As Google Fiber fights AT&T and Comcast over access to utility poles in Nashville, the new ISP says it hasn’t been able to get access to 44,000 poles in the city.
Google Fiber launched in Nashville in April, but expansion throughout the city has been slow in part because of pole access problems. Under the current process, Google Fiber has to wait for other carriers to perform “make ready” work that gets poles ready for Google to attach its own wires. Google Fiber is pushing a “one touch make ready” ordinance that would authorize the ISP to make all of the necessary wire adjustments itself without having to wait for incumbent providers to send their own construction crews. AT&T and Comcast have fought against the proposal.
With a Nashville Metro Council vote scheduled for September 6, Google Fiber published statistics yesterday detailing the scope of its problem.
“Of the 88,000 poles we need to attach Google Fiber to throughout Nashville, over 44,000 will require make ready work,” Google Fiber said. Nearly 9,800 poles have been “approved” for make ready work, “but so far, only 33 poles have been made ready.”
Google Fiber’s blog post didn’t say exactly who is to blame, though the incumbents doing make ready work include both AT&T and Comcast. Most of the poles are owned by the Nashville Electric Service, while AT&T is the second biggest owner of utility poles in the city.
(UPDATE: Google Fiber responded to Ars after this piece published, saying that of the 9,793 poles where work has been approved, 4,374 need Comcast to move wires, and 3,595 need AT&T to move wires. The other poles need work by other ISPs, or movements of power lines. While Google’s numbers indicate there are about 34,000 poles still waiting approval to start make ready work, it’s not clear whether Google has filed applications for all of them.)


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