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      <title>Curt Pringle for Mayor</title>
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      <description></description>
      <language>en</language>
      <copyright>Copyright 2006</copyright>
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         <title>Mayor Pringle Named One of the Hottest 25 People in Orange County by OC Metro Magazine</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Big-City Mayor</strong><br />
CURT PRINGLE </p>

<p>Mayor of the city of Anaheim <br />
Age: 47 <br />
Residence: Anaheim <br />
Family: Wife Alexis; 2 children <br />
Hobby: Family </p>

<p>Curt Pringle’s name has the ring of a big-city mayor in a county that has never rhymed with “Giuliani” or “Villaraigosa” or “Daly.” One of his strategies is to think big. Among his goals is to “advance Anaheim into a place where it deserves. What’s important is not only to continue (moving forward) with Anaheim as a leader, but also to do the same for the county. It’s interesting; we are very much discounted, or disregarded, because of our proximity to Los Angeles. Anaheim is a microcosm of the county, and also the state.” He adds: “I think we ought to get our proper due.”</p>

<p>As he prepares for a second and final four-year term ­ he runs against William Fitzgerald in next month’s election ­ Pringle is poised to help shape the most invigorating city in Orange County in the most challenging of times. Running a city ­ Anaheim is among the state’s top 10 largest cities with 343,000 residents ­ is no easy feat. Constituencies range from a growing Latino population to the world-famous Disneyland Resort to professional baseball and hockey teams. He has been there to greet NFL luminaries who want to plant a team in either the Los Angeles market or in Anaheim. </p>

<p>Pringle was there as the Platinum Triangle ­ Orange County’s largest urban redevelopment project ever ­ took shape. The concept is one that could create the first true downtown in a county that has been more village-inspired than urban. The 820 acres could have up to 9,500 housing units, 5 million square feet of office space, more than 2 million square feet of commercial uses and several high-rises. </p>

<p>In the eight to 10 years for buildout, the project promises to have the stamp of both Pringle’s early work ­ allowing the free market to build a viable project with city support, rather than act as a hindrance ­ and of his hope that it will emerge as the county’s true downtown. <br />
“That’s the definition of an urban center,” he says. “The streets don’t roll up at 5 o’clock. I think you’ll see that here.” </p>

<p>This has been a busy year. The activist mayor has had a hand in several major city initiatives. These include: Wi-Fi is now available throughout the city; the Tiger Woods Learning Center opened; transportation initiatives in the form of the newly purchased land for the planned Anaheim Regional Transportation Intermodel Center, which will provide shuttles to Disneyland, regional routes to neighboring cities, the Amtrak and Metrolink platform, and perhaps even high-speed rail to Ontario Airport and later to Las Vegas and possibly San Francisco. Also this year, the City Council gave the final go-ahead for GardenWalk, a 19-acre outdoor shopping center and hotel complex that opens in 2007. </p>

<p>Not everything is a win, though; the Angels prevailed this year against the city in a naming lawsuit (officially the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim). </p>

<p>The former state Assembly Speaker hosts an annual State of the City address that actually matters regionally. More than 800 people turned out this year. His annual prayer breakfast every October draws even more. </p>

<p>The question that makes him squirm is what he will do after his mayorship. “Those are always the nagging questions that show up. I’m at a point in my life where I don’t have to be in office … I’m very confident in God’s plan for my life, and at this moment in time have no interest in running for anything else.” </p>

<p>—Craig Reem </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/10/mayor_pringle_named_one_of_the.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/10/mayor_pringle_named_one_of_the.php</guid>
         <category></category>
         <pubDate>Tue, 31 Oct 2006 12:39:40 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Mayor Pringle On - Hand for Dedication of New Underground Electrical Substation</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>October 17, 2006 01:00 PM Eastern Time </p>

<p><strong>Anaheim Unveils Cutting-Edge Technology with Dedication of Park above Electric Substation </strong></p>

<p><em>City Leaders Help Celebrate Launch of First Underground Electric Substation in U.S. </em></p>

<p>ANAHEIM, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Anaheim Public Utilities, in a partnership that included the city’s Community Services Departments as well as some of the nation’s top energy contracting and consulting firms, today dedicated Park Substation, the first underground electric substation in the United States. Adding to the uniqueness of the substation is the fact that it sits below Roosevelt Park, a two-acre facility that serves the East Anaheim neighborhood. </p>

