►
From YouTube: November 28, 2016 Council Workshop on Broadband
Description
Council agendas, minutes, and packets can be found online here:
www.cariboumaine.org/index.php/government/city-council/council-meetings/
A
Good
evening,
everyone
tonight
is
a
workshop
with
the
caribou
broadband
coalition.
That's
the
dude
is
investigating
about
bringing
broadband
to
caribou
and
very
informal
meeting
and
Austin
I.
Don't
know
if,
if
you
want
to
go
through
this
presentation
here
or
if
everybody
read
it
and
just
wants
to
ask
questions
about
others,
I.
B
B
So
purpose
of
the
workshop
this
evening
is
for
the
ramen
coalition
and
the
City
Council
will
sit
down
and
discuss
doing
the
bribe
and
say
with
Tilson.
The
study
would
help
us
gain
more
knowledge
surrounding
broadband
and
the
options
that
exist
to
make
it
available
to
all
caribou
citizens
study
will
look
at
four
different
governance
and
ownership
strategies,
open
access
versus
controlled
access
networks,
municipality,
agreeing
to
anchor
a
privately
owned
and
operated
network.
The
municipality
owning
but
operated
by
a
third
party
and
municipal
I
want
to
end
operated.
Tell
someone.
B
B
Not
spending
millions
of
dollars
to
build
a
network
we're
trying
to
learn
if
building
a
network
is
even
feasible.
We
have
an
opportunity
with
this
study,
to
gain
more
knowledge
about
whether
or
not
it
makes
sense
for
the
city
to
pay
control
of
our
destiny
and
get
involved
with
building
out
of
fibre
network.
There
are
several
great
examples
of
what
a
fibre
network
can
do.
The
city
of
a
man
died,
though,
realized
what
is
possible
and
is
building
the
internet
network
of
the
future.
B
Households
and
businesses
can
instantly
change
Internet
service
providers
using
a
specially
designed
innovative
portal
with
a
with
this
network,
they're
saving
money,
creating
competition
for
broadband
services
and
creating
powerful
in
the
public
applications.
There's
a
length
of
the
youtube
video
for
that
one
Sammy
Oregon
has
implemented
a
fiber
network
because
the
private
sector
was
unable
to
provide
better
internet
services.
A
fiber
network
that
connects
the
Municipal
Building
saves
money
in
a
telecom
costs
enabling
better
communication
across
municipal
buildings
and
livability
for
their
citizens.
You
can
there's
a
video
link
there
as
well.
B
Some
of
the
concerns
that
the
Coalition
has
heard
over
the
past
several
months
include
if
the
broadband
is
already
here
or
will
be
here
in
a
few
years,
why
would
the
city
get
involved?
First
off
the
term
broadband
is
used
quite
loose
with
the
FCC
defines
broadband
is
25
megabits
per
second
download
speeds
and
3
megabits
upload.
The
state
defines
broad
man
is
10
mega
live
megabits
for
download
and
upload
speeds.
Some
companies
in
our
area
off
early
speeds
and
some
do
not.
B
The
speeds
of
the
Coalition
is
seeking,
is
100
and
mega
bits
per
second
download
and
upload
and
potentially
even
faster
upload
speeds
are
what
is
the
most
important
for
small
and
home-based
businesses?
Well,
some
areas
the
community
can
get
speeds
up
to
50
megs.
There
are
many
citizens
in
our
community
that
are
without
connectivity
at
all,
there's
no
guarantee
that
the
private
company
will
bring
reliable
high-speed
Internet.
100
Meg's
are
better
to
our
area.
B
We
could
be
at
the
will
of
private
companies
for
win
or
even
if
we
would
see
these
types
of
speeds
available
to
all
citizens.
Let's
be
on
the
front
end
of
this
change.
In
chart
our
own
destiny,
rather
than
waiting
to
see
if
the
private
sector
will
we
ever
decide
to
bring
it
to
us,
another
concern
is
heard,
as
the
taxpayers
will
be
liable
to
cover
the
costs.
No
one
in
the
room
here
today
could
say
with
hundred
percent
confidence
that
this
would
cost
the
taxpayer
money.
B
B
Speeds
and
while
the
individual
user
may
not
need
anything
faster
than
what
is
deliver
today,
that's
not
always
the
case
for
every
person
in
town.
There
are
many
areas
alone
that
cannot
get
the
internet
at
all.
Getting
these
people
connected
would
be
a
huge
step
forward.
