That number will change depending on distance, terrain, and a lot of other 
factors.  I have personally installed a lot of outside plant fiber and $700 can 
turn into $2400 the first time you find a rock or need to add a manhole 
somewhere.  It also depends on distance between customers and their distance 
from a right of way.  Are we talking New York labor or Atlanta labor charges?  
Big difference there.  Did the municipality require conduit?  Some do and it 
becomes much more expensive.  Are you digging up any pavement or direct boring 
it all?

It does not matter much though.  Bottom line is that if you can get a 
residential customer to pay even $700 construction charge very often, I will be 
impressed.

Steve

-----Original Message-----
From: Jay Ashworth [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, March 24, 2014 12:25 PM
To: NANOG
Subject: Re: Level 3 blames Internet slowdowns on Technica

----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Steve Naslund" <[email protected]>

>> What do you mean by average monthly bill? That is the issue here. The 
>> average monthly bill includes the services you are getting. In the 
>> Chicago area a fiber optic access circuit unbundled from the imcumbent 
>> carrier to a competitive carrier is something like $10 a month or so.
>> How could you possibly think you can fund a build out in a new area 
>> for that price? It may be possible to pay for that over 20 years. The 
> problem is that no one goes into business to break even over 20 years.

>Well, Steve, happens we had this conversation in some detail last year when I 
>was up for a City IT director position, and contemplating fibering
>12,000 passings.

>The magic number is apparently $700-800 per passing, not the $2400 you seem to 
>suggest...

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