| DILLSBORO,
NC - BalsamWest FiberNET today announced
an agreement with the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad
to speed construction of a portion of its fiber-optic
telecommunications network in Jackson, Swain,
Graham, and Cherokee Counties. BalsamWest will
deploy its network along the Great Smoky Mountains
Railroad from Dillsboro to Andrews. Cities that
will benefit from this innovative use of the railbed
include Dillsboro, Sylva, Cherokee, Bryson City,
Robbinsville, Andrews, and others.
Jon Schlegel, Vice President and General Manager
of the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad said, "We
are pleased to be partnering with BalsamWest on
this exciting initiative to bring high speed telecommunications
to the region." "We can think of no
better way to support the communities in which
we operate."
The Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians recently
appropriated funding to construct the portion
of the railbed-deployed backbone segment from
Dillsboro to Bryson City. The Eastern Band is
also providing funding for BalsamWest for an interconnecting
municipal ring to connect the Qualla Boundary
area to the backbone fiber when it reaches the
entrance to the Reservation.
"BalsamWest's fiber ring strategically positions
the six counties West of the Balsam Mountains
as a virtual 'near-shore' site location,"
said David Hubbs, Director of Drake Enterprises'
Dnet Internet Services. "This network will
decrease costs, improve reliability, strengthen
economic redevelopment efforts, and increase availability
of government, education, healthcare and cultural
resources to the region."
Southwestern Community College President, Cecil
Groves said that, "the BalsamWest network
will ensure that the region can participate fully
in a global economy and will give the region the
tools it needs to educate and train the workforce
of the future, support advances in health care,
improve the ability of local businesses to succeed,
and create opportunities to generate good jobs
for the future." Southwestern Community College
is a BalsamWest Community Interest Partner.
"BalsamWest is helping this area of North
Carolina trade the outdated perception that we
are a disadvantaged, isolated rural outpost with
a new reality," said Al Harper, owner of
the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad. "Western
North Carolinians will now have all of the advantages
of virtually unlimited, real-time connectivity
to major trade and cultural centers in North Carolina,
South Carolina, Georgia and Tennessee - with none
of the disadvantages of urban living." "This
is a great place to live, and BalsamWest is helping
to put it on the map for economic recruitment
and capital investment." |