Laura Fong: On the sixth floor of an affordable housing complex in the Bronx,
residents have a new internet service provider: it’s called People’s Choice
Communications, an employee- and-community-owned internet cooperative with a
mission of bridging the digital divide. Technician Mario Muñoz is leading the installation.
Mario Muñoz,
People’s Choice: In the hallways, we put
basically the Wi-Fi devices. And that will boost the signal to all the
apartments along the hallway.
Laura Fong: People’s Choice is installing what’s called a “mesh wifi” network in the Bronx; they install antennas on
rooftops and wifi routers in buildings to connect
residents to a high-speed wifi signal.
Using antennas and
wireless routers, mesh networks keep installation costs down.
With the help of grant funding, People’s Choice is currently providing
service for free to its customers and plans to keep monthly costs to no more
than $15 in the future.
In New York City, the
need for affordable internet is most acute in the Bronx, where almost 38
percent of homes are without broadband,
according to Mayor Bill de Blasio's Master Internet Plan released in January
2020.
Laura Fong: Brenda Rosen is CEO of Breaking Ground, an affordable housing
nonprofit that serves low-income and formerly homeless people in New York
City.
Breaking Ground operates
one of the first Bronx buildings where People’s Choice is being installed.
Brenda Rosen, Breaking
Ground: They wanted to focus
on a building that had a lot of families and would benefit greatly from being
able to have affordable Internet as soon as possible.
Laura Fong: Had you heard of an
Internet cooperative before?
Brenda Rosen: No, no. It was new for us. We’ve looked into other options for as
low cost internet services as we could find, but I never
heard of this. I mean it is not inexpensive to have internet service,
especially service that allows you to work at the speed that you need to work
at. And and for the people that we serve, saving
those dollars every month can truly, truly mean whether or
not you have enough food on the table for your children.
Laura Fong: Residents here already have Verizon and Optimum as service
options, but Michael Angeles, a college student who takes classes online, says
another option is needed.
Michael Angeles: The internet is, it's very expensive and it's not very
affordable for us.
Laura Fong: Angeles’ family currently pays $150 a month for a Verizon TV and
internet package.
Laura Fong: It sounds like you're excited at the prospect of a new internet
service.
Michael Angeles: Very excited.
Laura Fong: People’s Choice was started by a group of union electricians from
New York’s IBEW Local 3.
More than one thousand
technicians have been on strike against the telecommunications
giant spectrum for the past four years.
There’s some background
to this. In 2015, Charter Communications bought Time Warner to form the 2nd
largest cable and internet provider in the country. It operates under the
name Spectrum, serving more than 31 million customers in 41 states.
In March 2017, more than
1,800 unionized electricians in New York City called for a strike, after
negotiations broke down with Spectrum.
Troy Walcott: People couldn't make it today because they have
to pick up two or three jobs in order to keep going. Bankruptcies are
happening.
Laura Fong: It’s now the longest-running labor strike in United States
history. Troy Walcott was a union technician for two decades;
for Time Warner, and then for Spectrum.
Do you ever see yourself
working for Spectrum ever again at this point?
Troy Walcott, People’s
Choice Co-Founder: That's a good question.
What's Spectrum? Spectrum is a name on the door, but they're really holding out
a system that we built out over the past 40 years. We walk through so many
places in the city that we literally built with our hands, our entire
system.
Troy Walcott: We are going to make sure there will be internet for all!
Laura Fong: So in the past year, Walcott and other strikers launched People’s’
Choice Communications.
Troy Walcott: The wordy term is a multi-stakeholder cooperative. But what we
tell people is a bunch of strikers that work for Spectrum, we got together and
we're going to get together with the customers and own the cable system.
Laura Fong: How is that possible?
Troy Walcott: We said why not cut out the middleman, go directly to the source
and be able to get that same service. But now, instead of paying CEOs hundreds
of millions of dollars, we can take in and provide more equity and split that
and give people less cost service and higher quality. And that way we can also
invest some of those profits back into the communities that we're serving.
Laura Fong: And they’re not doing it alone. People's Choice formed the
cooperative with a community organizing group Metro IAF and green energy
startup BlocPower, which connected them to
philanthropic funding.
Troy Walcott: This is now I believe the third building where we are installing
antennas for the Bronx mesh network.
Laura Fong: So far, the cooperative has provided free internet to more than
700 residents in five buildings in the Bronx. In July, de Blasio announced a
plan to bring the service to New York City public housing. The goal is to get
up to 10 thousand residents connected to free internet in the first year, and
then charging $15 dollars a month after.
Troy Walcott: People having a problem with the internet have other problems with
food insecurity, home housing, economic income, income inequality. We see the
company now as a way to galvanize people towards some
type of movement towards something better. So why don't we get together and
join with the customers, rebuild the system that we already know how to build and we can own it together.
###
|
TIMECODE |
LOWER
THIRD |
1 |
0:34 |
COURTESY: BLOCPOWER |
2 |
1:47 |
BRENDA ROSEN BREAKING GROUND |
3 |
3:22 |
COURTESY: LOCAL UNION NO. 3 IBEW |
4 |
3:48 |
LAURA FONG @LAURAFONG |
5 |
4:32 |
TROY WALCOTT PEOPLE’S CHOICE CO-FOUNDER |
6 |
5:06 |
COURTESY: BLOCPOWER |