[1st-mile-nm] Navajo Nation police to lose wireless capability

Richard Lowenberg rl at 1st-mile.com
Fri Aug 1 11:43:39 PDT 2008


Navajo Nation police to lose wireless capability

By FELICIA FONSECA
Posted 01 August 2008 @ 09:55 am EST

Police on the sprawling Navajo Nation are about to lose their access to wireless
service, which enables them to file reports remotely and easily communicate with
fellow officers in field.

A subcontractor that had provided satellite time for the Internet service plans
to shutter it as of Friday because of nonpayment for services. SES Americom, a
subcontractor for Utah-based OnSat Network Communications Inc., said OnSat owes
the company $4 million dollars.

"This is a backward step, it's not a forward step," said George Hardeen, a
spokesman for Navajo President Joe Shirley Jr. "It's unfortunate because the
Navajo Nation was a leader in wireless communication, and certainly the
president wants to regain that status as soon as possible."

OnSat's five-year contract with SES expired on June 30, and the company decided
not to renew it because of the $4 million bill. At the request of the Federal
Communications Commission, the shutdown of service was delayed temporarily,
said Nancy Eskenazi, vice president and associate general counsel for SES. But
she said service would end Friday.

Eskenazi said OnSat has had months of notice that SES would not renew the
contract with such a large balance.

"It is what it is, at this point," she said.

The loss of wireless access for police is the second recent blow to
telecommunications in Navajo country. Just four months ago, about 70 of the
tribe's 110 chapter houses lost Internet service; they had been connected
through E-rate, a program administered by the Universal Services Administration
Company under the FCC.

USAC is withholding millions of dollars in funding to OnSat in a dispute over
what OnSat had been charging the tribe and whether the tribe followed
procurement and competitive bidding rules.

An e-mail message and calls to OnSat President Dave Stephens went unanswered.
The Associated Press also left messages with an OnSat attorney, Cynthia
Schultz, who specializes in the E-rate program.

OnSat has said it is unable to pay SES because USAC is withholding its money,
which had already been approved.

The public safety network is not part of the E-rate program and had been paid
for through federal grant money, Hardeen said.

Hardeen said police and other emergency responders still can access the Internet
through land lines, two-way radios and other forms of communication. He said the
safety of tribal members won't be in jeopardy.

'It's how it used to be," he said. "We're not back to typewriters, but we're
functioning without wireless."

Dozens of wireless access points had been set up across the vast reservation.
Navajo police had been able to file reports miles away from their office and
instantly communicate with their colleagues.

"In a community where there is already so little telecommunications
infrastructure available, it is just plain disrespectful to the Navajo Nation
to pull the plug on the systems they already have in place," said former
Arizona state Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick, whose district had included parts of the
reservation.

"The Nation is already struggling to cope with losing internet access for its
schools and libraries," she said. Now, it appears that the few gains we have
made moving toward a functional public safety network are taken away."

Read the full aticle of:
http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/20080801/navajo-nation-police-to-lose-wireless-capability.htm

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


-- 
Richard Lowenberg
1st-Mile Institute
P.O. Box 8001, Santa Fe, NM 87504
505-989-9110;   505-603-5200 cell
rl at 1st-mile.com  www.1st-mile.com

----------------------------------------------------------------
This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program.



More information about the 1st-mile-nm mailing list