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2A Work Session 2013 0128
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2A Work Session 2013 0128
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1/25/2013 3:55:36 PM
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CM City Clerk-City Council
CM City Clerk-City Council - Document Type
Staff Report
Document Date (6)
1/28/2013
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_CC Agenda 2013 0128 WS
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\City Clerk\City Council\Agenda Packets\2013\Packet 2013 0128
2A Work Session 2013 0128 Supplement
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\City Clerk\City Council\Agenda Packets\2013\Packet 2013 0128
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Visit the City of San Leandro website at www.sanleandro.org <br />manufacturers value, such as good freeway and <br />rail access, its own sewage treatment plant, and <br />cheaper rents. Nearly a quarter of San Leandro <br />is zoned for commercial or industrial use, and <br />the city has resisted the urge to rezone it for <br />other things. <br /> <br />"The city has always believed industrial land is <br />important for jobs," says Cynthia Battenberg, <br />San Leandro's business-development manager. <br />She says businesses are interested in the fiber <br />loop and there has been no opposition from any <br />quarter. <br /> <br />Like many Bay Area cities, San Leandro has lost <br />manufacturing companies in recent years. It still <br />has plants that make Ghiradelli chocolates and <br />Mi Rancho tortillas, among other products, but <br />has lost plants that make Kellogg's cereals and <br />Golden Grain pasta. Decades ago, the city also <br />had heavy manufacturing, with two auto <br />manufacturing plants. Today, there are at least <br />two dozen vacant properties with more than <br />10,000 square feet of space available within <br />reach of the fiber loop, according to city officials. <br />Gary Fracchia, a commercial broker and partner <br />at Cassidy Turley in Oakland, says it isn't the <br />first time the city has tried to lure high-tech <br />companies, with limited success, but that the <br />fiber loop "will help." He is looking for someone <br />to lease a 140,000-square-foot space that is <br />within the loop and says the rent, at 55 cents to <br />65 cents a square foot, is "about half" what it <br />would cost in Silicon Valley. <br /> <br />San Leandro's loop is small compared with <br />Santa Clara's. Santa Clara started its fiber <br />backbone in 2000 with three customers for its <br />26-fiber-mile loop. It now has about 20 <br />commercial customers, including companies <br />catering to social media and Web search, and <br />57 fiber miles. Companies pay for fiber-optic <br />access depending on the level of service they <br />want and amount of data they move. Revenue <br />from the service has grown from about $350,000 <br />the first year to $2.13 million, and it returns <br />$300,000 to $500,000 to Santa Clara each year. <br />"Our aim is not to turn a big profit but to foster <br />business development," says Debby Barry, fiber <br />program manager for Silicon Valley Power, the <br />electric utility that runs the program in Santa <br />Clara. <br /> <br />Communications experts say cities need high- <br />speed Internet access to compete for the most <br />tech-savvy companies, especially those involved <br />in large data transfers like gaming, software and <br />Web services. But even companies that aren't <br />often generally thought of as tech companies, <br />like hospitals, have rapidly growing data needs. <br />Mr. Kennedy says San Leandro's fiber optic- <br />needs are modest today, but "you build it for <br />where you're going, not where you've been." <br /> <br />Lit San Leandro plans to sell service using a <br />subscription model and is still developing <br />pricing. In exchange for access to the city's <br />underground pipes, the City of San Leandro is <br />getting 10% of the fiber system for its own use. <br />Partnering with the city, Mr. Kennedy says, has <br />eliminated bottlenecks in getting permits. <br /> <br />The Lit San Leandro team is also working with <br />development efforts in nearby cities like <br />Hayward, Castro Valley and Oakland. Ms. Clark, <br />the telecommunications consultant, says fiber <br />expansion anywhere is good because "it will <br />produce productivity gains for the whole region." <br /> <br />
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