#SFWiFi

Video transcript

Mayor Ed Lee:
Well, we're the innovation capital of the world, and I can't think of another project any better than having Wi-Fi connectivity in our city for everybody — and it cuts costs across different economic lines, different neighborhoods — and it helps, not only young people with their education, but for regular folks to find out where their muni bus is, or where their favorite restaurant is, or how to get educational opportunities in the city.

It was led by the Department of Technology, so they're
really, really proving themselves to want to take on such a great responsibility as our market street is one of the busiest corridors in the city. I want to thank the department of technology for that, but they found some great private partners in the form of Ruckus Wireless—out of the valley— that, along with Layer 42, both of them gave us some very expensive equipment to use but also gave us some great guidance as to how to do it in a sustained way, and so that combination of the public-private partnership was another compliment of how our Department of Technology is working— how a government should work with the private sector and particularly on technology to do these sorts of exciting things and it complements all the other things that we're trying to do to use technology in the positive way. 

Selina Lo:
San Francisco is one one of the greatest cities in the world, and it certainly gives Ruckus a lot of credibility to be able to support a service that works for San Francisco. 

Wi-Fi will become like a utility just like power and water, and as such it has to be pervasive. It will be available, I think it over time in all the public venues. 

Oakland Resident Visiting SF:
Actually, I live in Oakland, but I'm here on Market Street a whole lot, and I'm not really very familiar with the area, especially this part of market street. So being able to just use my smartphone and being able to navigate around, it's really, really helpful, and I appreciate the fact that the city is actually doing its civic duty and providing a connection for everybody, so thank you to the city. 

Joseph Molinari of DT:
There was a huge manpower effort. There were three different shops and crews involved in this. It was the overhead line crew doing all the overhead work. There was the underground cable crew pulling all the fiber optics and the network cable. And there was a radio shop doing all the connectorization, turn-on, and troubleshooting. Each one of those shops put in at least three months worth of man-hours times six or eight people on each shop. There were no real issues with the AP's, which are the access points for the system, and they really amount to basically a very sophisticated antenna. They're what broadcasts a signal out to the street that people can pick up on their mobile devices. 

Mayor Ed Lee:
We can use a public-private partnership to hit up the other major corridors. I'm looking at corridors across the city where people traverse, where there's a huge amount of small businesses, neighborhood groups, transit corridors, where there's housing for everybody. And they just want to get online with their education hopes, or connecting with their friends, or just looking for a job. I think we have a lot of people around the city whether they're veterans or others that they're not just on Market Street, they're all over the city, and they just want that connectivity. 

Joseph Molinari:
Market Street's very old. The conduits systems are very old, and Market Street has been dug up several times since they've been installed. You had to deal with damaged conduits. We did have to run some links between conduits systems, to link conduits system so we could get the routes we needed to pull the fiber, and just 3.1 miles of fibers is a lot of fiber to
pull in three months. So, another issue was just actually getting the fiber to our shop, procuring it, getting it on the job. 

San Francisco Resident:
We paid a good amount of taxes in San Francisco. It seems like to ease the burden— if we all had access to Wi-Fi more or less when we're in the city center— we wouldn't have to pay such egregious cellphone bills, and people's efficiency is broken down into when they can connect to the internet. I don't know, it's silly. Why not? 

Mayor Ed Lee:
Free internet and free Wi-Fi is a way forward for all of the challenginf divisions of our cities across the country, not just for San Francisco. Oakland, San Jose, Chicago, Philadelphia — we're all saying the same thing. We want our families, our kids —particularly from backgrounds where there used to be a digital divide— to be connected up so that people can look for jobs or gain the skill sets that they want for the 21st century. It's all about the future of our city and making sure we take care of the hundred percent.