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- Date: Sun, 05 Apr 92 10:06:31 CST
- From: Mike.Riddle@ivgate.omahug.org (Mike Riddle)
- Subject: The Alascom Story
-
- From the Fidonet FCC echo:
- Originally posted: 02 Apr 92 23:45:00
- Originally from: Don Kimberlin
-
- Here's some info for those who get propagandized about how "the phone
- company" or "AT&T" is the only telecommunications entity in the world
- that accomplishes anything. The following was received here today
- from Alascom, the original "interstate" and "international" common
- carrier for Alaska, that in addition to a pretty illustrious history,
- has today become one of the world's most called-upon "fast response"
- providers of transportable satellite stations for public
- communications, even down to being the real communications earth
- station provider during Desert Storm, operating quietly behind the
- scenes while AT&T and MCI beat their breasts about "providing the
- troops with phones from Saudi Arabia":
-
- THE ALASCOM STORY
-
- "From telegraph wires strung across vast stretches of
- wilderness to the emergence of satellites, fiber optics and
- solid-state digital technology, telecommunications in Alaska have made
- a quantum leap in a relatively brief span of time.
-
- "What is now Alascom began as the Washington-Alaska Military
- Cable and Telegraph System (WAMCATS), a "talking wire" strung overland
- across Alaska's wilderness and linked to a submarine telegraph cable
- connecting Seattle with Juneau, Sitka and Valdez.
-
- "Congress passed the act that created WAMCATS in 1900 in order
- to open communication channels between Alaska's isolated military
- outposts and the rest of the nation. A provision in the bill set the
- conditions for the eventual foundation of a civilian system. That
- year the first operational telegraph link was completed, with 25 miles
- of line (part of a $450,000 plan by the Army Signal Corps) strung from
- Nome Military headquarters to the Port Safety outpost.
-
- "Three years later, land lines connected western Alaska,
- Prince William Sound, the Interior and Southeast. An unsuccessful
- underwater telegraph cable had been laid in 1900 across Norton Sound
- from Port Safety to Fort Saint Michael. This early effort was ripped
- apart by ice blocks, but replaced in 1903 with a new wireless system.
- The Norton Sound radio link was the world's first application of a
- permanent radio-telegraph link for public communications, earning it a
- place in telecommunications history.
-
- "By 1905, 1500 miles of land lines, 2,000 miles of submarine
- cable and 107 miles of wireless links comprised WAMCATS' unique and
- growing network.
-
- "With the discovery of gold and subsequent law enforcement
- problems at this early part of the century, WAMCATS' telegraph linked
- San Francisco and Washington military headquarters with their
- far-flung Alaskan outposts.
-
- "The military allowed commercial and non-military traffic on
- the system, providing it did not interfere with military operations.
- The Alaska Railroad, completed in 1923, pused development from the
- port of Seward through Anchorage and into the Interior. Eventual
- increase in commercial traffic led to a telegraph link with Ketchikan
- and established that community as the main relay point between Seattle
- and Seward.
-
- "By 1916, half of WAMCATS' land line were abandoned in favor
- of wireless stations, which reduced costs and increased communications
- reliability in the harsh climates that made maintaining wire lines so
- difficult. For the next two decades, little growth was experienced as
- Alaska withdrew from the limelight of the post-goldrush era.
-
- "During the 1930's, submarine cables, supplemented by radio
- links, slowly replaced the `talking wire.' To reflect the changing
- technology, Congress renamed WAMCATS as the Alaska Communications
- System (ACS) in 1936.
-
- "With the outbreak of World War II, Alaska's geographic
- importance became evident to the nation`s leaders and substantial
- activity in communications began once again. The Alaska Highway
- project was pushing forward and communications with the outside world
- were vital to the war effort.
-
- "Communications links with the Lower 48 were upgraded in the
- mid-1950's when AT&T laid a submarine telephone cable between
- Ketchikan and Port Angeles, Washington.
-
- "When Alaska was granted statehood in 1959, Western Electric
- had been operating the strategic White Alice Communications System
- (WACS) for the government. WACS provided circuits for remote military
- installations and to villages that had been beyond reach of the Alaska
- Communications System.
