So if Crownpoint can get hi-speed cnx, why not Santa Fe?
-tj ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Richard Lowenberg <[hidden email]> Date: Aug 28, 2007 4:10 PM Subject: [1st-mile-nm] Navajo Nation Councilman Leonard Tsosie Convenes Lambda Rail Meeting To: 1st-mile-nm at crank.dcn.davis.ca.us NAVAJO NATION TRIBAL COUNCIL MEDIA RELEASE --- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE AUGUST 28, 2007 FOR MORE INFORMATION Sarisesa Begay, PIO, Navajo Nation Office of the Speaker - 928-871- 6384 Colleen Keane, Internet to the Hogans Committee, 505-379-3315 On August 15th, Council Delegate Leonard Tsosie Convened the 10th Internet to the Hogans meeting featuring The National Lambda Rail Agreement between the University of New Mexico and Navajo Technical College AN INTERNET TO THE HOGANS HISTORIC SIGNING In front of a packed room of Navajo and non-Navajo engineers, scientists, educators, health and telemedicine specialists, television producers and community people at the University of New Mexico (UNM) on Wednesday, August 15, 2007, Dr. Elmer Guy, President of Navajo Technical College (NTC) and Dr. Barney Maccabe, UNMs Chief Information Officer for the Computer Science Department signed an agreement that brought NTC into a national partnership made up of research universities and scientific laboratories The National Lambda Rail Partnership. MORE INTEREST AND MORE SUPPORT! NTC is a Navajo Nation owned and operated tribal college located in Crownpoint, New Mexico located about 170 miles northwest of Albuquerque. Like most Navajo communities, Crownpoint is surrounded by mountains and has limited telecommunications. Most families dont even have telephones or electricity. With the signing of the National Lambda Rail Agreement, Crownpoint will have access to a second Internet system that runs parallel to our everyday Internet connectivity on the World Wide Web. The signing of the agreement on August 15th at UNM was an historic moment for both Navajo Technical College and the University of New Mexico. This agreement is important to bringing high speed Internet access and state of the art communication to Navajo communities. Navajo Technical College and Din College, (another major Navajo-owned and operated college) will soon have abundant broadband access to students and faculty to conduct research, just like mainstream institutions, Steve Grey, Chairman of the Navajo Nation Telecommunications Regulatory Commission, (NNTRC) said. UNMs Dr. Maccabe agreed. The connectivity supported by this partnership will allow faculty and students at both institutions to form virtual communities where individuals can share their cultures and their experiences. Students and faculty from Navajo Technical College and the broader Navajo communities will be able to participate in UNM degree programs in both the learning and instructional roles. UNM will, in turn, increase enrollment in its degree programs and these programs will benefit from the knowledge and experiences of instructors who choose to be located on the Navajo Nation. AUGUST 15th MEETING HOSTED BY UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES The Internet to the Hogans meeting on August 15th was hosted by the University of New Mexicos University Libraries. The Dean of University Libraries, Dr. Martha Bedard, welcomed everyone along with Mary Alice Tsosie, the Outreach and Liaison Librarian for the Indigenous Nations Library Program. Participants included: Mr. James Tutt, former President of Navajo Technical College and currently the Executive Director of Nizhoni Smiles, Inc.; Dr. Elmer Guy, the current President of Navajo Technical College; Dr. Barney Maccabe, UNM; Sandra Begay-Campbell, former UNM Regent; Jeanne Whitehouse and Mildred Walters, New Mexico Tribal Libraries Program; Dean Tom Davis, Navajo Technical College; Nancy Martine-Alonzo, Assistant Cabinet Secretary for the Indian Education Division of the State of New Mexico; Dr. Maggie George and Dr. Veronica Chavez-Newman, State of New Mexico Higher Education Department; Dr. Anita Pfeiffer, UNM Professor Emeriti; Dr. Gregory Cajete, UNMs Director of the Native American Studies Department; Dr. Gayle Dinechacon, Director UNM Center for Native American Health; Dr. Dale Alverson, Medical Director UNM Center for Telehealth; Toney Begay, Executive Director of New Mexico MESA and Brent Nelson, Director of Navajo Nations Department of Din Education. THE HOGAN HEROES! The Internet to the Hogans effort also has a growing group of reformers known as the Hogan Heroes -- Native and non-Native people working individually or through their organizations to develop digital services and resources. Navajo language programming and streaming video, electronic mentoring, academic courses, dental services, health services, cultural story telling, training programs and technical services are some of the resources the Hogan Heroes plan to provide to Navajo families and chapter houses once the wireless system is in place. There are 110 Navajo chapter houses - community meeting places - across the Navajo Nation, a Tribal Nation that spans three states: Arizona, New Mexico and Utah. Most of the people attending previous Internet to the Hogans meetings came back together with several new people joining the effort. This was the 10th Internet to the Hogans meeting convened by Delegate Leonard Tsosie. The participants came from departments of the Navajo Nation, departments