| BRYSON
CITY — Robin Fronrath figures a corporate
retreat center near the log cabins he rents to
tourists would be a natural except for one thing.
“If I could get DSL in here and make my
little valley hot where people could come here
with wireless laptops — it’s going
to be a big deal for me,” he said.
Fronrath is a step closer as high-speed Internet
access pushes into remote pockets of Western North
Carolina.
Verizon announced this month it has expanded
high-speed access in Cherokee, Graham and Macon
counties, the only ones west of Buncombe in which
no more than 70 percent of households can get
speedy Internet. The expansion also will serve
parts of Jackson County and Swain County, where
Fronrath’s business is located.
That progress addresses a national problem: Only
25 percent of households in the rural United States
can get high-speed Internet, compared with 44
percent in urban areas, according to the Pew Internet
and American Life Project.
Rural users aren’t behind because they
don’t want the service. The Pew project
found that while rural areas lagged in users,
the percentage of growth increase was the same
as in suburban areas — meaning when broadband
is available, rural customers will buy it.
The gap has hampered economic development, WNC
officials say, and soon will affect people as
more information and entertainment are delivered
on the Internet.
A rural success
Some WNC economic development officials noticed
years ago that there was a demand in rural areas,
but the infrastructure wasn’t being built.
They came up with a solution: the BalsamWest FiberNET.
In 2003, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians
worked with Southwestern Community College and
Franklin-based software developer Drake Enterprises
to build a fiber optics loop through the region.
It was completed in March.
The $10 million network was developed to serve
businesses, nonprofits and governments. Businesses
already are enjoying its benefits.
Harris Regional Hospital, part of the WestCare
system, last year connected to the network at
a lower price than it was getting on the commercial
market and got faster service.
High-speed communication for residential users
remains in the hands of for-profit companies like
Verizon. And those companies make decisions on
upgrading their access options based on numbers
of users.
“I think that rural areas will lag because
there are just not sufficient concentrations of
populations for the provider of high-speed access
to justify the cost of investment,” said
Cecil Groves, president of SCC and one of the
architects of the BalsamWest deal.
Fiber optics is next
Groves said Verizon’s DSL expansion is
beneficial for now but soon will be eclipsed by
even faster technology being unveiled in large
cities. The recent expansion is expected to bring
DSL a third of a mile closer to 4,700 customers
in North Carolina, some in the eastern part of
the state.
Groves predicts a second digital divide when
urban areas switch to fiber optics connected to
individual homes that can deliver everything from
movies on demand to health care services and security.
“It is always going to be the law of supply
and demand,” he said. “So rural areas
have to constantly work to make themselves competitive.”
Fronrath has owned his log cabin rental business
in Swain County for seven years.
Like many entrepreneurs in the WNC tourism business,
he makes a living doing more than one thing. He
also runs a recording studio.
He already has a clubhouse built for his corporate
retreat idea, and he is working with local company
Dnet Internet Services to get high-speed access
over Verizon’s lines.
Partnerships like that one are how rural WNC
will stay connected in the future, said John Short,
general manger of BalsamWest FiberNET.
Short said he believes smaller providers will
soon use his company’s fiber optics infrastructure
to route services to individuals.
Because the fiber is already in the ground, it
saves the providers money and makes serving rural
areas more attractive.
“The idea is to allow people in our region
to be able to connect with anybody they want to,”
he said. |