<p>The 100 MVA electric distribution station has the capacity to serve 25,000 current and future residential customers. It uses state-of-the-art technology in substation design with Gas Insulated Switchgear (GIS), which reduces the required space for the substation to approximately 30 percent of a conventional station design. The use of this technology is more common in Europe and Japan. </p>

<p>“I am pleased to see Anaheim continue its transformation into a city of the 21st century with the completion of this innovative project,” Anaheim Mayor Curt Pringle told an audience of more than 100 invited guests that included city and utility leaders, project team members, as well as local residents and business owners. “With this new technology, we will be able to build substations closer to where we need them, in spaces that are considerably smaller than their predecessors and within enclosures such as buildings or underground.” </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/10/mayor_pringle_on_hand_for_dedi.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/10/mayor_pringle_on_hand_for_dedi.php</guid>
         <category></category>
         <pubDate>Thu, 26 Oct 2006 15:16:00 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Mayor Pringle and Councilmembers Hear Constructive Ideas for Revitalization of Santa Ana River Area</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Friday, October 20, 2006</p>

<p><strong>Students' plans would enhance Santa Ana River area<br />
Anaheim, already at work on sprucing up the Santa Ana River area, praises extension students' visions.</strong></p>

<p>By SARAH TULLY<br />
The Orange County Register</p>

<p>A shopping and dining promenade could line a strip by the Honda Center. Paddle boats and kayaks could launch from docks on an expanded urban lake. Nature trails could wind around water basins.</p>

<p>These lofty ideas and others for the Santa Ana River came from UCLA Extension students, who developed a plan for a class project and presented it at an Anaheim City Council workshop this week. The council has no funding for the projects and is unsure which proposals are even feasible, but members lauded the grand vision for the river in Anaheim, which means "home by the Santa Ana River" in German.</p>

<p>"What this plan does is embrace the river (in a city) that has a great potential for being a riverfront city," instructor Kathleen Bullard said.</p>

<p>As part of Mayor Curt Pringle's long-term goal to revitalize the river, more than 100 landscape architecture students were assigned to think big at an April brainstorming gathering. Eleven students then came up with beautification plans for a nine-mile stretch of the river, which is usually dry.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/10/mayor_pringle_and_councilmembe.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/10/mayor_pringle_and_councilmembe.php</guid>
         <category></category>
         <pubDate>Fri, 20 Oct 2006 14:59:03 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Mayor Pringle Seeks Seat On State High-Speed Rail Authority</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>From today's <em>Orange County Register</em>:</p><blockquote><p><em><span style="font-size: 1.2em;"><strong>Anaheim mayor seeks seat on a statewide rail board</strong></span></em></p>

<p><em><strong>Curt Pringle wants to join state agency planning high-speed bullet train connecting San Diego and San Francisco.</strong></em>
</p>

<p><em>By JIM RADCLIFFE and SARAH TULLY<br />The Orange County Register

<p></em></p></p>

<p><em>ANAHEIM - Mayor Curt Pringle submitted an application to the governor's office Monday for a seat on a statewide rail board – an effort to ensure that Orange County is a major player in a proposal to build a 700-plus-mile, high-speed line from San Diego to San Francisco.</em></p>

<p><em>&quot;I actually believe something's going to happen,&quot; Pringle said. &quot;It takes a long time to get the initial dollars in.&quot;</em></p>

<p><em>The state budget allocated $14.3 million recently to begin studying such things as exactly where the bullet-train alignment would go.</em></p>

<p><em>After years of little progress, it was a significant break for the California High-Speed Rail Authority, which hasn't had much money to work with. But major hurdles remain, like funding the $33 billion-plus system. There are potentially several openings on the authority's board.</em></p>

<p><em>The bullet train is envisioned to run mostly through California's midsection. In Anaheim, the rail line would stop at the planned Anaheim Regional Transportation Intermodal Center, a 13.5-acre parcel just south of Katella Avenue near Angel Stadium.</em></p></blockquote>

<p>The entire story can be found <a href="http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister/homepage/abox/article_1243177.php">here</a> on the OCR website.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/08/mayor_pringle_seeks_seat_on_st.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/08/mayor_pringle_seeks_seat_on_st.php</guid>
         <category>Transportation</category>
         <pubDate>Tue, 15 Aug 2006 08:29:35 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Mayor Pringle Named One Of The &quot;100 Most Powerful People In Southern California&quot;</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>West Magazine (formerly Los Angeles Times Magazine) has published <a href="http://www.latimes.com/features/magazine/west/la-tm-toppower33aug13,0,2757445.htmlstory">The West 100</a>, which the editors bill as their list <em>&quot;of the most pwerful people in Southern California.&quot;</em></p>

