COMMUNITY REPORT JULY 2017–2019 www.cenic.org
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CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
CENIC connects California to the world — advancing education and research statewide by providing a world-class network essential for innovation, collaboration, and economic growth.
Table of Contents 01
PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE
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GOVERNANCE & FINANCIALS
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NETWORK STORIES FROM OUR BLOG
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CENIC ANNUAL CONFERENCE: THE RIGHT CONNECTION
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TECHNICAL OPERATIONS & IMPROVEMENTS
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CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
From the President & CEO: California’s R&E Nework Evolves Dear Colleagues:
In 1996, visionary leaders at California’s research and education institutions came together to form CENIC, a nonprofit organization that would provide a world-class broadband network: the California Research and Education Network (CalREN). This cost-effective, high-bandwidth network would support the needs of our members: the University of California system, the California State University system, California Community Colleges, Stanford University, Caltech, the Naval Postgraduate School, University of Southern California, and California’s public K–12 schools and libraries, along with affiliated education, government, medical research, and cultural
LOUIS FOX
CEO & PRESIDENT
institutions throughout the state. CENIC now operates one of the world’s most complex and diverse networks. Over the years, as the networking field has evolved, the landscape we work in has changed. CENIC continues to adapt to an environment in which the economies of scale are not keeping pace with growing usage, particularly given the demands of big-data research and education. With these increasing demands and a continuously expanding network, we also must step up our efforts to ensure security, resiliency, and reliability. Robust broadband is essential to discovering and disseminating knowledge.
PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE
Other R&E networks are facing similar challenges — and we are all working together on solutions. Cloud service providers and leading-edge dot-coms are addressing many of the same problems and we are learning with and from them.
R&E NETWORKS AT A CROSSROADS
In this report, you will learn how CENIC is addressing these challenges and taking advantage of new opportunities in
STRATEGIC PLAN FOR 2018 – 2023
our members. We also outline ways in which CENIC continues to build and secure our world-class network, expand
our five-year strategic plan for 2018-2023. And you will hear how staff work flexibly and nimbly to meet the needs of the network to serve more Californians, and pursue dynamic and innovative uses of the network. As the world changes, CENIC’s mission remains unchanged: to connect California to the world — advancing education and research statewide by providing a world-class network essential for innovation, collaboration, and economic growth. For all of us at CENIC, it’s an honor and inspiration to pursue this mission with our associates.
Louis Fox President & CEO, CENIC
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Strategic Plan 2018-2023 Part One: Investing in the Evolution of CalREN
Part Two: Improving Access & Equity Across California CENIC seeks to continue enhancing connectivity among our already connected members, and connecting those insti-
To continue its history of responsiveness and relevance to the diverse communities it serves, and to perpetuate its
tutions who are either unconnected or poorly connected. For the former, we recognize that what constitutes quality
leadership and successes, CENIC seeks to (1) meet the exponential growth in traffic; (2) reach more un- and under-
connectivity is a moving target as our institutions and their needs and aspirations are dynamic. The latter are often in
served sites among its charter associates and their partners, while continuously upgrading existing sites; (3) sustain
communities that have little or no access to broadband capacity — in their community anchor institutions, businesses,
network performance, reliability, and resiliency; and (4) remain cost-effective, as it has for over 20 years.
government offices, or homes. To serve our members, we must find common cause with our partners in the public, pri-
With input from the capacity planning process from each segment, discussions with the board and technical advisory committees, CENIC is preparing a multi-year, phased development and implementation plan. The plan for the future of CalREN should include the following elements: (1) the network must be cost-effective and manage/flatten the cost-
vate, and governmental sectors. We have a history of engagement with these partners and we must deepen our ties to them, explore new strategies and resources for our common work and, together, achieve the goal of a fully-connected California.
curve; (2) the network must be reliable and resilient; (3) the network must meet the capability and capacity needs of all CENIC segments; and (4) the network must be “facilities efficient,” deploying cost-saving new technologies that decrease both capital and operating expenses, often in partnership with other networks.
Initial goals include: •
Refine and articulate goals, gaps, priorities for capabilities and capacity needs among the CENIC segments, and ensure that funding is commensurate with network services that support all CENIC segments.
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Meet with each segment to understand their needs, model future demands across the network, and circulate these combined expectations.
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Develop a five-year network roadmap, as well as a revenue plan to support this roadmap.
