Transcript Document

Infrastructure
Development
& Financing
Eric Jensen
Four Horizons Development Company
Telecommunications, Broadband and
Tribal Sovereignty
• Broadband—defined by the FCC as 256 kbs, and
by others as megabytes, the amount required to
transmit moving pictures--is fairly non-existent in
Indian Country and rural communities;
• Of the 562 federally recognized tribes, only 7
tribes have been able to build its own tribal
telecommunications systems;
• Not for everyone? Broadband is a tool for selfsufficiency, governance, education, economic
opportunity
• The Mescalero story
Key Questions Before Committing to an
Infrastructure Plan
• What are the needs of the tribe: data management;
voice coverage; network linkage; capacity; degree
of reliability versus cost; Broadband requirements
• Primary consideration: How will the Tribe pay for
the infrastructure? Will the teleco be a Tribal
service with sufficient tribal funds & resources to
service the capital and operational debts or will the
teleco be a self-sufficient enterprise?
• This decision on coverage, service or revenue
emphasis will effect investment and loan options
Familiar Landscapes & Problems
• Too many communities run down the
communications road by focusing on technology
first, without a sense of how revenues or debts
service or operational costs will be met;
• Nearly every tribe is engaged in the annual
struggle to patchwork extend or repair pieces of
their internal network system, with limited
budgets and no return on their investment;
• Tribes find new technologies like Wireless,
satellite, cable and voice over IP attractive;
Conceptual Shifts for Tribal
Communities
• Look at the long-term communications needs of
the community, not just the network and
patchwork needs;
• Telecommunications isn’t traditional economic
development; it is the fundamental foundation to
support enterprise and develop skills;
• Become an owner rather than a renter;
• Broadband is a powerful tool that the tribe can
develop to preserve culture, language and
community;
Technology
• Look to solutions, not to technology: it all
becomes obsolete quickly;
• Look to interoperability, scale-ability and
redundancy;
• Any technology will do, providing one
pays;
• Cost isn’t everything: reliability, flexibility
and revenue options are more important;
Let the Buyer Beware
• If the Tribe wants to become a carrier of last resort
for its own people, can the technologies that are
popular,wireless, satellite, cable, VOIP, do the job
meet the service needs of the community? Can it
generate a revenue and will it be sufficient to
service the capital debt, pay for operations and
expand next generation services? What are the
regulatory burdens that may or hamper
deployment of full range services for the tribe?
• What are the biases of the vendors, of the tribal
network techies, of the planners & consultants?
Financing
• There are many ways to finance the infrastructure,
and experts will address this: loans, private
investors, RUS loans, bonding, vendor financing,
alliance schemes—be careful and understand that
each option comes with a cost and a downside;
• Firewall and protect your teleco enterprise and its
revenues from the reaches of other tribal projects
and from tribal politics—promote stability;
It’s Still all about Sovereignty
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Promote the self-governance of the tribe;
Increase economic opportunities;
Control technology and solution choices;
Become an owner, not a renter;
Look to rational financing and revenue returns;
Limit the liability of the tribe;
Build the future of the tribe and its children.
Help is Available
• Learning opportunities: forums like this, FCC
forums;
• RUS, consultants who are here today;
• The Mescalero Apache Telecommunications
Company (MATI), the first tribal Teleco to try to
teach other tribes about operating their own teleco;
• Four Horizons Development Company, in
partnership with MATI, helps tribes build
telecommunications companies.
Thank You.
Eric Jensen
Four Horizons Development
Company