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Spokane
Boasts Model Gigabit Network
by Chris McManes
In March, IEEE-USA called for the
United States to deploy widespread wired and wireless gigabit
networks as a national priority. The call attracted the
attention of officials from Spokane, Wash., which has already
adopted this strategy on a municipal level and can serve as a
model for other U.S. cities.
“As we move into this information
age, and we’re well into it, we need to stay ahead,” Spokane
Mayor James West said in an April interview. “IEEE-USA’s efforts
nationally will help the entire country stay cutting edge.
Locally, that will also help us make our case with our citizens
and our legislature. And we get to use the information.
“Our colleges will be stronger,
our kids will be stronger, and our communities will be stronger.”
IEEE-USA’s white paper,
Providing Ubiquitous Gigabit Networks in the United States,
from its Committee on Communications and Information Policy (CCIP),
says that the nation must act promptly to ensure that a new
generation of broadband networks
—
of gigabit per second speed
— is ubiquitous and available
to all. Failure to act will “relegate the U.S.
telecommunications infrastructure to an inferior competitive
position” and undermine the future of the U.S. economy.
“Priority deployment of gigabit
networks is essential for the United States to maintain its
world leadership in the knowledge economy,” IEEE Life Fellow and
IEEE-USA CCIP member Dr. John Richardson said. “Information
drives our lives and our prosperity. The problem is that current
networks aren’t fast enough to distribute that information
properly.”
Broadband speed is not a problem
in Spokane, an eastern Washington city of about 197,000 in a
metro area of 400,000. The city has more miles of high-speed
fiber per capita than any other U.S. city. And its reliable,
high-speed network is not limited to the wired world. The city
launched the nation’s largest municipal wireless fidelity (Wi-Fi)
network (SpokaneHotZone) in its central business district last
summer. This provides users free wireless Internet access for
two hours a day through the zone’s broadband provider.
Hoop Dreams Provided Catalyst
The SpokaneHotZone was initiated
in 2003 during the city’s annual
—
and world’s largest —
3-on-3 basketball tournament. With 6,000 teams from around the
world playing 25,000 games throughout the city, scheduling and
score reporting was arduous when done on paper. So someone
proposed placing a Wi-Fi transmitter on top of city hall,
allowing scoring, scheduling and statistics management to be
done online. Spectators and players loved the system, and
afterwards city officials noticed that people were still tapping
into the wireless antenna and logging on to the Internet.
Spokane soon realized how
beneficial such a wireless system would be to its mobile
workforce, including police officers, fire fighters and others.
A public and private partnership emerged and the 100-block
SpokaneHotZone was born.
“I was pleased to hear about the
public-private partnerships that the city has successfully
implemented,” Richardson said. “The idea of hot zones covering
major parts of a city is an idea whose time has come.”
By the end of next year, Spokane
will be linked with Seattle, Pullman, Wash., and Boise, Idaho,
among other cities, through the Pacific Northwest Gigapop
(“gigabit point-of-presence”). While current bandwidth between
Seattle and Spokane, for example, is 155Mbps, this high-speed
Ethernet link (dubbed “Gigapop2”) will increase bandwidth to
10Gbps. (A megabit is one million bits; a gigabit is one billion
bits.)
The potential benefits of such a
high-speed cyber infrastructure to government, industry and
academia are enormous. Spokane’s Gigapop2 network is being paid
for with $1 million from the state government.
“Gigapop2 will vastly increase
our bandwidth and speed, linking Spokane to the nation and the
world,” West said in his January 2005 State of the City address.
“It will significantly advance research and technology,
education and health care, and economic development.”
Spokane’s Terabyte Triangle
provides fiber throughout downtown into more than 100 buildings,
making older buildings wired for business today.
“Those kind of things deliver on
the promise that we were all given many years ago, that you
could be in a small community and work in a big community,” West
said. “You could have all the benefits of being in rural America
and having a comfortable lifestyle, while at the same time being
employed by a multi-national corporation.”
West also wants to take advantage
of Spokane’s geographic location, which is free of volcanoes,
major earthquakes, tsunamis and tornados, to promote the city as
an ideal location for a West Coast data storage center.
“We’re out there in a nice,
comfortable area and people could move their back-up data to
Spokane over high-speed broadband, store it there and be
secure,” he said. “We have several companies now going into that
business and selling to our West Coast friends to store their
data. The state of Washington just put one of their back-up
centers in Spokane.
“We’re 300 miles from Seattle, so
we have a real advantage of being just far enough away that
we’re safe, but close enough that if a corporation needs to send
some employees to a temporary location that use their data, they
can get there fairly easy.”
The Spokane School District
deploys dark fiber to each of its schools and community
colleges. The 10/1000 Mbps Ethernet connection can easily be
upgraded to gigabit speeds for a small, one-time upgrade charge.
West agrees with IEEE-USA that
the entire nation should be linked through gigabit networks. He
likened it to the westward expansion of the railroad, the
building of the Panama Canal and the construction of the
Interstate highway system.
“Each of these projects was done
for military purposes, but did huge things for the American
economy,” he said. “I see the deployment of broadband into every
community having not just commercial benefits, but also
defense-related and education-related benefits.”
In a
position adopted in June, IEEE-USA advocates establishing a National
Health Information Network (NHIN) to take advantage of
cutting-edge networking technologies and provide secure and
reliable shared access to health information. Once again,
Spokane is out in front with the Inland Northwest Health
Services (INHS). This nonprofit corporation’s Information
Resource Management (IRM) health information network provides
integrated information systems to Spokane hospitals, physicians
offices, imaging companies, pharmacies and the region’s health
care community, enabling those groups to share patient medical
information.
IRM stores approximately 2.6
million patient records and is used by more than 30 health care
agencies in Washington and Idaho. Clinical applications include
electronic storage and distribution of radiology images and lab
results, access to patient information on a personal digital
assistant, and electronic pharmacy review and monitoring, among
other things. The telehealth network also provides online
insurance eligibility, patient registration and appointment
scheduling.
In Spokane, INHS has a
Metropolitan Area Network (MAN) that uses gigabit Ethernet with
a fiber ring. The Wide Area Network (WAN), which serves rural
areas, connects through INHS to the MAN. Each hospital has a
Local Area Network (LAN) that also connects to the MAN, making
Spokane’s hospitals among the most wired in the world. As a
dedicated network, it is unified, secure and stable.
Through the work of its Medical
Technology Policy Committee, IEEE-USA believes that an NHIN could reduce
medical errors resulting from insufficient information regarding
a patient’s history, prescribed medications and current
condition; provide fast access to health data in an emergency
situation; and curb rising health care costs by eliminating much
of the paper-based processing of patient records and insurance
claims.
Rep. Nancy Johnson (R-Conn.),
chair of the House Health Subcommittee of the Ways and Means
Committee, said that, “greater use of IT can dramatically
improve the safety and quality of our health care system while
also reducing costs. I am encouraged that (the Department of Health
and Human Services) is moving forward to adopt health IT, and
Congress wants to work with the administration to shape the
final product.
“I believe that a public-private
approach appropriately recognizes the key roles that both the
government and the private sector play in the critical area of
health IT.”

Chris McManes is IEEE-USA's
senior public relations coordinator in Washington, D.C. Comments
may be submitted to
todaysengineer@ieee.org.
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