and operate the network can obtain state or federal funding. There are advantages to us- ing fiber, Green told the Eagle. “Fiber is more expensive on the capital side but much lower cost on operations and maintenance,” he said. “You also get lower capacity (with wireless). At least in John the Day, we intend to explore both wireless and wireline options as well as services from vari- ous providers.” When Oregon Telephone Corporation replaced aging copper wires hanging from poles in Mt. Vernon with bur- ied fiber-optic lines in 2005, it was supported with a $10 million federal loan from the Rural Utilities Service. Directional-boring ma- chines were used to run cables under the John Day River and Beech Creek. Once the cables were buried, crews connected fiber-optic lines to customers’ homes, providing better ser- vice than offered in Portland, Ortelco manager Stephen Sch- weitzer said at the time. All this came at no cost to Ortelco’s customers. The $10 million, five-year project con- tinued into Hereford/Unity, Dufur, Dayville and finally Prairie City. Ortelco General Manager DeeDee Kluser said the com- pany is continuing with its “fiber to the home/premise” program. Homes and business- es along Main Street in John Day have been connected, and crews will soon be running aerial fiber in the Hillcrest, corner’s SH T HOT EEK OF THE W School: Grant Union Grade: 12 Parents: Rocky & Deanna Maley Sport: Football Position: Offensive/Defensive Linebacker What I like best about my sport: “I like spending time with a great group of guys. It keeps you busy and doing something productive. It gets you in shape and makes you work hard.” Coach’s Comment: “Dillon has been a pillar of our program for four years. He has earned multiple all-league honors and has been a pleasure to coach.” -Coach Jason Miller munities and customers in Grant County, Kluser said the company’s goal is to pro- vide internet service to some areas by using wireless. Running fiber to Seneca, Long Creek and Monument, however, is beyond Ortel- co’s capabilities for now, she said. “We’re expanding us- ing our own manpower and funds,” she said, adding that while Ortelco’s month- ly fees are higher than what the coalition’s broad- band network might offer, “our install fees are very low.” 911 ties. It might prove difficult for small rural communities in Grant County to find money for 911 dispatch in their city budgets or to pass a special option tax or bond measure to fund the service. “It’s not my job to travel around the county educating the various city councils on this issue,” Green said. Green offered three op- tions to the city council: out- source 911 dispatch to Fron- tier Dispatch in Condon; form a cooperative dispatch center with an adjacent county; or create a new intergovernmen- tal agreement to maintain a lo- cal dispatch center with local cost-sharing and local control. Green said he preferred the third option and would be happy to see the joint service be independent of the city. “Couldn’t this independent agency charge us whatever they wanted?” Councilor Paul Smith asked. “We would become a cus- tomer,” Green agreed, “but we don’t have a lot of options.” Green suggested that the head of the new joint agency or its board could be elected by countywide voters. In the meantime, Green suggested creating a task force with the four members that “have skin in the game” — the city, the county, Blue Mountain Hos- pital and Malheur National Forest — to work on a solu- tion that could be presented to the dozen or so communities and groups that would form a new joint dispatch service. “This is solvable, but there’s too much politics,” Green said. “It should be a policy decision.” Councilor Shannon Adair suggested ways to improve how the issue could be pre- The Eagle/Richard Hanners Kelvin Taysom, left, temporarily left his engineering post at Oregon Telephone Corp. on Nov. 17 to help field technician Cory Hayes run fiber cable to the Families First office on South Canyon Boulevard in John Day. The big spool behind them holds twin-fiber cable for running to businesses and homes. The private company continues to expand its fiber-optic access. the history of the local dis- patch center, suggested mem- bers stopped coming to User Board meetings because in the early years after the joint service formed in 1989 the statewide telephone excise tax “covered everything.” Green noted that under state law the lead agency for the dispatch center — which is now the city — can’t sim- ply abdicate its responsibility without following a required process. But the city “is not obligated to cover the smaller communities,” he added. State law requires cities and counties to provide 911 emergency service, but Mea- sure 5 passed in 1990 limits the total amount of tax com- munities can levy on proper- PALMER PROUD