JULY 18, 2008 -- Engineers will begin working in Southeast Alaska waters this month, placing 750 miles of fiber-optic cable on the ocean floor, GCI (search for GCI) officials announced today.
For residents in Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Angoon, and Sitka this means high-speed connections for Internet, phone and video; in Juneau, residents will benefit from additional fiber-optic cable creating a self-healing fiber ring within Southeast Alaska, GCI added.
Shore-end operations were scheduled to commence today in Ketchikan. Shore-end operations in Wrangell will be about four days later; in Petersburg about three days later; and in Sitka about 15 days later.
The $33 million project will connect five more communities to the Alaska United West line that currently connects Alaska to the Lower 48 States, providing alternate routing and overflow traffic-handling capabilities for residents of these southeast communities. GCI expects the system to be complete by November 2008.
"This fiber-optic network will provide new and faster services to more than 50,000 people in Southeast Alaska," said Richard Dowling, GCI's senior vice president of corporate development. "The addition to our network is another important step in creating and maintaining a self-healing telecommunications network."
Residents in Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Sitka and Angoon are currently served through microwave and satellite networks. The fiber-optic link will be more reliable and faster than those networks, GCI said. Residents in other southeast communities will also benefit with the reduction in demand on the existing systems. GCI owns two of the three networks currently tying Alaska to the Lower 48.
GCI asserted that the new fiber network will meet the ever-growing capacity requirements of the residents in Southeast Alaska and has the capacity to keep up with the growth of both current and potential Internet, wireless, phone, and video services. In addition, the network will allow Southeast residents access to more medical and educational opportunities from their own communities through GCI's ConnectMD and SchoolAccess networks.
"The quality of life and the potential for economic development increase as community access to telecommunications services increase," said Dowling. "From small business owners looking to increase their client base to employees who can be hired to work remotely via telecommunications, a robust network positively affects all Alaskans."
Marine routing of the cable was carefully planned with safety and historical uses of the seafloor in mind. Stakeholders in the area were consulted including local fishermen, pilots, the United States Coast Guard, harbormasters, and other permit agencies. The subsea cable follows the Inside Passage from Ketchikan to Juneau, then heads south to connect to Angoon and west to connect to Sitka.
GCI obtained permits from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the USDA Forest Service, the Alaska Department of Natural Resources, various local agencies, and local municipalities where the fiber comes on shore. Public input was also solicited along with comments from the Alaska Department of Fish and Game and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Visit GCI