<p>Anaheim Mayor Curt Pringle is the only Orange County elected official to be included in the list:</p>
<blockquote><p><em><strong>Curt Pringle<br />Anaheim mayor; 47, Anaheim</strong></em></p>

<p><em>Pringle has taken some heat for having lost Anaheim's name-change fight with the Angels and for struggling to muster consensus on courting the NFL. Still, Pringle is not only running unopposed, he's also been endorsed by his biggest critic. It's a testament to the skill and war chest of the ambitious GOP leader of Disneyland's hometown. More broadly, Pringle has built such a strong reputation for his aggressive pro-business approach to governance (creative tax waivers, sweeping zone changes, market incentives to redevelop run-down parts of the city) that other local officials have coined a verb for his philosophy: &quot;to Pringle-ize.&quot;</em></p></blockquote>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/08/mayor_prinngle_named_one_of_th.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/08/mayor_prinngle_named_one_of_th.php</guid>
         <category>Leadership</category>
         <pubDate>Fri, 11 Aug 2006 08:53:53 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Mayor Pringle Pleased to Receive Endorsement from Council Colleague</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Anaheim Mayor Looks Unopposed</strong><br />
<em>An endorsement by Curt Pringle's chief critic paves the way for an easy reelection. </em></p>

<p>By Dave McKibben, Times Staff Writer</p>

<p>July 26, 2006 </p>

<p><br />
Anaheim Mayor Curt Pringle, one of Orange County's few big-city mayors, has won the endorsement of his chief critic, and it appears he will run unopposed for reelection in November. </p>

<p>"He's done a great job for the city, and he deserves another four years," said Anaheim Councilman Harry Sidhu, who has sparred with Pringle. "Even though we might have our differences on a few of the issues, they are not significant enough for me not to endorse a man with a great vision for our city."<br />
The smart money suggested that Pringle would have a fight on his hands this fall after Anaheim lost its name-game lawsuit with the Angels, costing the state's 10th-largest city some $4 million and alienating the team's popular owner. And an effort to land an NFL team drew skepticism from Sidhu, who thought the city was offering the league land for a stadium at half its value.</p>

<p>But Pringle's critics never got much traction on either issue. Even Pringle's opponents believed that in renaming the team the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Angels owner Arte Moreno had backed the mayor into a corner. Many residents of Anaheim - home to Disneyland, a huge convention center, an emerging downtown and professional baseball and hockey teams - applauded Pringle for fighting the name change. The NFL land deal has remained in the background, largely because the league has yet to choose between the Los Angeles Coliseum and vacant land next to Angel Stadium.</p>

<p>Sidhu has tangled with Pringle on a few other occasions. Sidhu was the lone council member who didn't support Pringle's decision to appeal the verdict over the Angels' name, and he disagreed with the mayor's move to put a permanent gambling ban on the November ballot.</p>

<p>Because of Sidhu's policy differences with Pringle and his wealth, most insiders figured he was the only politician who could give the mayor some competition. Sidhu, 49, once owned 28 fast-food restaurants and spent more than $200,000 of his own money on his last council race. </p>

<p>"Now that Harry has endorsed the mayor, I think he will run unopposed," said Anaheim Councilman Bob Hernandez, also a frequent Pringle critic. "It's unfortunate, because I think the political process works a lot better when people have choices. I think a challenge would be better for Curt too. It keeps you on your game."</p>

<p>But Hernandez acknowledged that Pringle, a former Assembly speaker with a war chest of some $500,000, is virtually unbeatable. Pringle, a conservative Republican, has worked closely with Democratic council colleagues Richard Chavez and Lorri Galloway and Latino leaders to create more low-cost housing and recreational opportunities in the city's poorer districts.</p>

<p>Amin David, who heads Los Amigos of Orange County, a Latino advocacy group, said he was happy to hear Pringle would probably run unopposed. "We certainly don't want to lose him," David said. "We're very pleased with him. He listens to a lot of the ideas set forth by the progressives on council, Lorri and Richard. He cares about doing something different and decent for the working class. That's very inclusive thinking."</p>

<p>Sidhu, also a conservative Republican, said he briefly considered entering the race. But he realized a month ago he didn't have enough support to defeat Pringle, who won handily in 2002 over three challengers. "His polling numbers are better than mine," Sidhu said. "But I didn't base this solely on polling. The timing was not right. I will have a chance in my lifetime to be the mayor of the city."</p>

