By MATT HOPF
Herald-Whig Staff Writer
Herald-Whig Staff Writer
Quincy [IL] and a United Kingdom-based company remain in contact in hopes of reaching an agreement to install a fiber-optic network throughout the city.
The City Council approved a pilot project in September that allowed the company to install 1,300 feet of fiber-optic cable in municipal sewer lines along South 46th Street.
The cable is laid on the bottom of sewers and anchored down with mats, a process that has been used in the UK.
“The pilot was successful, and we are in discussions now with the city of Quincy to make Quincy the first fibercity in the U.S.,” said Richard Tauberman, spokesman for i3 America. “We’re hopeful that in the coming weeks that we can begin work.”
Chuck Bevelheimer, the city’s director of planning and development, said negotiations have not started yet, and the city needed to check one more reference.
The sewer lines were filmed prior to the installation and reviewed after it was installed for the 30-day pilot project.
“We’ve reviewed tapes … and generally speaking there is some sedimentation that the engineering and utility departments have associated with the fiber and there’s discussion about ways that if we go forward with an agreement that we’re going to want to mitigate that in the agreement,” Bevelheimer said.
“In other words, as part of our negotiations, we want to have a discussion on how we’re going to address that whether it’s equipment or our annual service schedule have to change.”
Any costs associated with sedimentation would be negotiated as the city and i3 America work toward an agreement.
The company originally made initial contact with the city through aldermen Paul Havermale and Kyle Moore through their 3rd Ward website.
Officials with i3 told the city’s Central Services Committee in September that the lines installed would offer a standard service of up to 100 megabits a second, 10 times as fast as a typical cable connection. It could be boosted to up to 1 gigabit a second.
Fiber-optic service would be delivered to homes at no cost, and service providers would offer service such as cable, Internet and phone through the network.
The company recently completed installation of a citywide fiber-optic network for 68,000 homes and businesses in Dundee, Scotland.
— [email protected]/221-3391