Faster
internet
speeds
benefit
businesses,
not
just
businesses
that
may
locate
in
downtown
caribou,
but
the
small
businesses
in
other
parts
of
our
community
you're
the
home
based
businesses
or
telecommuters,
just
like
roads
and
bridges,
were
the
driver
for
economic,
develop.
The
1950s
the
Internet
is
the
driver.
B
Here
it
allows
for
better
communications
around
the
city
for
police
and
fire,
and
it
opens
the
door
for
education
with
the
21st
century
curriculum.
Today,
the
schools
of
RS,
you
39,
have
internet
speeds
of
100
Meg's
down
and
up
I'm
talking
with
the
superintendent,
with
these
speeds,
they're
able
to
provide
additional
online
based
curriculum
computer
programs
or
21st
century
opportunities
for
the
students.
Because
of
this,
when.
C
B
Be
great
to
offer
this
type
of
access
and
connectivity
to
students
and
families
at
home
as
well
from
a
January
2015
Portland
Press,
article
Maine
has
ranked
close
to
the
bottom
and
lists
of
broadband
speeds
by
state,
including
a
recent
face
of
net
metrics
data.
That
said,
main
ranks
49th
out
of
the
50
states
and
a
recent
report
from
akamai
technologies
that
puts
main
at
48th
among
us
states
and
fire
behind
countries
such
as
estonian
maka.
B
Many
citizens
believe
that
we
could
see
more
small
businesses,
more
telecommuting
jobs
and
more
distance
learning
opportunities
and
giving
young
people
and
other
reason
to
stay
if
we
have
better
access
to
faster
image.
That's
from
the
survey
that
was
done
earlier
this
year
and
the
full
survey
results
aren't
part
of
the
packet
there's
no
guarantee
when
it
comes
to
economic
development,
that
anything
will
work.
We
spent
countless
hours
trying
to
come
up
with
new
ideas
and
new
ways
to
attract
businesses,
families
and
tourists
to
our
area.
B
The
study
is
another
piece
of
an
overall
economic
strategy.
One
City
Council
makyo
economic
growth
council,
discussed
at
length
earlier
this
year,
while
this
economic
development
strategy
would
certainly
provide
better,
faster
internet
to
serve
everyone.
In
some
cases
provider
net
for
the
first
time
to
citizens
locator
go.
This
is
not
all
about
getting
faster
to
internet
speeds
for
us
individually.
Yes,
that's
a
part
of
it
with
the
larger
vision.
Ninety-Five
percent
of
the
mission
of
the
broadband
coalition
is
to
provide
state-of-the-art
infrastructure
for
potential.
Mrs.
increase
risks.
B
A
E
So
other
banks,
other
businesses,
would
have
that
same
opportunity.
If
there's
I
mean
there's
fiber
optics,
apparently
on
Main
Street,
fiber
optics,
apparently
on
high
street
there's
it's
in
town.
So
if
you
can
do
it,
then
somebody
else
in
other
business
or
whatever
would
also
have
the
same
opportunity
to
do
that
yeah.
It.
D
D
A
A
B
A
C
A
H
A
A
B
A
A
A
A
I,
don't
think
ways
to
get
the
water
company
here
to
pay
to
bring
in
the
line
and
do
all
the
main
work
first,
which
is
what
they
did
and
they
did
it
on
the
basis
of
they
would
pay
no
fees
for
using
it,
but
they
paid
the
capital
cost
right.
Putting
in
all
the
effort
that
line
just
are
the
high
speed
line
to
start
they
didn't.
A
A
Have
to
look
after
it
service
it
and
we
don't
want
to
have
to
pay
any
fees
for
it
in
the
future
and
the
city
agreed
to
that.
Okay,
that's
how
it
started,
so
they
have
no
capital
cost
than
that.
If
caribou
could
do
that
with
our
water
and
silver
division
and
have
no
capital
cost
I
think
that
would
be
wonderful
now,
the
second
stage
as
far
as
servicing
the
people
that's
set
up
so
that
they've
asked
all
the
presidents
in
the
town.
Are
you
interested
in
this?
A
C
A
Done
this
yet,
but
that's
where
they
will
put
it
the
cost
to
do
that.
If
you
are
a
resident
there,
you
want
high
speed
internet
three
thousand
dollars
since
that's
a
system
up
in
your
house
and
then
it's
done
or
you
can
pay
for
it.
Twenty
dollars
a
month
for
the
next
20
years.