<p>Pringle said he was pleased to receive Sidhu's endorsement Monday.</p>

<p>"Harry told me some time ago that he wouldn't run against me, but I know there was some talk out there," Pringle said Tuesday after a ceremony launching the city's 150th anniversary celebration. "It's nice to have a strong coalition of support from my colleagues. It makes it a lot easier to move the city forward." </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/07/mayor_pringle_receives_importa.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/07/mayor_pringle_receives_importa.php</guid>
         <category></category>
         <pubDate>Wed, 26 Jul 2006 12:25:42 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Council Colleagues, Police and Firefighter Associations Endorse Mayor Pringle&apos;s Re-Election</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Anaheim Mayor Curt Pringle’s re-election campaign for a second term as Mayor is just starting to gear up, but has already received the endorsement of most of his City Council colleagues as well as the Anaheim Police Officers Association (APOA) and the Anaheim Firefighters Association (AFA).</p>

<p>Along with the associations representing Anaheim’s public safety personnel, Mayor Pro Tem Richard Chavez, City Councilman Harry Sidhu, and City Councilwoman Lori Galloway have endorsed Pringle’s campaign.</p>

<p>“Although we don’t approach every issue from the same perspective,” Mayor Pro Tem Chavez, “there is no doubt that Curt has a passion for Anaheim.&nbsp; You know that he is motivated by what is best for our community.”</p>

<p>“Curt and I share some very important goals, including keeping taxes low and protecting private property rights,” said Councilman Sidhu.&nbsp; “I look forward to working with him in his second term.”</p>

<p>“Anaheim is in the middle of a Golden Age, and Mayor Curt Pringle is the visionary driving our progress,” said Councilwoman Galloway.&nbsp; “I am as proud to call him my friend as I am to call him my Mayor.”</p>

<p>Joining his council colleagues, the APOA and AFA cited Mayor Pringle’s efforts to keep Anaheim one of the safest large cities in America.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/07/council_colleagues_police_and.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/07/council_colleagues_police_and.php</guid>
         <category>Leadership</category>
         <pubDate>Tue, 25 Jul 2006 12:04:21 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Government Technology Magazine On Anaheim&apos;s New Live Online Council Broadcasts</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Government Technology magazine published <a href="http://www.govtech.net/localgovt/story.php?id=100158">this story</a> today on the City of Anaheim's new service allowing anyone to watch Anaheim City Council meetings <a href="http://anaheim.granicus.com/ViewPublisher.php?view_id=2">live online</a>:</p>

<blockquote><p><em>Beginning tomorrow, Anaheim residents can view City Council meetings from the comfort of their own home or anywhere they have access to the internet. Working with San Francisco-based Granicus, streaming video of Anaheim City Council meetings now will be available from the city's Web site.</em></p>

<p><em>&quot;As I proposed at my State of the City speech earlier this year,&quot; said Anaheim Mayor Curt Pringle, &quot;at every opportunity we are moving closer to creating 21st Century City Hall, where City Hall is open for business 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, whether you come downtown, or sit in a city park accessing the citywide wireless network on your laptop. With Granicus and our new EarthLink wireless network, Anaheim residents can now watch decisions being made that affect their daily lives from anywhere in the city.&quot;</em></p>

<p><em>Regularly-scheduled Anaheim City Council meetings will be aired live on Tuesday evenings at approximately 5 p.m. Each meeting then will be posted online along with an accompanying Council agenda about two hours after the conclusion of each meeting. Past meetings will be archived and searchable so that people can locate a specific item of interest and watch that item being addressed by the City Council.</em></p>

<p><em>The city's cable channel, ACTV-3, will continue to air the most recent City Council meetings for those who prefer a more traditional viewing format.</em></p></blockquote>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/07/government_technology_magazine.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/07/government_technology_magazine.php</guid>
         <category>Anaheim&apos;s Freedom Revolution</category>
         <pubDate>Mon, 10 Jul 2006 12:40:58 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Reason Foundation: &quot;Cable Competition Offers More For Less&quot;</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Steven Titch, telecom policy analysts for the Reason Foundation, wrote <a href="http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister/opinion/columns/article_1201307.php">this op-ed</a> featured in today's Orange Countty Register. Titch pens a compelling argument for vidoe franchising reform that benefits consumers by ending the cable companyies monopoly on the delivery of video entertainment. The Ciyt of Anaheim -- in contrast to virtually every other local government in the United STates -- is a leader in ending the cable monopoly and its accompanying franchise fee and allowing other companies to compete for consumers' business.</p>