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Explore resource development and cost savings through automation technologies, renewed IRUs, circuit consolidation, and other improved efficiencies.
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Explore new “customer” segments in government, health care, and education.
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With partners, explore and develop new technology applications, such as node-slicing technologies and a shared optical layer with partners.
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Initial goals include: •
Associate institutions. •
Further deploy among all CENIC segments PRP-developed network transparency and measurement tools.
Develop segment strategies that can be implemented simultaneously; for example, large institution (dark fiber), middle-sized institution (lit fiber services), and rural/edge and small institutions (fixed wireless and other, related
With partners, explore shared infrastructure efficiencies, such as facilities, spectrum agreements, dark channel,
wireless technologies).
alien wave, and co-locations condo agreements. •
Enhance forecasting and deployment of new circuits and/or new fiber connections for CENIC Charter
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Form a CENIC Rural Broadband Working Group comprised of CENIC associates and interested partners from the public and private sectors that are committed to rural connectivity.
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Work with partners, old and new, to develop better data and narratives around community needs and interests, as well as develop more comprehensive funding stream strategies.
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Assist the California Emerging Technology Fund in achieving its goal of 98% access in California, with CENIC’s focus on its community anchor institutions, through strategic engagement and planning processes with community members, policymakers, and vendors.
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Continue to lead in the development of a statewide initiative to install wildfire detection, monitoring, and modeling technology across California with systems already proven in the field by university researchers,
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Support for constituents with technical security mitigations, such as for distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks.
private sector vendors, utility companies, first responders, and R&E networks. •
Develop collaborative plans for policy and funding in support of local, regional, and statewide fixed wireless
As CENIC and other R&E networks find ourselves at a crossroads with big-data science demands at all-time highs
deployments in other areas including additional research arenas (earthquake monitoring and research, climate
and budgets that have not kept pace, we will strive to collaborate and share new approaches that can reduce costs,
research, weather research, etc.), support for the University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources’
advance resilience, and increase economies of scale. We will continue to partner with a host of public and private
(and partners) efforts in precision agriculture, and broadband connectivity for community anchor institutions,
entities to provide the high-speed connectivity and customized services that bolster scientific discovery and promote
including CENIC’s constituents.
digital access.
Part Three: Ensuring a Secure CENIC and a Resilient CalREN We seek an enterprise in which all CENIC computing and networking and intellectual property assets are identified, activity involving those assets is visible, and industry best practices for security mitigations are applied to those assets. We also seek a CalREN that supports the research and education missions of CENIC’s constituents, while being resilient to attacks against the network and other failures, and where possible and desired, provides CENIC’s constituents with the appropriate visibility and security controls to help them enhance the security of their own enterprise, without interfering with the research and educational missions of their respective sites.
Initial goals include: •
Updating CENIC’s disaster recovery plan.
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Executing annual disaster preparedness and recovery drills.
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Continuous maintenance of visibility for all CENIC-operated equipment, from devices to security cameras to networked equipment.
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Updated enterprise security standards, including strong authentication practices and highly segmented and insulated local area networks.
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Continuous development of security personnel capacity.
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About CENIC CENIC connects California to the world – advancing education and research statewide by providing the worldclass network essential for innovation, collaboration, and economic growth. In 1996, visionary leaders in California’s research and education institutions came together to form CENIC, a nonprofit organization operating the world-class California Research and Education Network (CalREN) essential for innovation, collaboration, and economic growth statewide. Today, CENIC continues to provide cost-effective, reliable, high-bandwidth networking capacity and connectivity to support research and education conducted by our members: the University of California system, the California State University system, California Community Colleges, Stanford University, the California Institute of Technology, the University of Southern California, the Naval Postgraduate School, and California’s public K–12 schools and libraries, along with affiliated educational, governmental, medical research, and cultural institutions throughout the state. CENIC serves shared long-term public goals of technological innovation, democratic vitality, and opportunity for the next generation. CENIC connects the state’s research and education institutions to peers around the world, with an estimated 20 million Californians using CENIC’s services each year. CENIC is part of a global ecosystem of research and education, government, and commercial networks, and manages a vast portfolio of integrated networks on behalf of its members and partners, delivering quality, efficiency, and value for all.