That's
forty
eight
hundred
dollars
and
that
will
be
on
your
tax
bill.
So
your
tax
bill
will
go
up
two
hundred
forty
bucks
right
off
the
bat.
A
H
G
A
If
I'm
just
going
to
see
I
mean
if
Justin
to
figure
out
that
there's
going
to
be
no
cost
of
taxpayer,
and
you
can
tell
us
that
there
there
won't
be,
why
I'd
be
glad
to
do
the
study,
then,
if
that's
the
case
I
mean
everything.
I
see
tells
me
this
going
to
be
it
the
cost
of
the
taxpayer.
I
mean
I'm
gonna
subtract
the
cost
to
the
taxpayer,
who
is
costing
them
20
cotton,
200
people.
G
H
A
No,
no,
that's
not
the
important
part.
I'll
tell
you
what
the
important
part
is
to
me
doing.
This
study
and
I've
read
Tilson
studies
more
than
one
that
they've
done
in
other
communities
and
I've
read
studies
that
have
been
done
in
some
of
these
communities,
such
as
almond,
and
the
way
the
studies
are
done
and
not
an
almond,
because
this
is
a
different
deal.
This
is
unique
and
I
do
think
it
is
great.
I
love
the
system.
I
love
the
way
that
that
they're
controlling
at
all.
A
A
Where
else
you
could
do
that
because
were
you
going
to
get
to
put
in
the
system
first
and
are
you
going
to
get
600
people
in
an
area,
a
small
enough
area
to
even
put
this
all
into
I'm
in
a
seven
point,
two
six
square
miles
of
city:
we're
talking
80
square
miles
here
in
caribou,
and
you
want
to
supply
this
to
all
the
citizens
and
caribou
I
mean
think
about
that
think
about
the
cost
of
doing
that
compared
to
the
cost
of
them
doing
it,
I
mean
it's
just
it.
I.
A
H
E
C
H
A
H
H
H
A
H
Of
babies
walk
into
a
row,
it
would
be
irresponsible
to
walk
into
a
room
with
these
three
players
and
pretend
that
we
know
or
that
we
have
the
information,
because
we
read
something
online.
A
little
bit
of
knowledge
is
dangerous,
Gary
and
I
think
you're
proving
that
tonight.
What
we
want
to
have
is
information,
so
we
can
make
a
definitive
decision
on
something
that
could
have
a
unique
and
wonderful
impact
to
our
community,
and
this
is
something
and
to
say
that
we've
done
zero
work.
D
H
B
B
A
B
H
H
Their
the
federal
standards
are
going
there
and
we
do
not
have
the
backbone
to
provide
it
to
all
of
our
citizens.
Wouldn't
it
be
wonderful
if
we
had
an
initiative
that
actually
took
care
of
bringing
caribou
together
and
not
just
look
at
the
compact
zone,
and
the
girls
are
that
this
was
something
that
we
all
own,
wouldn't.
A
E
H
H
The
question:
well,
why
doesn't
my
quinlan
build
I?
Think
I
did
question
yeah?
Well,
it's
because
of
the
fact
that
it
doesn't
make
sense
for
me
in
the
private
sector,
where
I
want
a
hundred
I
want
a
thirty
percent
return
on
my
on
my
investment,
where
I
can
spend
my
efforts
elsewhere
to
get
thirty
percent
and
the
city
could.
H
Day,
I
get
up
and
I
started
working
on
my
computer
and
start
interacting
with
my
clients,
it's
the
highest
and
best
use
of
my
time.
However,
if
the
city
could
maybe
reap
I,
don't
know
15
or
17
percent
of
a
profit
margin
that
may
be
nice
enough
for
a
municipality
and
again
in
the
future.
We
may
not
necessarily
see
the
internet
as
a
for-profit
industry.
A
C
G
H
A
H
A
H
Know
I
do
agree,
but
it's
trying
to
use
TIFF
money
to
find
an
off
if,
like
that's,
not
going
to
increase
the
taxes
for
the
for
the
taxpayers,
we're
going
to
be
able
to
utilize
these
funds
that
could
heavy
heavy
nice
economic
windfall
for
us
for
many
years
to
come
because
we
chose
to
invest
in
our.
We
don't
even
know.
If
that's,
if
that's
what's
going
to
be
one
of
the
outcomes,
but
our
mind
is
open
to
a
myriad
of
different
options
that
could
come
our
way.
A
E
Went
to
my
own
consultant,
who
was
a
software
developer
and
he's
based
in
austin
texas.
