April 2, 2005
Dayton’s Uniquely ‘Hot’
Wireless Initiative
By Joseph Kornowski
LexisNexis Product Planner
Among the nation’s few free municipal wireless Internet
services, Dayton’s Hot City network embodies a unique
partnership with other cities and private entities.
“This is the model that will sustain municipalities
long-term,” says Bill Hill, the city’s director
of information and technology services.
About 18 months ago, when wireless technology finally appeared
ready for prime-time outdoor use, he approached the city about
an economic development initiative to provide a wireless network.
Officials agreed to help launch the pilot program but did not
want to finance it with the city’s general fund.
It seemed unfair to use taxpayers’ money for what was
supposed to be a truly free service, Hill says. His department
couldn’t support the initiative and still provide other
essential services for which it is responsible.
In the true spirit of technological and municipal innovation,
Hill went looking for private-sector funding. He started with
large Internet providers who offer proprietary broadband access
within the city. Those providers, however, would have required
wireless users to pay monthly subscriptions between $20 and
$80. So he approached other local businesses he had worked with
in the past.
He and the city reached an agreement with HarborLink, then
a division of R.B. Tangeman Co. Inc., as well as P&R Communications
Service Inc. and DONet Inc. Under the public-private partnership
arrangement, HarborLink agreed to act as prime contractor, making
the largest investment in the infrastructure, while P&R
handled the installation and service of the radio units (the
“access points” in the wireless network). DONet
provided the backhaul access - the “pipe” - to the
Internet.
In exchange for Harborlink’s significant investment -
an amount company representatives do not disclose - the business
will receive revenue from small ads it serves up on the wireless
service. Ads appear on pop-up windows every 12 minutes “only
if you click to change the stream,” Hill says. However,
to minimize intrusion on the users’ experiences, ads will
not emerge when people simply read or research a particular
Web page.
Another first in this service model is what Hill calls a “me
too” clause in the city’s contract with its private
partners. It allows other cities in the area to sign onto the
city’s contract and receive the same features and benefits
as the Hot City service. “This allows entities to get
into the game that otherwise wouldn’t be there,”
he adds.
Hill stresses the service targets outdoor spaces, in part so
that it does not conflict or compete with indoor wireless zones
created by local businesses. By the same token, the city wants
to allow businesses the opportunity to enable Hot City users
to roam into the businesses’ proprietary systems.
The network’s current pilot program, offering wireless
service in about 1 square mile downtown, will test the technology,
coverage areas, placement of access points and the degree of
user adoption. The city wants to “see if the model supports
the volume,” Hill says. Also, the city will be looking
to test the technology’s ability to facilitate city services.
If the pilot succeeds, the city may request proposals from
all interested vendors to cover 55 square miles in Dayton. Additionally,
the city may try to expand coverage right up to the edge of
Dayton schools and college campuses, offering them the ability
to take over the service for students and faculties. The pilot
program may end Dec. 31 or sooner, Hill says.
Coverage – From Pilot to Pervasive
The service uses wireless local-area network (WLAN) technology,
sometimes referred to as Wi-F i- (“Wireless Fidelity”)
or 802.11 (the technical standard), whereby data is sent and
received via high-frequency radio waves rather than cables or
wires. This is the same technology that provides wireless access
to patrons of coffee shops, restaurants, hotels and other public
establishments in which people may retrieve e-mail, check news
and sports scores, and browse the Web.
These stores, buildings, parks or schools are “hotspots”
- islands of wireless coverage typically no larger than football
fields but usually smaller. People who leave hotspots lose wireless
connections, which is inconvenient for those needing the Internet
while on the move. Still, the proliferation of wireless hotspots
has driven the mainstream popularity of Wi-Fi access. The market
research firm In-Stat/MDR forecasts that the number of hotspots
will grow to more than 40,000 by the year 2007.
Dayton’s Hot City service is no mere hotspot; access
to the wireless network is not limited to a particular building
or park. The pilot phase of the city’s initiative will
offer connectivity in an area of the Central Business District
bordered on the north by the Great Miami and Mad rivers, on
the west by I-75, on the south by the railroad tracks near Fifth
Street, and on the east by Keowee Street. This includes the
Oregon Business District, RiverScape, Fifth Third Field, Webster
Station and the Tech Town area.
Eventually, however, Dayton’s wireless service aspires
to offer coverage in “all 55 square miles of the city,
all of the city for outdoor public spaces,” Hill says.
This will make Dayton “the first city in Ohio to initiate
citywide, edge-to-edge WiFi coverage,” according to the
city’s press release.
A growing number of cities seek to provide expanding wireless
coverage areas. Two types of initiatives include “wireless
zones” and “wireless clouds,” says a December
report by the University of Georgia’s Mobile Media Consortium
titled Wireless Clouds and Zones: A Survey of Municipal Wireless
Initiatives.
A wireless zone is an aggregation of hotspots covering a large
area, such as a mall or a convention center, says the report,
authored by Scott A. Shamp and Bailey White. Coverage gaps may
exist inside the area.
Wireless clouds, however, “offer continuous coverage
over a significant portion of a city’s or town’s
geographic area usually using multiple hotspots,” the
report says.
Dayton became a proud new cloud city this month. And the cloud,
says the report, “is the most significant step toward
ubiquitous and pervasive coverage to be found in the Wi-Fi®
movement today.”
The study’s researchers surveyed 16 clouds and 38 zones
throughout the United States. While 28 percent of the report’s
cloud municipalities offered free wireless access, 40 percent
of those clouds were financed by cities.
Dayton’s program is free to users and to taxpayers.
Here are some goals Dayton officials hope to achieve by offering
wireless access:
• Enhance the community: Two city commissioners, Joey
Williams and Matt Joseph, have been instrumental in making
the wireless service a reality. Both have advocated strongly
for using technology to enhance services and the quality of
life for citizens.
• Develop the economy: Williams believes the service
will make the city more competitive and “go a long way
toward helping Dayton attract that creative class of people
who will help fuel our community’s future success.”
• Bridge the digital divide: The city seeks to offer
broadband Internet access to all its residents and visitors,
including those who cannot afford such services. “Dayton
is working to break down the barriers of the digital divide
without burdening taxpayers in the process,” Mayor Rhine
McLin says.
• Improve city services: Wireless technology could help
the city by facilitating automated meter reading for gas and
water services, automated vehicle location for improved routing
of waste-disposal and snow-removal vehicles, and mugshot and
fingerprint transmissions for public safety agencies, Hill
says.
|