SPONSOR OF GRANT COUNTY ATHLETES 100 E. Main • Stoplight in John Day 541-792-0425 Seventh Street and Charolais Heights neighborhoods and west of John Day. Ortelco has also run fiber south along Highway 395 into Canyon City as far as the courthouse, with homes connected along Humbolt Street. Kluser said addition- al capacity will be run along the highway from the high school to the courthouse. Ortelco originally began offering high-speed internet for business customers and was surprised by the rapidly growing demand by residen- tial customers. As for more rural com- Two models Green presented two mod- els to the county court for how a public broadband network could be established in Grant County. Sandy, Oregon, which has the best network in the state, used no tax dollars in building its citywide network — it was paid for by user fees. The net- work is run as a public utility overseen by the city council. SandyNet began with DSL and wireless in 2001 and be- gan to switch to fiber in 2008. The network has never seen an outage in eight years, accord- ing to Sandy’s IT manager, Joe Knapp. Green said Knapp has visited John Day to talk about Sandy’s network. The broadband network in Ammon, Idaho, is also pub- licly owned, but it was built neighborhood by neighbor- hood with multiple local im- provement districts, similarly to how sidewalks are funded. Ammon offers an open-ac- cess network, and users can switch internet service pro- viders within seconds through software. Green told the Eagle that the task force is consider- ing working with EntryPoint, the company that developed the open access network used by Ammon. Green told the court that Continued from Page A1 DILLON MALEY Wednesday, November 22, 2017 Continued from Page A1 24815 At least eight people sent formal com- plaints about Palmer to DPSST after he met with people who participated in the 41-day occupation of the Malheur Na- tional Wildlife Refuge in 2016. Most of the complaints focused on Palmer’s involvement with the refuge occupiers, after Palmer met in John Day with three occupiers and the president of a militia group in January 2016. A com- plaint from John Day Police Chief Rich- ard Gray also accused Palmer of destroy- ing a public record, and an anonymous complaint accused Palmer of issuing costs to connect fiber to homes ran about $3,000 in Ammon and $4,000 in Sandy. Ammon offers 100 mega- bits per second symmetrical (upload and download service) for about $45 per month, and Sandy offers 1 gigabit (1,000 megabits) per second symmet- rical for about $60 per month. For comparison, Ortelco offers up to 100 mbps for $120 per month, and CenturyLink offers 10 mbps DSL service for about $45 per month. Green told the Eagle the task force’s target is to start at 100 mbps and go up to 1 gbps. No specific prices were cited, but Green has said the proposed network could offer lower prices than the private sector. Green told the court he wasn’t opposed to a public-pri- vate partnership, but he said the private sector has failed so far to provide quality inter- net service to many area resi- dents and businesses. He also said Ortelco and CenturyLink lack the capital needed to run broadband to rural communi- ties, such as Seneca or Long Creek. When asked if commu- nities could opt out after they joined the coalition, Green said yes. “If it doesn’t pencil out, we can back out,” he said. “We would only use state money.” sented to voters, but Green said he doubted the Grant County Court would bring the special option tax back for another vote. It likely would only come back by petition from the voters, he said. The optimal solution to the funding problem would be to raise the telephone excise tax from 75 cents per month to about $1.50, but Smith noted that the legislature and the League of Oregon Cities were not interested in addressing the issue. If a solution is not found, the city could end up spend- ing $1 million on 911 dispatch over the next 10 years, Green said. “This is a problem that needs to be solved,” Green said. “It can’t just be met with a shrug and the comment, ‘Oh, John Day will figure it out.’” concealed handgun licenses to out-of- state residents. Department of Justice Chief Counsel Michael Slauson said in an Oct. 10 letter the investigation found “insufficient evi- dence” Palmer destroyed public records, and “the evidence does not support a con- clusion” Palmer violated state concealed handgun license laws. JOHN DAY VIDEO & ELECTRONICS SALES ON: 23991 417 W. Main, John Day (541) 575-1387 Located in the West Main Plaza Open Tues.-Sat. 11am-9pm 24824 • SONY Electronics • TV’s • Sound Systems • Blu-Ray Players • Christmas Movies • 100s of Games for PS3, PS4, Xbox, Xbox 360, Xbox 1, Nintendo Wii and Switch Sole Searching for Winter? 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