He
used
to
be
in
nursed
accounting
in
Presque
Isle.
They
started
their
business
in
Presque,
Isle
fiber
optics
was
there.
They
had
the
50
megabytes,
they
moved
mostly,
not
because
the
internet
was
there
and
the
fiber
optics
were
there,
but
because
the
people
that
they
needed
to
develop
the
software
they
were
working
on
were
in
the
hubs.
Okay,
now
so
I
went
to
him
and
I
I
asked
him
some
questions.
E
First
of
all,
they
are
a
intervet,
a
software
developer
with
nine
employees,
and
he
said
we
we
don't
use
more
than
10
to
20
megabytes.
He
said:
we've
got
50
megabytes,
he
said,
we've
got
the
time
warner
business
50
and
he
said
we
never
gone
that
high.
He
said
the
idea
of
putting
high-speed
internet
into
every
residence
and
caribou.
He
said
it's
unrealistic
because
they
don't
need
it
most.
People
don't
realize
that
they
don't
need
it
or
can't
use.
It
is.
E
E
Yeses
but
the
residences
for
one
thing
for
that
high
speed
internet,
he
said
they
wouldn't
use.
It
is
that
it
would
be
like
putting
having
living
in
a
25
mile,
an
hour
zone
all
around
you
and
having
a
car
that
goes
100
miles
an
hour,
but
you
can't
drive
it
because
you
don't
need
it
and
he
said
most
people
don't
realize
what
they
need.
I
also
spoke
to
a
person
who
worked
at
time
warner
for
years
and
she
said
people
would
come
in
and
say:
I
am
so
I
hate.
My
internet
service
I
hate
this.
E
C
E
E
C
A
E
Not
something,
I
don't
believe
that
it's
the
city's
responsibility
or
whatever
you
want
to
call
it
to
bring
this
I
understand
that
pioneer
is
about
a
year
and
a
half
out
from
caribou,
so
they're
going
to
be
coming
and
we've
got
in,
we've
got
fiber
optics
on
Main
Street.
If
we've
got
a
business
that
wants
to
come
in
and
say,
oh
I
want
to
open
up
a
you
know,
a
call
center
would
ever
bring
them
to
wear
that.
E
Fiber
optic
is
and
maybe
help
them
through
some
chip
funds,
maybe
or
whatever,
to
get
their
business
setup,
but
to
spend
forty
six
thousand
dollars
on
a
on
a
study
that
I
don't
know
what
it'll
tell
us
or
what
not.
But
the
point
is
even
if
it
says
yes,
yes,
yes,
you
should
be.
You
know
in
doing
this.
Where
are
you
going
to
get
the
money?
I
mean
we
can't?
We
can't
charge
the
taxpayers,
you
know
a
million
dollars
on
their
tax
bill
and
the
people
that
come
and
they
will
say
to
you
Joe
you're,.
C
E
H
E
Said,
first
and
foremost,
no
one
wants
to
put
the
taxpayers
on
the
hook
for
millions
of
dollars
for
no
good
reason.
Well,
that's
what
I'm
saying
is
that
you
don't
we
may
or
we
may
not,
but
we're
not
going
to
know
until
somebody
starts
coming
in
and
hooking
they're
telling
you
what
it's
going
to
cost.
We
already
know
that
it's
going
to
cost
fifteen
to
twenty
thousand
dollars
per
mile
to
run
fiber
optics.
That
was
already
told
to
us.
I
think
that
this
needs
to
sweat.
H
H
But
I
would
submit
to
you
that
we
don't
have
this
information
to
be
able
to
make
these
wild
claims
in
an
in
an
environment
like
this,
but
I
would
say
to
you
what
happens
if
there's
an
opportunity
for
us
to
use
some
of
our
own
equity,
our
own
sweat
equity,
to
build
out
something.
Could
that
offset
the
cost?
I
don't
know?
Well,
I
would
like
to
have
the
information,
maybe.
E
H
E
This
out
I
agree.
Maybe
you
should
be
going
to
buy
a
fair
point
or
time
winner
and
seeing
what
what
they've
got
to
offer
and
what
they
can
help
you
do
if
anything,
but
I,
don't
know
that
we
should
even
a
city
should
be
even
going
into
a
type
of
business
where
you're
going
against
your
competitors
or
whatever
and
putting
possibly
pudding
so.
H
E
H
E
H
If
we
choose
not
to
do
any
building,
nobody
will
come
and
joan
this
conversation
is
going
to
take
a
different
this.
