Google, AT&T, Eye Austin for 1 Gig Service

It looks like there could be a duel for 1 gigabit broadband
in the Texas sun.

On the heels of Google's announcement that it is expanding
its Google Fiber from Kansas City to Austin, Texas, AT&T announced that it,
too, would build a 1 gigabit fiber network to the city, so long as it got the
same breaks and incentives the city is offering. The city's mayor later suggested TIme Warner would get equal treatment, but also said that Google did not get any incentives.

AT&T is both making plans and making the point that the
help Google got in Kansas City was a big reason it was able to make the
high-speed offering.

Kansas City's willingness to smooth the way was key to
Google's roll-out of its Gigabit Internet and Google Fiber TV service, which it
plans to offer in Austin starting next year.

Why Austin? Google described it as a "mecca for
creativity and entrepreneurialism, with thriving artistic and tech communities,
as well as the University of Texas and its new medical research hospital."  Austin was also one of the cities that wanted to be the Google fiber test bed, but got beaten out by Kansas City.

Google plans to work with the city to offer free hookups to
schools, libraries and other public institutions, similar to its Kansas City
model.

AT&T said that it, too, is prepared to build an advanced
fiber optic network so long as "it will be granted the same terms and
conditions as Google on issues such as geographic scope of offerings, rights of
way, permitting, state licenses and any investment incentives."

In announcing the plan, AT&T chairman
Randall Stephenson called it "most encouraging" what he said was
"the recognition by government officials that policies which eliminate
unnecessary regulation, lower costs and speed infrastructure deployment, can be
a meaningful catalyst to additional investment in advanced networks..."

Google's answer to AT&T was essentially 'bring it on," which was seconded by Austin Mayor Lee Leffingwell

In a press conference on the Google expansion, Leffingwell was asked about the AT&T counter proposal. He said the city "would have to take a look at their operation and go through the same process that we went through with Google." He said the city had not offered any economic incentives to Google, but had simply committed to provide "expedited service and approvals for various licenses and rights of way...Certainly I think that would applicable to others."

Councilwoman Laura Morrison, who helped pitch Austin as the Google test city back when Kansas City beat it out in 2010, said that much of what Google has been doing with the city are standard procedures regulated by state law. "There is certainly nothing that is offered to Google that is not available to everyone."

Google Fiber GM Kevin Lo emphasized that Google got no special incentives, then said Google thought it was great when there is more user choice, that it welcomed AT&T's announcement and thought it was also great that AT&T "was recognizing that people wanted a gig."

John Eggerton

Contributing editor John Eggerton has been an editor and/or writer on media regulation, legislation and policy for over four decades, including covering the FCC, FTC, Congress, the major media trade associations, and the federal courts. In addition to Multichannel News and Broadcasting + Cable, his work has appeared in Radio World, TV Technology, TV Fax, This Week in Consumer Electronics, Variety and the Encyclopedia Britannica.