County touts “historic” broadband investment

Mauch has already hooked up some of the homes on the list of required addresses. Washtenaw County issued a press release after the first home was connected in June, touting a “historic broadband infrastructure investment” to “create a path for every household to access high-speed broadband Internet.”

The county said it is investing $15 million in broadband projects by combining the federal funds with money from the county’s general fund. Between Washtenaw Fiber Properties and the other three ISPs selected by local government officials, “over 3,000 Washtenaw County households will be connected as a result of this investment in the next few years,” the press release said.

One of the areas covered by Mauch’s funding is around a lake in Freedom Township, where he plans to begin construction on August 22, he said. “Generally speaking, it’s a lower income area as well as an area that has been without service for a very long time, aside from cellular or wireless,” he said. “The goal is to close the gap on them very quickly.”

As for the other three ISPs, the county was reportedly negotiating with cable giants Comcast and Charter, and Midwest Energy and Communications. Those three companies ended up getting the deals with the county, a contractor working on the overall project confirmed to Ars.

Under state law, “Municipalities in Michigan are not simply able to decide to build and operate their own networks, they must first issue an RFP for a private provider to come in and build,” the Institute for Local Self-Reliance’s Community Broadband Networks Initiative wrote. “Only if the RFP receives less than three viable offers can a municipality move forward with building and owning the network. There are also additional requirements that municipalities have to follow, such as holding public forums and submitting cost-benefit analysis and feasibility studies.”

The county’s RFP set 25Mbps download and 3Mbps upload speeds as the minimum acceptable tier but stated a strong preference for “at least 100Mbps download speeds, ideally with symmetrical upload speeds, from wireline technology to accommodate present and future bandwidth-hungry applications.”

Mauch faces increasing equipment costs

Mauch has made some upgrades to his operation. In our previous story, we described how Mauch was renting an air compressor to blow fiber through his conduits. He recently bought an industrial air compressor at a government liquidation auction, spending under $4,000 for equipment that often costs about $20,000, he said. He had previously spent $8,000 on a directional drill machine that installs cables or conduits under driveways and roads without digging giant holes.

Increasing prices have been a problem. Mauch said he used to buy fiber conduit for 32 cents a foot but that he’s paying more than double that now. The handholes that are buried underground at various points throughout Mauch’s network used to cost $300 and are now about $700, he said.

While Mauch built the network using his own money, he said one wealthy family last year wrote a nearly six-figure check to fund a network expansion that let “them and all of their neighbors get Internet access.”

When we first wrote about Mauch, he was using a contractor to install most of the fiber conduits and installing the actual fiber cable into the conduits himself. He said he’s using a few contractors now but he’s still doing some fiber-laying work.

One time last year, Mauch was using the rented air compressor to blow out conduits because they accumulate water. On the other end, over a mile away, “people thought it was smoke coming up from the ground and they called the fire department, and the fire department came out on two successive days because there was a water mist in the air,” he said. “One day they couldn’t figure out where it was coming from. The next day I saw them, and I turned around and I talked to them about it.”

“I’m saved in people’s cell phones as ‘fiber cable guy’”

Jared Mauch

Enlarge / Jared Mauch

Jared Mauch

Mauch said network management has been smooth without any major problems over the past 18 months or so. His network generally uses about 500Mbps of traffic, and he can ramp up to 4Gbps as needed, he said.

Mauch said he has people lined up to handle emergencies “so I can go on vacation,” and took a trip to Europe in March. During his Europe trip, there was an outage at one of the power substations in his area while he was away. Some of his customers lost Internet service due to that power outage, but Mauch’s network kept running because of the generator at his house.

“There was no power for about 24 hours, so my house ran on generator for 24 hours, and I could see which customers were out of service,” he said.

Life has changed a bit for Mauch since he became an Internet provider. “I’m definitely a lot more well-known by all my neighbors… I’m saved in people’s cell phones as ‘fiber cable guy,’” he said. “The world around me has gotten a lot smaller, I’ve gotten to know a lot more people.”