<p>Here's is the Titch article:</p>

<blockquote><p><em><span style="font-size: 1.2em;"><strong>Cable competition offers more for less</strong></span></em></p>

<p><em><strong>Legislature should end monopolistic alliance of cities, cable TV companies</strong></em></p>

<p><em>By STEVE TITCH</em></p>

<p><em>Rising cable television bills have been straining household budgets and driving consumers crazy. But cable customers might finally catch a break as California pushes forward on legislation to reform our antiquated system of video franchising – the revenue-sharing agreements that cable companies sign with local governments in return for the right to offer video services to taxpayers on an exclusive basis.
</em></p>

<p><em>Remember rotary phones and television sets with tuning knobs? Remember when personal computers did not exist? That's the era in which the current franchising system was created. Local governments wrote exclusive agreements with cable and phone companies for the purpose of &quot;protecting consumers,&quot; i.e., regulating what was then a monopoly service. At the time, there was no competition with, or between, phone and cable service providers.</em></p>

<p><em>But today competition is booming among a variety of rapidly evolving technologies including cable TV, cell phones, satellite TV, Internet telephone, Internet TV and others.</em></p>

<p><em>So now, instead of protecting consumers, the old laws are actually shielding large companies from emerging competition and are preventing consumers from taking advantage of better services and lower prices.</em></p></blockquote>

<p>You can read the entire article <a href="http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister/opinion/columns/article_1201307.php">here</a>.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/07/reason_foundation_cable_compet.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/07/reason_foundation_cable_compet.php</guid>
         <category>Deregulation</category>
         <pubDate>Wed, 05 Jul 2006 11:39:15 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Anaheim WiFi: Greater Consumer Choice, No Taxpayer Subsidies</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Last week, I had the honor of cutting the “ribbon” (it was actually a wire) inaugurating the first phase of the citywide WiFi network built and operated by Earthlink. Within six square miles centered on Anaheim’s downtown, hi-speed wireless Internet access will be available for a $22 monthly subscription fee (you can view a map of the initial coverage area at http://www.earthlink.net/about/muni/maps/anaheim/). The network is scheduled to expand to 10-square miles by the end of July and cover all 50-square miles of Anaheim by the end of 2006.</p>

<p>This is an impressive accomplishment and a testament to the speed with which private sector provides public goods when unburdened by government interference. The Anaheim City Council voted last October to sign an agreement with Earthlink for the building of a citywide WiFi network. Eight months later the first phase is already operational.</p>

<p>More importantly, this is not a city-owned enterprise undertaken to gratify government egos and provide a trendy “free” service using taxpayer dollars. Earthlink is using existing city infrastructure to build their WiFi network. The company pays the city for the electricity to power the system, a lease payment for the municipal fiber connections used, and a fee for attaching their wireless equipment to city streetlights and traffic signals. Earthlink will also provide the city with access to the new network at a discounted rate – enabling us to create a back-up for the city’s emergency wireless network at a lower cost. </p>

<p>Furthermore, Earthlink performs a wholesale role that enables other ISPs to sell WiFi access on a retail basis. In other words, Earthlink will not have a city-chartered WiFi monopoly in Anaheim. </p>

<p>July is a month when American celebrate our independence and remember to “let freedom ring.” In a small way, the inauguration of Anaheim’s citywide WiFi network does exactly that, and shows how local government, via open-mindedness and a simple willingness to stay on the sidelines, can let freedom ring a little bit louder.</p>

<p>--Curt<br />
</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/07/anaehim_wifi_greater_consumer.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/07/anaehim_wifi_greater_consumer.php</guid>
         <category>Citywide WiFi</category>
         <pubDate>Sat, 01 Jul 2006 15:32:01 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>AOL, DirectTV To Resell Earthlink WiFi In Anaheim</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Earthlink, which launched the first phase of its city-wide WiFi netowrk last week, <a href="http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/TechNews/TechInvestor/2006/06/30/1661789-ap.html">announced agreements</a> with AOl and DirectTV that allows those companies to purchase the service wholsale and resell in Anaheim:<br />

</p><blockquote><p><em>AOL and DirecTV will offer Wi-Fi subscriptions to customers in all cities where EarthLink builds networks.</em></p>

<p><em>&quot;We don't want to be a franchise that has a monopoly on Wi-Fi,&quot; said Donald Berryman, president of municipal networks for EarthLink. &quot;It will be a truly open market, price-competitive system, and that was a big selling point for the cities.&quot;</em></p>