-
- "WACS provided the technology that could relay voice
- communications over high mountain ranges. This system functioned by
- bouncing strong radio signals off the Earth's troposphere, a costly
- process due to the huge amounts of power required to produce
- sufficiently strong signals at a distance. Used in conjunction with
- the Distant Early Warning line of radars (DEW line), White Alice sites
- featured ten-story-high troposcatter antennas, some of which are still
- standing as silent monuments to a bygone technology.
-
- "Meanwhile, RCA had established itself in the state by winning
- contracts to supply personnel and maintenance to scattered armed
- forces communications sites. As private enterprise became more
- involved in Alaskan communications, the Federal government decided to
- stop providing communications to the commercial and private sectors.
-
- "In 1969, Congress passed the Alaska Communications Disposal
- Act. Among interested bidders to purchase the Alaska Communications
- System were General Telephone, Continental Telephone and RCA Global
- Communications. RCA was the successful bidder at a price of $28.5
- million in cash and a pledge to immediately invest an additional $30
- million for badly needed improvements to the then seriously overtaxed
- and outdated ACS.
-
- "RCA had purchased rights to provide the state's commercial
- traffic with a network including toll centers at Anchorage, Fairbanks,
- Juneau and Ketchikan; a network of marine radio stations, a submarine
- cable terminating in Southwest and a scattering of high-frequency (HF)
- radio communications sites.
-
- "Concurrent with the purchase of ACS, RCA's pioneering
- satellite technology in long distance communications made its debut on
- the international scene.
-
- "RCA renamed its Alaska operating unit Alascom, and in 1973
- purchased the Bartlett Earth Station, then the only one in Alaska and
- Alaska's sole satellite link with the outside world. Shortly
- thereafter, Alascom contructed its own first satellite station at Lena
- Point, near Juneau, bringing Alaska into the era of modern satellite
- technology.
-
- "The first functional domestic satellite system in the nation
- appeared later than year when Alascom began using the Canadian Anik II
- satellite on a regular basis. Howard Hawkins, the forward-thinking
- president of RCA Alascom's parent company, RCA Communications, pushed
- full speed ahead on plans to construct earth stations across Alaska on
- a substantial scale.
-
- "By 1974 Alascom had constructed earth stations at Prudhoe
- Bay, Nome, Bethel and Valdez. The same year, RCA launched its own
- satellites, SATCOM 1 and 2, and all of Alascom's satellite traffic was
- switched to the new "birds."
-
- "In July 1976 RCA Alascom entered into an agrement with the
- Department of the Air Force to lease most of the military's antiquated
- White Alice facilities and replace them with 22 modern satellite earth
- stations.
-
- "Replacement of the military's aging communications system was
- largely completed by Alascom in the late 1970's; the earth stations
- built to replace the White Alice system required construction in
- formidable places. For example, a year of pre-planning was needed to
- get equipment to Shemya in the Aleutian Islands on the once-a-year
- supply barge.
-
- "In the late 1970's, the federal government was beginning to
- look at reshaping the domestic telecommunications industry to foster
- competition. The giant RCA Global Communications, which also operated
- worldwide communications of many sorts, was ordered by the FCC to
- divest itself of domestic satellite communications -- of which RCA
- Alascom was a foremost part. RCA American Communications (RCA
- Americom) was formed as a totally independent corporation and given
- the responsibility for handling all domestic satellite business of
- RCA.
-
- "In June, 1979, RCA Alascom was purchased by Pacific Power and
- Light Company (now PacifiCorp) of Portland, Oregon. The purchase
- price was $200 million cash and taking over $90 million of Alascom's
- long term debt.
-
- "Meanwhile, Alascom had expanded its service by constructing
- more than 200 earth stations and serving even the smallest rural
- communities in the state. Company pride and committment to Alaska was
- never more evident than on October 27, 1982, when Alascom launched its
- own satellite -- Aurora I -- the only satellite of its kind and
- devoted exclusively to use by a single state -- Alaska.
-
- "Along with the new `bird,' Alascom's plant improvements had
- vastly upgraded its satellite and terrestrial links within the state
- and to interstate points. A new multipurpose building in Anchorage
- was constructed on Government Hill, consolidating all local Alascom
- components in one complex.