of UNM, the UNM Gallup Branch, Navajo Technical College, Sandia National Laboratory, New Mexico State Tribal Library, Institute for American Indian Education, National Network of Digital Schools and Native American Television Network. New representation came from Din Department of Education, UNM College of Education, New Mexico Higher Education Department, New Mexico Indian Education Department, Navajo Nation DHR, UNM Native American Studies, Fort Lewis College, Nizhoni Smiles, Inc. and New Mexico MESA. MORE DEVELOPMENTS! Like the National Lambda Rail Agreement between UNM and NTC, additional formal partnerships are falling into place as ITTH people and organizations find ways to address the digital divide for Native American communities. Recently, the Navajo Nation, Indian Health Services, Navajo Technical College, UNMs Center for Telehealth and Din College created a committee to coordinate telecommunications, distance learning and telemedicine resources for the Navajo people, according to Steve Grey. Council Delegate Tsosie, Steve Grey, Ernest Franklin, Jason Arviso, Norbert Nez, Harold Skow, Pearl Lee, Elrena Mitchell, Sylvia Jordan and Francesca Shiekh are among the Navajo Nation dignitaries and technology experts who sit on the committee. UNM representation includes Dr. Barney Maccabe, Moria Gerety and Dr. Dale Alverson. This effort establishes the foundation for ongoing collaboration with Native American Tribes and communities throughout New Mexico and the Southwest. We are learning how we can best work together to serve the health and education needs of Native people, starting with the Navajo Nation, Dr. Alverson said. Like other social movements - the Womens Movement and the Civil Rights Movement - the Internet to the Hogans initiative started at the community level; it is marked by significant and sometimes spontaneous growth; and it has dynamic leadership that keeps it moving it forward. More and more people are coming forward and asking how can we contribute to the effort? Support for this project is getting larger and larger as you can see from the August 15th attendance. I would like to thank Council Delegate Tsosie for leading this initiative, Jason Arviso, Director, Technology Services, Navajo Technical College. NEXT ITTH MEETING Watch for an announcement about the next groundbreaking event for the Internet to the Hogans a demonstration of Internet connectivity at a traditional Navajo Hogan in the community of Crownpoint, New Mexico. AFTER TEN MAJOR ITTH GATHERINGS, HERE ARE SOME OF THE ACHIEVEMENTS TO DATE: In early 2000, under the leadership of President James Tutt, Crownpoint Institute of Technology, (CIT) which is now known as Navajo Technical College (NTC), receives initial funding from NASA to develop a wireless grid for the Navajo Nation. In 2005, State Senator Leonard Tsosie begins convening Internet to the Hogans meetings to bring together scientists, engineers, educators, cell and phone company representatives and community people to share resources. In January, 2006, with sponsorship from Senator Leonard Tsosie, the State of New Mexico provides more than one million dollars in funding for Internet to the Hogans infrastructure which included $500,000 for transition of a Navajo television station to a digital signal. In January 2006 and January of 2007, Governor Bill Richardson promises to support the effort to bridge the digital divide for Navajo families. In January, 2007, ground breaks for the first Internet to the Hogans tower in Crownpoint, New Mexico. In March, 2007, Delegate Leonard Tsosie convenes his first Internet to the Hogans meeting as Council Delegate for the Navajo Nation extending his leadership of the Internet to the Hogans effort from the Northwestern region to the Navajo Nation, which is includes three states, New Mexico, Arizona and Utah. In January, 2007, with sponsorship from Senator Linda Lovejoy, the State of New Mexico awards another $550,000 to continue laying the wireless infrastructure. In May of 2007, the Ramah Navajo community turns on the first digital television station broadcasting in Navajo and English with engineering support from Jim Gale and Dan Zillich of KNME-TV. In Summer 2007, the Telemedicine Committee is established, which includes representation from the Navajo Nation Tribal Council, Indian Health Service, Navajo Nation Telecommunications Regulatory Commission, Navajo Technical College, Din College and UNMs Center for Telehealth. In August, 2007, Navajo Technical College and UNM sign the historic National Lambda Rail Agreement. Internet to the Hogans participation grows from an estimated 15 participants and 6 organizations in 2005 to an estimated 240 interested and contributing people from numerous organizations and communities. _______________________________________________ 1st-mile-nm mailing list 1st-mile-nm at mailman.dcn.org http://www2.dcn.org/mailman/listinfo/1st-mile-nm -- ========================================== J. T. Johnson Institute for Analytic Journalism -- Santa Fe, NM USA www.analyticjournalism.com 505.577.6482(c) 505.473.9646(h) http://www.jtjohnson.com tom at jtjohnson.us "You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete." -- Buckminster Fuller ========================================== -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/attachments/20070828/12d06982/attachment.html |
>>So if Crownpoint can get hi-speed cnx, why not Santa Fe?