<p><em>EarthLink said it has now completed about 20 percent of Anaheim's network, which will ultimately cover about 100,000 households over 49 square miles. It will also offer access to the city's throngs of tourists; some 50 million people go to Anaheim each year to visit Disneyland and attend conventions and sporting events.</em></p></blockquote>

<p>You can read the entire article <a href="http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/TechNews/TechInvestor/2006/06/30/1661789-ap.html">here</a>.<br /> </p>
]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/06/aol_directtv_to_resell_earthli.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/06/aol_directtv_to_resell_earthli.php</guid>
         <category>Citywide WiFi</category>
         <pubDate>Fri, 30 Jun 2006 19:04:24 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Mayor Pringle Celebrates New Citywide Internet Access with &quot;Wire Cutting&quot; Ceremony</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Net Access in Anaheim Untethered by EarthLink</strong></p>

<p></p>

<p>By James S. Granelli<br />
Times Staff Writer</p>

<p>June 29, 2006</p>

<p>Internet service provider EarthLink Inc. expects to launch its first municipal wireless system today, with high-speed connections in six square miles of downtown Anaheim.</p>

<p>The Orange County city is key to EarthLink's strategy as it adapts to changing online habits and the evaporation of its dial-up business. Anaheim is the biggest city so far to embrace a nationwide trend of creating citywide wireless Internet access for residents and businesses.</p>

<p>"We want to see competition for broadband Internet access," said Mayor Curt Pringle, who will join EarthLink executives for a "wire cutting" ceremony at City Hall. The project is expected to be completed this year.</p>

<p>The service will cost $22 a month, more than the base prices of limited broadband offered by the phone and cable companies that provide most Internet access across California.</p>

<p>Unable to get cable modem service at her Caracol Toy & Candy shop three blocks from City Hall, Rosie Navarrete became EarthLink's first customer, switching to wireless during a test period that started at the end of April. "The first thing I noticed was that I got reception everywhere in the store and the surrounding areas outside," Navarrete said. "It was great reception. No interference."</p>

<p>EarthLink needs more customers like Navarrete.</p>

<p>Executives of the Atlanta company appreciate that the wireless system is just another option for residents who already can get DSL from AT&T Inc. and cable modem service from Adelphia Communications Inc. But Adelphia doesn't reach Anaheim businesses. Earthlink figures it needs to attract 15% to 20% of the households with Internet access to make its effort profitable.</p>

<p>"We're looking at it as a replacement for dial-up Internet users, for people who are new to the Internet and for those who want a roaming service," said Donald Berryman, president of EarthLink Municipal Networks.</p>

<p>About half the nation's online households still use their regular telephone connection to dial into the Internet, according to Forrester Research Inc.</p>

<p>"That's a pretty good market to sell to," Forrester analyst Charles Golvin said. "I think EarthLink has a really tough row to hoe, but it is focused on the right market."</p>

<p>The company's business model, he said, is unproven.</p>

<p>EarthLink customers in Anaheim will get data at 1 megabit per second — about 18 times faster than dial-up. Phone and cable companies sell slower broadband for $13 to $18 a month and faster speeds for more than EarthLink charges.</p>

<p>Last year, the company lost about 300,000 dial-up customers. After counting gains in broadband customers, its subscriber base fell by 73,000 to just over 5 million.</p>

<p>A problem for EarthLink is that it doesn't own any broadband access pipes. "Given changes in regulations, it can't assure itself of holding on to its broadband customers going forward," Golvin said.</p>

<p>That's why EarthLink Chief Executive Garry Betty decided to go after the municipal wireless market.</p>

<p>The company is starting to put together a 135-square-mile network in Philadelphia as well as systems in hurricane-ravaged New Orleans and in the Silicon Valley town of Milpitas. It has won contracts to unwire San Francisco and Aurora, Colo., and is a finalist in bids for building networks in Long Beach, Pasadena, Minneapolis, Arlington, Va., and Grand Rapids, Mich.</p>

<p>In Anaheim, EarthLink is building two linked systems based on wireless technologies known as Wi-Fi and WiMax. Residents within 6 square miles around City Hall downtown can get wireless broadband now, and coverage will grow to 10 square miles within a month, said Jay Dugas, the company's local network director. Earthlink plans to cover all of Anaheim's 50 square miles by the end of the year.</p>

<p>At some point, Dugas said, EarthLink also will offer higher speeds to businesses.</p>

