British Columbia Community Networks
Wisdom from Trail's CIAO Pioneer
Contact Info:
- Ken McClean, President Community Information Access Organization
- Telephone: 368-6434 (w) or 362-5885 (h)
- E-mail: kmcclean@ciao.trail.bc.ca
- HomePage: http://www.ciao.trail.bc.ca
Interview Notes:
- Public documents to share include standard Constitution & By-laws,
Appropriate Use Policies for students/teachers & general public, original
CIAO proposal to the BC Ministry of Education.
- There are 2 sides to CIAO: School District (2200 students) and General
Public (400 citizens).
- Equipment includes a Sun SPARC 10 server, 12 Telebit Routers (1 for each
school in the District), and a 24 x 14.4 Kbps dial-up modem pool.
- Only one school per day has full Internet access due to bandwidth
limitations between schools and to the Internet.
- 600 of the District's 800 MacIntosh computers now have some Internet
access.
- In the late 1980s, schools in the area were involved in pioneering on-line
communications systems such as COSY, X.400, ProvNet, and Southern Interior
Telecommunications Project.
- The Community Learning Network (CLN) is not as effective as it could be
because it is centrally controlled/located in Victoria.
- Schools in the region are not holding their breath waiting for the
Provincial Learning Network (PLNet) to arrive. A $50,000 TeleConsult
Feasibility Study went nowhere. Currently a consortium of 7 school districts
is pulling together a Regional strat egy to connect their schools to the net.
- Organizational Start Date = April/93. Operational Start Date =
November/93.
- CIAO has no paid staff. There is a core group of 10 volunteers and a
volunteer drive is currently under way.
- CIAO has 2 major sponsors: Local School District and Economic Development
Council.
- PowerLink -- a local commercial Internet Service Provider (ISP) --
recently filed a greivance with the Ministry of Education complaining that
CIAO's government funding was unfair competition. Ken met with the ISP and was
able to smooth the waters, cl arifying that CommunityNets help to fuel
commercial service demand.
CIAO is introducing 5 different service
offerings to help pay the bills:
- Lead = Free Guest Account (general local community/business information)
- Zinc = $25/year for unlimited text access to the Internet
- Silver = $50/year for a personalized "vanity" e-mail address
- Gold = $100/year for full SLIP/PPP access based on 20 hours/month.
- Training = $35/person, once/month.
Ken's Wish List is
Affordable, Equitable Bandwidth!
- 56 Kbps access to the Internet currently costs $1000/month.
- Pressure the telephone company to provide affordable 10 Mbps access. BC
Tel's ATM fiber optic network runs straight through the middle of Trail but it
can't be accessed because there is no switch -- and BCTel says a switch would
cost about $500,000.
- 56 Kbps/ISDN connections to all schools in the district.
- Use alternative bandwidth suppliers. People in Grand Forks have given up
on BC Tel and are beginning to use cheaper cable/satellite connections from
just over the border in the United States.
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For further information:
EMail: bccna@bccna.bc.ca
Phone: (250) 727-2489
(in Victoria)
Toll Free (BC): 1-888-727-2226
Fax: (250) 727-6418
This file was last edited: May 15, 1996