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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Fiber optic line to Black Butte
Crews working
for Qwest are laying fiber optic cable between Sisters and Black Butte along
Highway 20.
Eventually, the new cable
will be used to upgrade service between the ranch and the rest of the
world. New options will include digital subscriber lines and improved
broadband.
Qwest has 3,393 accounts out
of the Sisters call center, and 1,744 out of the Black Butte call center,
according Erin Dunn, Director of Public Relations for Qwest.
Camp Sherman will not have
the new services because of the distance between homes in that community
and the Black Butte central office that handles their calls.
The fiber optic line, which
will cost a little under $1 million, is being paid for by the telephone
company. A six-man crew from Van Dorn Enterprises out of Stayton and Pendleton
is actually laying the cable at the rate of about one mile per day.
Most of the distance is being
covered by a vibrating plow that feeds the "Plow con" or conduit directly
into the ground. In some areas, to meet terrain or regulatory requirements,
a backhoe is being used instead to trench and lay the pipe.
Construction should be complete
by the middle of October. After the conduit is in the ground, optical
fiber will be pulled through and spliced, according to Bill Burgess of
Qwest.Then the cable will be connected to equipment already installed
at Black Butte and Sisters, and they will "turn on the light."
According to Dunn, the fiber
optic cable is a spur off of the main fiber optic "backbone" from Portland
to Gilchrist.
Eventually, the "backbone"
will become a "ring," from Portland through Central Oregon to Gilchrist,
then through Oak Ridge to Eugene and back to Portland. |
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