<p>But even as EarthLink completes its network, AT&T is rushing to finish upgrading its system to a mix of fiber-optic and copper lines to provide more reliable digital subscriber line, or DSL, service and pay TV.</p>

<p>The nation's largest phone company expects to start offering television programming to Anaheim residents by the end of the year. AT&T also aggressively markets its phone, video, high-speed data and Cingular Wireless services in discounted packages that neither Adelphia nor EarthLink can match.</p>

<p>EarthLink is undaunted. "We're not going to take many DSL customers anyway," Berryman said. "I think our service will be complementary. Customers can take it and roam around." </p>

<p></p>

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         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/06/mayor_pringle_celebrates_new_c.php</link>
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         <pubDate>Fri, 30 Jun 2006 11:46:17 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Anaheim&apos;s Advocacy Of Free Market For Video Services Praised</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Kurt Weber, a columnist on <a href="http://www.townhall.com/">Townhall.com's</a> Conservative Weblog, <a href="http://www.townhall.com/blogs/c-log/KurtWeber/story/2006/06/26/202612.html">posted this</a> on on June 24:</p><blockquote><p><em>There are good things happening at the local government level. As concerns cable and video services, the always informative <a href="http://www.townhall.com/phrd.html?loc=http://reason.org">Reason Foundation</a> vice president Adrian Moore recently wrote, “A few states, like Texas and Ohio, have passed legislation requiring that cities allow competing services. And a few mayors have spoken out in favor of competition in television providers and an end to the old monopoly regulations and franchise fees.” But, pointing a positive finger, Moore says, “Mayor Curt Pringle of Anaheim has been out front on this.” Moore mentions that the Anaheim Mayor and city council are making “good policy decisions that embrace competition and markets. Mayor Pringle’s perspective on competitive telecommunications providers … will give city residents more choices, a better deal, and make the city more competitive with its neighbors.” The next time your local officials blather on about franchise fees, the need for a monopoly provider, and other blah, blah about the importance of Soviet Central Telecomm Planning, hand them the <a href="http://www.anaheim.net/administration/PIO/news.asp?id=678">City of Anaheim media release</a> that extols the benefits of reduced government interference and franchise fee elimination. Next, send ‘em to Disneyland to see firsthand what a wonderful telecomm world we could have if they’d just stop acting Dopey.</em></p></blockquote><p>]]></description>
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         <pubDate>Wed, 28 Jun 2006 10:42:27 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Forbes Magazine Profiles Anaheim&apos;s Soon-To-Debut Citywide WiFi</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>The July 3 edition of Forbes magazine features an article on Anaheim's cityiwde WiFi network -- the first phase of which will debut next week:</p>

<blockquote><p><em><span style="color: #999999;">OutFront</span><br /><span style="font-size: 1.2em;"><strong>Tomorrowland</strong></span><br /><span style="color: #3333ff;">Scott Woolley </span>07.03.06</em></p>

<p><em>Anaheim is about to turn on the first Wi-Fi network to blanket an entire city. Has Earthlink's Garry Betty finally found a way to make a mint selling Internet access?</em></p>

<p><em>In the past decade Garry Betty has experimented with just about every possible way of connecting his customers to the Internet--and wiped $1 billion of his shareholders' capital off the balance sheet in the process. But now the chief executive of Earthlink says he sees a way to take his revenge on the giant rivals who have long beaten him bloody.</em></p>

<p><em>In Anaheim, Calif. Earthlink has attached little white boxes to 1,500 traffic lights. At the end of the month Anaheim Mayor Curt Pringle will cut a ceremonial wire, turning on those boxes and powering up America's first big-city Wi-Fi network, which will offer residents high-speed wireless Web access across Anaheim for $22 per month.</em></p>

<p><em>While many cities have fought bitter public battles over building urban Wi-Fi networks--phone and cable companies loathe the idea of the cut-rate competition--Anaheim is about to become the first major-league city to do it.</em></p>

<p><em>The 49-year-old Betty hopes to repeat Anaheim across the nation, turning Earthlink into the leader, by far, in building and running urban Wi-Fi networks. He has won contracts to build networks in Philadelphia and New Orleans, both of which will go live in the last quarter of this year. He hopes to finalize similar contracts with Honolulu, Minneapolis, Arlington, Va. and, with help from Google, San Francisco. Dozens more cities are eyeing Anaheim before deciding to sign up.</em></p>

<p><em>It's a sweet moment for Betty, who has spent most of the past decade trying to beg, borrow or buy access to the networks owned by big phone and cable companies. His larger rivals had no interest in letting him turn a profit selling dial-up or high-speed access using their wires. Government efforts to force them to share--which Betty lobbied for--did little to create real competition.</em></p>