GOVERNANCE & FINANCIALS ABOUT CENIC BOARD OF DIRECTORS TECHNICAL ADVISORY COUNCILS COMMUNITY MEMBERS FINANCIAL STATEMENT 2015-2018
FPO FOR POSITION ONLY New Image to come
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Board of Directors CENIC is governed by its member institutions by means of the board of directors. Director seats are held by representatives of the Charter Associates — the segments of the California research and education community for and by which CENIC was created, as well as significant segments that joined later. The following served partial or whole two-year terms during the period July 2017 to June 2019.
CALIFORNIA COMMUNITY COLLEGES
STANFORD UNIVERSITY
Tim Calhoon, Director, CCC Technology Center
Mark Miyasaki, Executive Director, Communication Services, Information Technology
Barney Gomez, Vice Chancellor Digital Innovation & Infrastructure, CCC Chancellor’s Office Todd Hoig, Director, Management Information Systems, CCC Chancellor’s Office Deborah Ludford, District Director, IT Services, North Orange CCC District Van Ton-Quinlivan, Vice Chancellor, Workforce & Economic Development, CCC Chancellor’s Office
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Tom Andriola, Vice President & CIO, UC Office of the President Larry Conrad, Associate Vice Chancellor and CIO, UC Berkeley Michael Pazzani, Vice Chancellor, Research & Economic Development, UC Riverside
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Jin Chang, Chief Information Officer, Caltech
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
CALIFORNIA K–12 SYSTEM
David Galassi, Assistant CIO, University of Southern California
Todd Finnell, Superintendent, Imperial County Office of Education
OUTSIDE DIRECTORS
Terry Walker, Superintendent, Irvine Unified School District Jerry Winkler Director, Education Data Mngmt Division, California Department of Education
Greg Bell, CEO, Corelight Ron Johnson, Vice President, CIO Emeritus, and Professor, University of Washington
CALIFORNIA PUBLIC LIBRARIES
Larry Smarr, Director, California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology, UCSD
Natalie Cole, Consultant, Library Development Services Bureau, California State Library
EX-OFFICIO
Michael Liang, Chief Information Officer, San Francisco Public Library Anne W. Neville, Director, California Research Bureau, California State Library Patty Wong, City Librarian, Santa Monica Public Library CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY Patrick Perry, Chief Information Officer, CSU Chancellor’s Office Michael Berman, Chief Innovation Officer & Deputy CIO, CSU Chancellor’s Office Samuel Sudhakar, Vice President for Information Technology Services & CIO, CSU San Bernardino NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL Joseph LoPiccolo, CIO and Director, Information Technology and Communication Services
Technical Advisory Councils The Technical Advisory Councils (TACs) serve to provide technical review and recommendations on infrastructure issues relating to the California Research & Education Network (CalREN) as requested by the CENIC board of directors. TACs are made up of interested members of the CalREN community who work closely on hardware, software, interoperability issues, performance management, and network research priorities. •
CalREN-HPR TAC: Advises on the development of CENIC’s High-Performance Research (HPR)
Louis Fox, President & CEO, CENIC
network, which provides leading-edge services for large-application users at CENIC Associate
Ernest Johanson, Senior Network Design Engineer, Voice and Data Networks (IMSS), California Institute of Technology
ESNet, and AARnet.
Paula MacKinnon, Interim Director, Califa Jelena Mirkovic, Project Leader & Research Faculty, Information Sciences Institute, University of Southern California George Peek, Network Engineer, Information Technology Services, UC Santa Cruz Russ Selken, Executive Director, IETS, Twin Rivers Unified School District
sites through national and international research and educational networks such as Internet2, •
CalREN-DC TAC: Advises on CENIC’s Digital California (DC) network, which provides highquality network services for faculty, staff, students, researchers, patrons, and patients in member institutions through the commercial Internet.
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CalREN-SEC TAC: Advises on network security systems, tools, and techniques as part of CalREN and related infrastructure, as well as data privacy issues related to CalREN and common to CENIC Associates.
Individuals eligible to participate in TACs are employed by CENIC Associates as defined in the CENIC Bylaws by its board of directors and listed on the website. TAC members should actively participate in the discussion list, meeting, and subcommittees as needed. For more information about getting involved with TACs, contact Brian Court at CENIC.
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Sponsored Associates These are cultural, scientific, or artistic institutions or organizations with a close tie to a Charter Associate that serves as a sponsor. Sponsored associates have direct access to an abbreviated portfolio of CENIC’s networks and services.
Community Members Charter Associates These founding and governing research and education members have full access to CENIC’s portfolio of networks and services. Charter Associates’ representatives comprise the CENIC board of directors, setting policy and guiding the organization.