This
whole
thing
is
going
to
take
a
tone
and
we're
going
to
need
to
understand
what
how
you
folks
are
choosing
to
lead
this
city
and
where
you
think
our
business
development
dollars
need
to
go,
because
what
I'm
telling
you
is
is
that
we
really
think
that
there
is
a
lot
of
business
opportunity.
H
H
A
E
H
E
E
E
No,
if
you,
if
you
want
they,
must
there
must
be
consultant,
sell
to
you
come
and
look
at
your
area
and
say:
okay,
maybe
this
won't
work
but
lift
you
know,
because
your
your
remote,
because
you
are
a
cold
climate
cuz,
you
then
try
the
four
seasons
or
try
retirement
place.
You
know
places
or
something
like
that.
Try
something
that's
going
to
adapt
to
this
area.
E
E
G
G
E
I
do
because
I
talked
to
many
of
my
friends
who
have
grandchildren
younger
ones
when
they
graduate
they
want
to
go
so
there.
While,
though
they'll
probably
come
back
in
15
or
20
years,
my
daughter
left
three
times
and
came
back.
My
sister
left
out
on
a
hundred
dollars
came
back
and
now
she's
gone
again.
I,
don't
believe
that
having
high
speed
internet
is
going
to
keep
young
people
all
young
people
and.
H
Joking,
this
is
what
this
money
was
meant
for,
there's
a
lot
of
good
that
could
come
out
of
this,
and
you
know
what
anything
in
it.
At
the
end
of
the
day,
it
decides
that
you
know
this
is
a
door
that
could
be
closed.
There
are
going
to
be
very
few
opportunities
for
us
to
be
able
to
jump
out
there
safely
in
the
environment
and
find
something
that
we
could
potentially
generate.
Some
additional
revenue
from
I
think
it.
H
C
C
H
E
H
E
Probably
out
of
about
6,000
people
who
could
who
are
old
enough
to
answer
I
know
I
I
answered
it
and
everybody
wants
faster
internet
they'll,
say
yeah
I
want
the
computer
to
go
faster,
but
that
doesn't
necessarily
mean
that
it's
because
they
don't
have
fast
enough
internet.
It
probably
means
it's
their
computer.
E
Think
it's
a
good
amount,
especially
anybody
that
use
any
more
than
fifty
percent.
Oh
yes,
I
bet
you.
It
is
because,
especially
for
residences,
because
they
don't
need
that
kind
of
speed
and
they
and
what,
in
what
the
former
employee
of
Time
Warner
told
me,
she
said
just
about
all
the
time
when
they
came
in
and
if.
H
E
A
E
H
A
E
G
C
H
A
A
H
H
H
H
Devil's
advocate
is
a
wonderful
way
for
us
all
to
make
sure
that
the
decision
you
know
if
it
should
ever
come
to
pass
that
we
have
people
that
are
willing
to
just
not
say
yay,
just
because
it's
it's
the
flashy
thing
to
do,
or
you
don't
want
to
feel,
but,
quite
frankly,
I
think
it's
irresponsible
for
us
to
not
look
at
this
as
a
viable
opportunity
for
this
community.
I
look.
A
A
You
have
it
that's
that
important,
like
paying
forty-seven
thousand
dollars
to
say
I,
told
yourself,
I,
guess
that's
my
and
my
other
concern
which
I
never
going
to
change.
The
finish
at
the
start
was
the
fact
that
I'm
not
so
much
against
the
study.
I
know
how
the
studies
going
to
come
back.
You
know
why.
H
A
A
Again,
I'll
just
make
a
couple
comments
about
sandy,
because
I
haven't
really
had
a
big
long
look
at
it.
I
usually
go
into
this
stuff
and
quite
a
lot
of
depth
in
their
promotion.
They
said
they
need
a
35-percent,
take
great
to
make
this
drink
even
pay
for
itself
whatever
and
are
now
at
a
sixty
percent
rate
which
to
me
means
they
should
be
making
all
kinds
of
money.
A
A
They
haven't
made
any
money
yet,
but
there
is
a
little
note
on
their
budget.
Internet
access
fees
are
projected
to
increase
due
to
the
need
to
accommodate
more
fiber
customer
traffic
and
allow
for
increased
redundancy,
so
if
they
only
needed
35%
to
break
even
why
are
they
increase?
