Chattanooga has unveiled a plan to offer free Wi-Fi across the city.
Workers are in the process of rewiring the existing Wi-Fi in city-owned buildings, and in subsequent phases will open up Wi-Fi in parks and other open spaces, said Lacie Stone, director of communications for the city.
In buildings with Wi-Fi available in some areas, such as the city's Youth and Family Development centers, workers are expanding the networks to cover the whole structures, Stone said.
Such a plan dates back to 2011, when the administration of former Mayor Ron Littlefield announced that it would conduct a test of free Wi-Fi in selected areas.
The city by then had already partly completed a network of 580 wireless routers across the city, initially designed as a network for police to use for their in-car laptops. But the network, a so-called wireless mesh, was never completed and the plan to offer free citywide Wi-Fi using the mesh network was shelved by the Berke administration.
The new network will not use the $30 million mesh system. Nor will it represent a brand new network. Instead, it is more of a retooling of a patchwork of existing networks and will be more limited in scope, covering only certain properties rather than a ubiquitous, citywide coverage area as first envisioned under the Littlefield administration.
The city will kick off a naming competition today that will allow the public to vote on the best name for the new Wi-Fi. For instance, Boston's municipal Wi-Fi system is called "Wicked Free Wi-Fi," the city says.
After a week of submissions, the mayor's office will narrow the list down to five names, which then will be put to a vote.
The city's effort is separate from the work of The Enterprise Center, which is working on a solution to bridge the digital divide and bring Internet access to Chattanooga's poorest communities.
Contact staff writer Ellis Smith at 423-757-6315 or esmith@timesfreepress.com with tips and documents.