-tj ---------- Forwarded message ---------- NAVAJO NATION TRIBAL COUNCIL MEDIA RELEASE --- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE AUGUST 28, 2007 On August 15th, Council Delegate Leonard Tsosie Convened the 10th Internet to the Hogans meeting featuring The National Lambda Rail Agreement between the University of New Mexico and Navajo Technical College.<< Tom, Good question. The devil is in the details. Two points: It is my understanding that the agreement has been signed, but connectivity is not yet provided to Crownpoint. It will be via microwave, I'm told. Also, I just completed a contracted report for Santa Fe County, providing an assessment of options and a set of recommendations for bringing LambdaRail and/or other 'open' fiber to the Business Park in the Community College District (I-25 @ Hwy. 14), and other potential area community connections. In my assessment, I found out a lot about (current lack of access to) NM LambdaRail and Wire New Mexico; Qwest and other fiber along the BNSF rail line; potential deployment along new RailRunner construction to Santa Fe; and total lack of conduit or fiber along I-25 (NM DOT right of way). I also costed out options to bring new 'open access' fiber from Albuquerque to Santa Fe, as well as investment partner potential. Lots more in the works. If there is interest, I'd be pleased to provide a summary discussion of this and a State Broadband initiative that I'm waiting to hear back about, at a WedTech in the near future, if interested or appropriate. Richard ------------------------------------------------ Richard Lowenberg P.O.Box 8001, Santa Fe, NM 87504 505-989-9110, 505-603-5200 cell New Mexico Broadband Initiative www.1st-mile.com/newmexico ------------------------------------------------ |
Can't speak for all the WedTech gang, of course, but I sure would be
interested. -tj On 8/28/07, Richard Lowenberg <rl at radlab.com> wrote: > > >>So if Crownpoint can get hi-speed cnx, why not Santa Fe? > -tj > > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > NAVAJO NATION TRIBAL COUNCIL MEDIA RELEASE --- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE > AUGUST 28, 2007 > > On August 15th, Council Delegate Leonard Tsosie Convened the 10th Internet > to the Hogans meeting featuring The National Lambda Rail Agreement between > the University of New Mexico and Navajo Technical College.<< > > > Tom, > Good question. The devil is in the details. Two points: > It is my understanding that the agreement has been signed, but > connectivity is not yet provided to Crownpoint. It will be via > microwave, I'm told. > > Also, I just completed a contracted report for Santa Fe County, providing > an assessment of options and a set of recommendations for bringing > LambdaRail and/or other 'open' fiber to the Business Park in the Community > College District (I-25 @ Hwy. 14), and other potential area community > connections. In my assessment, I found out a lot about (current lack of > access to) NM LambdaRail and Wire New Mexico; Qwest and other fiber along > the BNSF rail line; potential deployment along new RailRunner construction > to Santa Fe; and total lack of conduit or fiber along I-25 (NM DOT right > of way). I also costed out options to bring new 'open access' fiber from > Albuquerque to Santa Fe, as well as investment partner potential. Lots > more in the works. > > If there is interest, I'd be pleased to provide a summary discussion of > this and a State Broadband initiative that I'm waiting to hear back about, > at a WedTech in the near future, if interested or appropriate. > > Richard > > ------------------------------------------------ > Richard Lowenberg > P.O.Box 8001, Santa Fe, NM 87504 > 505-989-9110, 505-603-5200 cell > > New Mexico Broadband Initiative > www.1st-mile.com/newmexico > ------------------------------------------------ > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > -- ========================================== J. T. Johnson Institute for Analytic Journalism -- Santa Fe, NM USA www.analyticjournalism.com 505.577.6482(c) 505.473.9646(h) http://www.jtjohnson.com tom at jtjohnson.us "You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete." -- Buckminster Fuller ========================================== -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/attachments/20070828/b212982c/attachment.html |
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