The
rates
are
ready,
honey,
there's
something
here
again
that
someone
there
hasn't
looked
at
when
they
put
together
their
system
and
put
it
in
and
now
they're
finding
out
that
as
many
of
these
other
places
that
I've
looked
at
and
gathered
that
capital
cost.
A
A
H
H
A
A
H
H
G
H
C
G
Our
vision,
our
maybe
select
arrow,
but
you
know
to
have
some
economic
development
portion
and
right
now
we
do
not,
and
so
the
broadband
coalition
took
it
upon
ourselves
to
find
that
next
Avenue
and
one
of
my
concerns
is
there's.
There's
no
vision
here
is
what
we
do
it
for
economic
development.
You.
A
Know,
I
and
I
guess
if
this
would
have
been
handled
in
a
different
way,
I
might
have
been
more
agreeable.
I
mean
I
get
back
again.
I
can't
believe
that
we
haven't
talked
to
the
providers
that
are
there
now
to
try
to
see
what
can
be
done
and
then,
if
they
say,
there's
nothing
that
could
be
done,
then
maybe
you
could
be
talking
about
well,
what
other
possibilities
are
there?
How
do
we
handle
this?
A
I
mean
you
got
people
that
are
advertising
and
all
the
main
municipalities
about
you
know
thinking
about
a
broadband
develop
project
near
town.
Let's
talk
fair
point:
you
know
the
guy
from
pioneer
tells
me
he
wanted
to
sit
in
with
a
committee
to
talk
about
what
could
be
done
here
and
caribou
and
he
was
told
that
no
he's
not
needed.
Yeah
God,
if
I'm,
if
I'm,
trying
to
do
something
in
some
kind
of
a
business
I,
would
love
to
talk
to
the
people
that
are
involved
and
if
you're
saying
you're,
not
an
expert.
A
A
Did
you
get
a
chance
to
talk
to
him
who
all
these
companies
spare
phone?
No
I
I'm
not
involved
with
this
process,
so
council
Martin.
F
F
C
C
A
D
A
Looked
at
all
about
you
know:
I
have
two
young
fellows
myself.
I've
got
two
boys
that
are,
and
you
know
that
everything's
on
the
internet
with
them,
but
it's
all
on
the
smarticle.
It's
they
don't
have
broadband
they're,
not
even
interested
in
they
do
it
all
on
the
phone
and
I
you
know,
I
just
pull
the
thing
off.
That
shows
that
that's
growing
I
mean
it's
grown
by
six
and
a
half
percent
from
2013
2
2015
people
that
use
their
phones
to
do
all
this
stuff.
Gary.
H
A
Don't
know
if
you've
seen
this
study
the
Pew
put
up
broadband
at
home.
It
has
decreased
by
four
and
a
half
percent
smartphones,
but
no
broadband
at
home
has
gone
up
by
six
and
actors,
and-
and
that's
my
boys
are
they're-
not
they
don't
have
broadband
at
home.
They
they
just
have
a
phone
and
I
look
I'm,
not
into.
H
A
B
C
H
A
A
H
Let's
talk
about
that,
that's
it
that's
a
question
of
net
neutrality
and
what
they're
doing
is
they're
actually
throttling
back.
You
may
find
that
most
of
these
cell
phone
companies
are
actually
limiting
your
Netflix
or
YouTube
any
of
the
big
data
hogs
out
there
they'll
actually
take
you
from
your
broadband
speed
and
roll
and
dial
you
write
down.
If
you
go
over
your
10
your
allotment
and
if
you
noticing
you
listen
to
some
of
the
marketing
its,
they
don't
really
use
the
unlimited
marketing
approach
anymore,
because
it's
just
not
viable
in
the
for-profit.
So.
H
A
Legacy
I'm,
not
a
phone
person.
I
was
amazing.
I
saw
this,
but
then
I
thought
I
got
two
boys.
They
do
the
same
thing
they
don't
they
don't
have
broadband
at
home.
They
have
a
smartphone
and
that's
why
they
do
everything
on
that,
all
that
our
email,
all
their
banking,
everything
it's
not
or
not.
From.
H
What
I
understand
of
the
you
go
to
Walmart
and
pay
forty
five
dollars
for
a
tracfone
for
lack
of
a
better
phrase.
I
can
remember
some
of
their
other
names
that
are
out
there,
but
your
experience
at
paying
your
fixed
amount
of
$45
with
the
limited
amount
is
a
phenomenally
drastic,
different
experience
than
being
on
broadband.
And,
quite
frankly,
we
don't
have
the
numbers
to
be
able
to
back.