Council tries to free up Verizon
Dave Brooks
In an 11th-hour attempt to save a high-speed Internet deal, Mayor
Cathy Green has asked the City Council to intervene in a design
dispute between Verizon and a city advisory board.
Earlier this month, the city’s Design Review Board rejected an
application by the telecommunications giant to install 150 utility
boxes that would service a citywide fiber-optic network billed as the
fastest consumer Internet service available.
Fios, as it is called, would be up to 10 times faster than cable
Internet, Verizon officials said, and would be capable of downloading
a full-length feature film in about 15 minutes. The technology would
be test marketed in Huntington Beach and several other U.S. cities
before being made available to about a million customers by the end
of the year.
The technology requires the installation of about 300 utility
boxes throughout Huntington Beach that have to be approved by the
city’s Design Review Board, which make decisions on aesthetics of
city projects.
Design Review Board member Robert Eberle said the advisory board
was not impressed with the utility box design Verizon submitted.
“They looked like a five-drawer metal filing cabinet without the
doors,” Eberle said.
The Design Review Board told Verizon officials to go back to the
manufacturers and ask for a project that was more pleasing to the
eye. When Verizon returned with its revisions a few months later,
Eberle said that the cabinets had only been reduced by a few inches
in height and essentially looked the same.
At that point, the Design Review Board then denied the
application.
“Instead of easily allowing it, we wanted to tell them that the
town doesn’t want this,” Eberle said. “We want them to do something
better.”
Verizon’s spokesperson Eric Rabe was not available by press time,
but Mayor Green said company officials told her they were working on
a tight time frame and might temporarily halt its plans to bring the
high speed Internet service to Huntington Beach.
“This whole project is worth $10 million,” she said. “To throw
one’s nose at it is kind of silly.”
In hopes of saving the deal, Green undertook the appeals process,
first sending it to an emergency meeting of the Planning Commission
Thursday. If the Planning Commission also rejects the boxes, the
issue will be brought before the council at the Monday meeting.
Green said she was not upset about the Design Review Board’s
denial, but said she thought it was important the City Council get
involved.
“This is really a policy decision,” she said.
City Councilman Dave Sullivan backed Green’s decision to pull the
issue before the council.
“On a big issue like this, elected officials should make the final
decision,” he said.
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