-
- "Always forging ahead with new technology, Alascom established
- the first satellite communications for offshore oil rigs in the
- mid-1980's, developing a gyro-stablized satellite antenna that
- compensated for the pitch and roll of the drilling vessels.
-
- "Live television, a given anywhere else in the United States,
- arrived late in Alaska. Entertainment programs were a week or two
- late arriving in Anchorage by film or tape. After showing in
- Anchorage, the material was sent onward for even later showing in
- Fairbanks and then Juneau. National news was taped off the air in
- Seattle and put on the first available northbound plane. In most
- cases, Walter Cronkite addressed his Alaskan audience a day later than
- the Lower 48.
-
- "Today, live programming is beamed throughout Alaska using
- Alascom's Aurora I, and events of interest to the world are beamed out
- from Alaska; events like the visit of Pope John Paul, the rescue of
- the trapped whales, and coverage of the Valdez oil spill all traveled
- out via Alascom's Aurora I. The same Alascom satellite is used to
- relay long distance learning to remote sites throughout the state.
-
- "Presently, Alascom employs more than 700 people in Alaska and
- operates more than 300 sites statewide with microwave and satellite
- communications. Alascom also works under contract for several
- companies that require specialized communications at remote mining and
- oil drilling sites. Alascom also operates the state's marine radio
- network and an aviation weather service for pilots.
-
- "In the last few years, Alascom has become known throughout
- the global telecommunications industry as the experts on rapid
- deployment of transportable earth stations, delivering them to remote
- sites by air freighter or helicopter and setting up operation within
- hours. Alascom was called upon by the oil industry in Alaska to
- provide remote communications from the tragic spill site in Prince
- William Sound when the tanker Exxon Valdez lost its cargo in the
- pristine Alaskan waters.
-
- "In 1989, Alascom was called upon by the U.S. Navy to fly its
- transportable earth station to Puerto Rico to re-establish
- communications devastated by Hurricane Hugo on that Caribbean island.
- The same year, Alascom transportable earth stations and personnel were
- deployed to Panama in support of the U.S. forces in Operation Just
- Cause.
-
- "One year later, as the Iraquis invaded Kuwait, Alascom was
- once again thousands of miles from home providing satellite
- communications support to our Armed Forces operating in the Saudi
- theatre as part of Desert Shield, and then Desert Storm.
-
- "On May 29, 1991, Alascom launched its second satellite --
- Aurora II -- as a replacement for the aging Aurora I which was almost
- out of station-keeping fuel after nine years of faithful service. The
- new satellite, more sophisticated and powerful than its predecessor,
- will continue to provide a variety of telecommunications services to
- Alaska's growing population.
-
- "More recently, Alascom entered the era of international
- submarine fiber optic cables by linking its communications network
- with a spur that runs off the North Pacific Cable that runs between
- Portland, Oregon and Japan. The Alascom spur, which lands at Seward,
- Alaska, proceeds underwater to a point 1,900 miles south, where the
- transPacific portion of the cable is tapped, using methods like those
- employed for joining multiple European nations on transAtlantic
- cables. This connects Alaskans not only with the Lower 48 but also
- directly with the Orient via the latest in digital fiber optics
- technology.
-
- "The story of Alascom has been the story of growth. In 1971,
- when the company took its first few steps, Alaska's long distance
- telephone traffic amounted to 5 million calls per year. Today,
- Alascom handles in excess of 95 million calls annually and is doing so
- at substantial rate reductions from jsut 20 years ago. Over that
- short history, Alascom has lowered its interstate calling rates by 85%
- while reducing intrastate calls by 25%. A call that cost $10.00 in
- 1971 today costs only $1.56.
-
- THE FUTURE:
-
- "The years ahead are full of promise and excitement. As
- Alaska enters the last decade of this century, plans are already being
- laid for Alascom to enter the twenty-first century in the way WAMCATS
- entered the twentieth century, full of dedication and committed to
- serving its state and its people -- and now increasingly expanding
- that scope to the world, wherever and whenever needed.
-
-