Yellowstone Notebook
Yellowstone encourages public comment on environmental assessment proposal to improve telecommunication services to meet critical needs - NPS
Yellowstone encourages public comment on environmental assessment proposal to improve telecommunication services to meet critical needs
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Contact: Morgan Warthin, (307) 344-2015
MAMMOTH HOT SPRINGS, WY – The National Park Service (NPS) encourages
public comment on an Environmental Assessment (EA) about a proposal to
improve telecommunication services in developed areas of Yellowstone
National Park. The proposal would also give the park the opportunity to
remove obsolete telecommunication systems currently on mountaintops and
from the backcountry as underground fiber within the road corridor
becomes operational.
The park prepared the EA to evaluate potential impacts and determine if
the park should authorize a right-of-way (ROW) permit. The EA examines
two alternatives. In Alternative A (no action), the fiber optic network
would not be installed. Alternative B (proposed action) would allow for
the installation of fiber optic cable along existing park roads. If
approved, the proposed action (an application for a right-of-way permit)
from Diamond Communications, LLC. would allow for:
- Installation of fiber optic cable along 187 miles of park roads. See map.
- Appropriate equipment e.g., rubber-tracked vehicles, to install the conduit underground within the existing road corridor, immediately adjacent to and/or directly into the roadbed. See photos (click on YELL Fiber Optic EA).
- Temporary and localized traffic delays up to 30 minutes and speed reductions in work areas from April until early November for three consecutive years.
- Removal of five microwave radio reflectors that were installed in
the park's backcountry around 1980. Removal could begin in the near
future as fiber optic becomes operational.
- Currently, these reflectors are an essential component of the park's microwave radio telecommunication system.
- Each reflector is about 28 feet high and 24 feet wide.
- The existing microwave radio system is the only means of telecommunication (telephone, 911 and computer networks) in the park interior.
- Broadband over fiber optic cable could replace the obsolete microwave system.
Additional proposal details include:
- It is estimated that 8% of the park is currently covered by cellular.
- The proposal would not expand authorized cellular phone coverage areas in the park but would substantially improve coverage quality in existing developed areas.
- This proposal is consistent with Yellowstone National Park's Wireless Communications Services Plan.
- No new cellular towers would be installed under this proposal.
- Diamond Communications, LLC. would pay for all up-front construction costs.
- Once installed, the park could subscribe to the broadband services.
- Commercial telecommunication systems can be considered a utility and, like other utilities, are authorized on NPS lands using the right-of-way permit process.
The proposal addresses the following park issues:
- Bandwidth on the existing microwave radio system is inadequate and no longer meets the park's needs for business operations, employee communications, and emergency communications and operations.
- Due to extremely remote duty stations, recruitment/retention for both the NPS and its business partners is severely affected by a lack of consistent and reliable connectivity.
If this proposal is approved, the benefits to NPS staff, partners and visitors would include:
- Improved telephone, cellular phone, park computer networks and broadband internet services that could meet critical park operations, safety and emergency services and visitor information needs and expectations in developed areas.
Comments must be received by April 21, 2021. Comments may be submitted online at: parkplanning.nps.gov/fiberEA
or by mail. Mail comments to: Compliance Office, Attention: Fiber Optic
Project, P.O. Box 168, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming 82190.
Following the comment period, the park will make a final decision about
the proposal. A final decision is expected in summer 2021.
Public Comment Considerations
- Comments will not be accepted by fax, email, or by any other means.
- Bulk comments in any format submitted on behalf of others will not be accepted.
- Before including your address, phone number, email or other personal information, be aware that your entire comment – including your personally identifiable information – may be made public at any time. You may ask us to withhold your personally identifiable information from public review, but we cannot guarantee that we will be able to do so.
- The proposed project is an undertaking as outlined under Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA). We welcome comments about historic properties or other cultural resources that fall within the project area.
In addition to NHPA, the park is also completing compliance that
includes the Endangered Species Act, and other applicable laws and
policies for this project.