Voters all over CO. are voting 3to1 to build high speed internet in their communities. must not be as expensive as you quote.
http://www.boulderweekly.com/article-13499-2c-or-not-2c-isnrst-the-question.html
Wow....wow oh wow..
A city with 26,667 households is putting in Internet in its town of 22 Square Miles.
It's $50 a month -the lowest in the state. In other words, all others are higher....and speaking of higher...$50 is only good if you sign up immediately when available. If you do not, the price is $100 a month.
And fwiw, thus far, only 25% of the residents have signed up for it at the $50 price point.
The city plans to connect 25% of the residents over the next year. Thats 6.5k by this time next year.
It will be this time in 2017 before all 26k are connected.
And if we dig a little deeper, we find that "voters OK'd the proposal, and then two years later approved a $45.3 million bond issue to build the network, which uses pulses of light, instead of electricity, to transmit data."
$45.3M/ 26,667 households = $1,698 each household is being charged to build this network.
ROFLMAO.
So much for your $50 a month.
Also tells you that it costs $2.05M per square mile in a small town approximately 5 miles by 4.5 miles wide.
Then let's move to Chattanooga.
The Chattanooga's network cost nearly $400 million to build and deploy. And while the network as a whole serves about 55,000 business and residential customers, only a relative handful — about 3,600 homes — had signed up for the marquee gigabit service. The rest mostly paid less for lower speeds.
$400M/55k = $7,272 per business and residential customer.
$400M/143 Square Miles in Chattanooga = $2.8M per square mile to build when the city is larger than 22 Square Miles.
Again, so much for the "low cost"
You are paying for it, just on a different bill.