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Navajo Nation to lose Internet signal Monday ALBUQUERQUE (AP) The thousands
of Navajo Nation residents who rely on the Internet to work, study
and communicate across their 27,000-square-mile reservation will
be out of luck Monday, if their service provider is shuttered as
planned. Its going to be a
sad day, said Ernest Franklin, director of the tribes
Telecommunications Regulatory Commission. A tribal audit last year revealed
that Utah-based provider OnSat Network Communications Inc. may have
double-billed the tribe, and it raised questions about how the tribe
requested bids for the Internet contract. Those discoveries led the Universal
Service Administration Co., which administers the service under
the Federal Communications Commissions E-rate program, to
tell the tribe March 28 that it would withhold $2.1 million from
OnSat. Jim Fitting, an attorney for OnSat,
said the delay in payment means it cant pay subcontractor
SES Americom for satellite time. With USAC taking this particular
position, it doesnt look like were going to get paid
in the foreseeable future, Fitting said. Were
already $4 million in the hole, so why should we continue doing
it? Most evenings, when residents
get off work, the reservations chapter houses are closed,
but their wireless signals remain live. So its common to see
residents with laptops sitting in cars outside working away, a local
official said. Through the Washington, D.C.-based
USAC, the FCC reimburses 85 percent to 90 percent of the costs for
Internet service to 70 of the tribes 110 chapter houses, which
operate like city governments. The Navajo Nation covers the other
10 percent to 15 percent of the cost and offers service inside the
chapter house and nearby through Wi-Fi. The USAC told Navajo President
Joe Shirley Jr. in a March 28 letter that it is withholding money
for OnSat for 2006-07 because of the possible overbilling and because
the tribe didnt comply with federal rules that require it
to select the most cost-effective service or equipment through a
fair, open and competitive bidding process. The USAC asked the tribe to prove
OnSat provided the service it is billing for and has not overbilled. OnSat won a preliminary injunction
last July in Window Rock District Court barring the tribes
auditor from further disseminating the audit, said Fitting, the
OnSat lawyer. We dont believe this
audit is valid, Fitting said. Tribal regulator Franklin said
he has given the USAC documents detailing how OnSat was selected
and has shown USAC personnel the service operating last year at
sites they randomly selected. We proved that we are delivering
the bandwidth and that we went through the proper procurement system,
he said. We had to dig up all these documents. OnSat will continue to provide
Internet services for the tribes Division of Public Safety
and the Office of the President and Vice President, offices whose
satellite service isnt dependent on FCC funding, Fitting said. Each Navajo chapter received a
grant for computers and Internet access from the Bill and Melinda
Gates Foundations Native American Access to Technology Program
in 2000. But it wasnt possible to establish dial-up access
or create a wireless grid because the reservation
largely lacked wired telephone service. So the tribes Division of
Community Development contracted with OnSat in 2001 to provide satellite
Internet service to the chapter houses even though satellite
Internet technology is costly, slow and unreliable. The tribe eventually would have
stopped using OnSat, Franklin said, but it needed to sustain the
satellite connections for at least two years until a wireless grid
is completed on the reservation. Its not like its
not being used and its just going to go away, he said.
Its used tremendously by the public. Its just
sad that this has to happen. Navajo President Shirley said
reservation residents have come to rely on Internet access to improve
their professional and educational lives. It would be a very sad day
for the children and people of the Navajo Nation if the dark clouds
descend, the lights go out, and access is denied to the chapter
houses on the reservation, in large part, because USAC has failed
to timely fund our application, Shirley said in a December
letter to Mel Blackwell, vice president of USACs Schools and
Libraries Division. Inscription Chapter House community
services coordinator Victoria Bydone said she is bracing for a backlash
from residents who typically park outside her chapter house in the
evening. Its going to be unfortunate, she said. Its not going to be very good. |
Friday On the rocks Squabble erupts over Red Rock Park rodeo management Local man charged with coke, pot possession Navajo Nation to lose Internet signal Monday |
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