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California Academy of Sciences
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Exploratorium
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Jackson Labs
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SFJAZZ Center
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United States Geological Survey (USGS), Menlo Park Campus
Auxiliary Associates Auxiliary Associates are smaller institutions and organizations that engage with the CENIC community and have direct access to an abbreviated portfolio of networks and services.
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California Community Colleges
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California Institute of Technology
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Chapman University
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California K–12 Schools
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City of Hope National Medical Center
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California Public Libraries
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The Getty
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California State University
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Pepperdine University
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Naval Postgraduate School
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University of San Diego
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Stanford University
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University of California
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University of Southern California
Affiliates These educational and research institutions and organizations make use of CalREN indirectly through a Charter Associate that serves as an Affiliate’s connection to the network.
Associates These independent research, educational, medical, and technology institutions and organizations engage with and connect directly to the broader CENIC community. Associates have direct access to CENIC’s portfolio of networks and services. •
Carnegie-Mellon University West
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NASA Ames Research Center
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Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula
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Salinas Valley Memorial Healthcare System
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Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
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ArtCenter College of Design
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International Computer Science Institute
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Broad Art Foundation
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Loyola Marymount University
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Charles Drew University
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National Marine Fisheries Service
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Claremont College
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Occidental College
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Colburn School
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Pac-12 Enterprises
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East Bay Community Law Centers
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The Scripps Research Institute
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Venter Institute
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CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
CENIC Financial Statement 2015 - 2018 FY2015-16 Liabilities Assets Total Assets
FY2016-17
FY2017-18
18,176
16,362
17,830
84,571
95,719
91,299
102,747
112,081
109,129
120,000
03
110,000 100,000 95,719
Assets Liabilities In Thousands
91,299
84,571 80,000
NETWORK STORIES FROM OUR BLOG BUILDING AND SECURING A WORLD-CLASS NETWORK
60,000
EXPANDING THE NETWORK DYNAMIC AND INNOVATIVE USES OF THE NETWORK 40,000
20,000 18,176 10,000
0
FY2015-16
16,362
FY2016-17
17,830
FY2017-2018
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The pilot is a collaborative effort involving experts from CENIC and its member research institutions, the University of Oregon’s Network Startup Research Center (NSRC), the US Department of Energy’s Energy Sciences Network (ESnet), and the American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN), as well as from collaborating institutions and organizations from the larger US R&E network community.
Building & Securing a World-Class Network
Routing security is vital to the stability of the Internet. The global routing system is the backbone of the Internet. It determines how all data — from email messages to videoconferences to website content — moves from network to network. Networks use Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) to connect with one another, but BGP was designed long before security was such a large concern. Routing incidents can be prevented with MANRS’s collaborative approach to security.
Better Together: R&E Networks at a Crossroads These days, research and education networks find themselves at a crossroads with big-data science demands at alltime highs and budgets that have not kept pace. Still, network capacity should not limit the work or ambitions of our researchers, teachers, and students. One of the finest assets of R&E networks is their ability to collaborate. While commercial internet service providers are characterized by competition, R&E networks thrive on collaboration. By working together, R&E network members enjoy reduced costs, shared expertise, shared services, advanced security, increased buying power, and economies of scale. CENIC partners with a host of public and private entities to provide the high-speed connectivity and customized services that bolster scientific discovery and promote digital access. CENIC is staying ahead of the curve as we extended fiber leases until 2040, and with Cisco test next-generation network capabilities of 400G and 600G.
CENIC to Explore Adoption of MANRS Global Initiative to Improve Routing Security
Zero-Trust Networking Enhances Security in Research & Education Environments Research and education institutions face unique cybersecurity challenges due to their inherent culture of openness, sharing, and innovation. Universities, schools, and libraries administer public programs and allow
CENIC is initiating a pilot project to explore regional adoption of Mutually Agreed Norms for Routing Security (MANRS), a global initiative to make the Internet more secure. Those who join MANRS agree to apply best practices, that when taken by all users, dramatically improve the resilience and security of the Internet routing infrastructure.
anyone to use their own electronic devices to access their networks. At the same time, these institutions store
MANRS is supported by the Internet Society, an international nonprofit dedicated to the open development, use, and evolution of the Internet. More than 30 research and education networks worldwide have already adopted MANRS, including Internet2, the US research and education (R&E) consortium. Industry giants such as Google and Microsoft also participate.