<p><em>&quot;For the first time I don't have to go crawling on my hands and knees asking for a better deal,&quot; says Betty.</em></p>

<p><em>Earthlink, based in Atlanta, has spent $5 million building the Anaheim network and expects that it can earn a decent return on that cash once 15% to 20% of Anaheim's 100,000 homes sign up. The monthly $22 buys a customer access at 1 megabit per second. That's not as fast as cable or DSL, but it's cheaper and, unlike most Internet connections, is accessible from a car or a park bench as well as home.</em></p>

<p><em>That's just the start, says Betty. Last year Earthlink and South Korea's SK Telecom launched their jointly owned high-speed wireless service called Helio. Helio buys minutes on Sprint's broadband cellular network and resells them. Betty plans to offer Helio customers new phones that can sense Earthlink's Wi-Fi networks and shunt calls off the cellular network and onto Wi-Fi. The Wi-Fi option has the potential of offering clearer calls at cheaper rates, by letting callers pay for smaller monthly buckets of cellular minutes. While cell phone companies don't have much incentive to let their own subscribers use such phones, Helio has plenty.</em></p>

<p><em>Another potential new market is lower-income Anaheim residents who can't afford broadband or a standard cell phone. Betty expects to offer them unlimited calling from anywhere in Anaheim to anywhere in the U.S. for around $25 per month.</em></p>

<p><em>Betty dreams of creating new wireless markets that don't exist: tracking cop cars and fire trucks; reading electricity, parking and gas meters; monitoring inventory and breakdowns in soda- and candy-vending machines. He figures he can make a fine profit charging the likes of Coca-Cola a few pennies a day per machine. &quot;Prior to this they could never afford to connect all those machines, but for a buck a month they will,&quot; Betty says.</em></p>

<p><em>Betty's initial capital outlay works out to $50 per home within the territory (i.e., $250 per customer, if he achieves that hoped-for 20% market penetration), and he thinks that price will fall to close to $20 per home passed as volumes ramp up. Within the next two to three years Earthlink's antennas could be upgraded at minimal cost to speeds of 5 to 10 megabits a second, says Donald Berryman, the Earthlink executive in charge of building the networks.</em></p>

<p><em>Cellular data networks offer vastly greater coverage areas, but installing cellular towers and licensing cellular airwaves cost far more per customer. Last year U.S. carriers spent $23 billion upgrading their networks to &quot;3G.&quot; Telcos are spending $1,000 and up per home passed to lay capacious fiber in the ground. Betty is happy to cherry-pick the urban areas that are the cheapest to serve with Wi-Fi.</em></p>

<p><em>It is too soon to say how many cities will qualify. Earthlink chose to start in Anaheim because it is blessed with friendly geography. The city is mostly flat (hills block Wi-Fi signals) and studded with slender palm trees (leafier trees damp signals); the tallest building in the center of town happens to be city hall (so the Wi-Fi antennas around town can beam their data back to one central location).</em></p>

<p><em>The $1 billion of shareholders' money that Earthlink spent over the last decade has left it with 1.6 million broadband and 3.6 million dial-up Internet subscribers. That customer base produced $188 million in cash last year, but is atrophying as dial-up customers disappear. Revenue fell 7%, to $1.4 billion last year, and building out cities with Wi-Fi will eat up a big chunk of the cash flow the remaining subscribers throw off.</em></p>

<p><em>Betty had to assiduously cut costs to bring the company to profitability in 2004. It earned $143 million last year. Betty thinks citywide Wi-Fi won't produce meaningful revenue this year or next. &quot;But by 2008 or 2009,&quot; he says, &quot;it could be a really big number.&quot;</em></p></blockquote>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/06/forbes_magazine_profiles_anahe.php</link>
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         <category>Citywide WiFi</category>
         <pubDate>Fri, 23 Jun 2006 14:38:30 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>NFL Commissioner Tagliabue and Select Owners Come to Orange County for Business Meeting to Discuss Opportunities</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Mayor Curt Pringle and local business leaders hosted NFL Commissioner Tagliabue and key NFL owners to further discuss opportunities for the NFL in Anaheim.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/06/nfl_commisioner_tagliabue_and.php</link>
         <guid>http://curtpringleformayor.com/2006/06/nfl_commisioner_tagliabue_and.php</guid>
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         <pubDate>Fri, 16 Jun 2006 12:21:50 -0800</pubDate>
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