Zero-trust security — a solution implemented by Google and Netflix — may be uniquely capable of tackling the
This voluntary pilot project will start with select research institutions, and with success, could be expanded to include
as users become increasingly mobile, organizations store more information in the cloud, and cyberattacks
all of CENIC’s more than 12,000 member sites. While other R&E networks in the United States have adopted MANRS,
become more sophisticated.
CENIC would be the first to do so on such a large scale. Facilitating adoption of MANRS across CENIC’s membership would better secure the network routing infrastructure that all members rely on, thereby preventing outages caused by routing incidents and creating a more reliable connection for everyone.
vast amounts of personal data, expensive research, and other confidential information, making them an attractive target for hackers.
security issues confronted by R&E environments. The underpinning zero-trust IT security model is that users inside a network are no more trustworthy than users outside a network, and therefore strict identity verification is required for every person and device. The zero-trust networking approach is being pursued
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Collaboration Kept Pepperdine Connected During Wildfires When the deadly Woolsey wildfire closed in on Pepperdine University’s Malibu campus last fall, the private college worked with CENIC to save critical Internet service. Communication lines were kept open for parents, students, faculty, and staff to stay informed during the emergency. Engineers responded quickly, many volunteered to help, and partners collaborated with agility. Whenever a CalREN connection goes down, network engineers in CENIC’s Network Operations Center receive an alarm and immediately start troubleshooting. Everyone in CENIC’s NOC is a network engineer. At Pepperdine, it took NOC engineers only three hours to work with AT&T to upgrade a circuit and increase alternate capacity. “It happened very fast. I was impressed,” said Pepperdine Director of Information Technology Rita Schnepp. NOC engineers also made it a priority to contact other institutions on the network affected by wildfires and offer to help in any way possible.
As Internet use and utility grow with each passing year, the importance of establishing connectivity for all communities becomes more urgent. CENIC’s goals, too, are to continue expanding access to underserved institutions, to promote education and smart Internet usage, and to provide reliable, high-speed access to research and education facilities that will help preserve the past for the future.
CENIC Tour Helps Identify Strategies to Expand Internet Access Many rural areas in California still lack reliable, or any, Internet connectivity. To find ways that CENIC can help expand access in underserved communities, President and CEO Louis Fox is visiting all 17 regional broadband consortia in California in partnership with California Emerging Technology Fund (CETF) leaders. Broadband consortia are local efforts organized to improve and expand Internet access and funded by the California Public Utilities Commission. Getting Internet to the most remote areas necessitates public-private partnerships and hybrid strategies that combine broadband technologies. Through this statewide tour, CENIC and CETF are identifying connectivity gaps, funding sources, ways CENIC’s network might be used, and relationships with broadband providers that might be leveraged. Working collaboratively, CENIC now has many projects in production that stitch together two or more broadband technologies to extend last-
Expanding the Network
The Unfinished Internet: Vint Cerf on Expansion, Education, and Preservation Forty years after helping create the Internet, Vint Cerf, chief Internet evangelist at Google, advocates for broadband expansion, greater digital literacy, and improved digital preservation. The Internet, Cerf says, isn’t yet complete for several reasons: Around 3.5 billion people worldwide still don’t have adequate Internet access, including millions of Californians; education supporting sophisticated Internet use needs more widespread establishment; and network technologies need significant improvement, especially in the field of digital archiving. Cerf believes that ultimately the Internet serves as a human network, connecting people and ideas around the globe.
mile symmetrical gigabit connections to schools,libraries, community colleges, and research sites in rural communities that previously had little or no bandwidth.
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A BIIG Milestone: More of California’s Hardestto-Reach K-12 Schools Now Have Broadband Starting in the early 2000s, California public schools began connecting to the Internet through CENIC, but a minority to this day have not been able to due to financial and geographic constraints. Thanks to special state funding from Broadband Infrastructure Improvement Grants (BIIG) and public-private partnerships, hundreds of new schools have overcome these challenges in recent years. These schools are now among the best connected in California. CalREN now provides Internet to 100% of county offices of education, 85% of school districts (897), 80% of schools (8,594), and 5.1 million students.
Because bandwidth is no longer a limitation, patrons are able to not only experience virtual reality, but also create their own VR content. In times of crisis, such as recent wildfires, libraries serve as community resource centers and communication hubs. In areas without adequate Internet access, libraries are loaning hotspots and providing remote access points in parks and other community centers.
The Getty and the California Academy of Sciences Join CENIC Two renowned cultural institutions, The Getty and the California Academy of Sciences, now have direct connections to CalREN. With access of 10 gigabits per second, the institutions’ increased capacity enables new opportunities to
Getting hard-to-reach schools online has taken a lot of work, but the resulting benefits are tremendous. CENIC looks forward to continuing its successful collaborations with the California Department of Education, the California Legislature, the California Public Utility Commission, the K-12 High Speed Network, school sites, and commercial service providers to finish the job.
help their visitors engage, share, and learn. As the world’s largest arts institution, The Getty is better equipped to share scientific data, digitized artworks, and vast research databases that scholars, scientists, curators, and researchers around the world use every day. With a mission to explore, explain, and sustain life on Earth, the Academy’s planetarium, aquarium, and natural history museum are all housed under one living roof. From live, multi-planetarium broadcasts of the latest astronomical discoveries to new animal webcam streams to extended K-12 educational outreach, the CENIC network has opened new channels for the Academy’s valuable resources.
Our Evolving Public Libraries: Gigabit Connections Bring Fresh Ambitions In 2013, California public libraries began connecting to the CalREN network for dramatically faster and more reliable Internet at a cost savings of up to 95%. Now, more than 80% of libraries are connected with increased speeds of 10 to 100 times their earlier capacity. This transition has vastly improved administrative functions and made possible new services. Many communities are envisioning a larger role for libraries. Libraries are becoming the place for patrons to work remotely, meet up to collaborate, take online courses, and complete training programs and certification testing.
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DYNAMIC & INNOVATIVE USES OF THE NETWORK
CSU San Bernardino Leveraging New Networking Capacity to Tackle Campus Challenges With an upgraded 100-gigabit link to the CENIC network, California State University San Bernardino is developing new student technology programs, expanding faculty-led research, obtaining research grants, creating Science DMZs, and moving more applications to the cloud. CSUSB is one of nine CSU campuses with a recently upgraded 100 Gbps network link.
UC San Diego: Tiny Organisms, Giant Impact on Climate Advances in automated plankton identification being made at the University of California San Diego could transform our ability to monitor ocean health and drastically speed up the discovery of climate change solutions. An essential part of life, plankton form the base of the aquatic ecosystem, produce more than half of the oxygen on Earth, and remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Jules Jaffe, a researcher at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and his team have captured more than one billion high-resolution images of plankton with the use of underwater microscopes. Images are automatically classified and analyzed using machine learning. Jaffe’s team uses Flash I/O Network Appliances (FIONAs), developed by the National Science Foundation-funded Pacific Research Platform; UCSD’s Science DMZ (Prism) to move data on campus; and CENIC’s High-Performance Research network for inter-campus data sharing. Plankton pictures are also published online, where anyone can explore and tag the data.
Pacific Research Platform: The Future of Big Data Collaboration To accelerate the rate of scientific discovery in data-intensive fields such as cancer genomics, galaxy evolution research, and climate modeling, researchers need to get the data they need, where they need it, and when they need it. Pacific Research Platform (PRP) aims to achieve transparent and rapid data access among collaborating scientists at multiple institutions throughout the United States and the world. A partnership of more than 50 institutions including the US Department of Energy, led by researchers at UC San Diego and UC Berkeley, and with funding from the National Science Foundation, PRP extends the campus Science DMZ model to a regional, national, and, eventually, a global scale. PRP builds on the optical backbone of Pacific Wave, a joint project of CENIC and Pacific Northwest Gigapop (PNWGP) to create one large, seamless research platform. Today, machine learning is being added to PRP and CENIC has renewed collaborations to support PRP’s underlying infrastructure.
CSUSB is taking advantage of its new computing power to rethink how it delivers curriculum, promoting multi-disciplinary innovation teams that address 21st-century challenges. Students are developing an app to alleviate parking congestion on campus for commuters, as well as creating virtual reality curriculum for a variety of classes at the university, from archeology to nursing. New technology-enabled programs at CSUSB improve student engagement, eliminate achievement gaps, and increase graduation rates in support of the California State University’s Graduation Initiative 2025. More than 80% of students who graduate from CSUSB are the first in their families to graduate from college.
Rivers in the Sky: How PRP Enables Scientists to Predict Extreme Weather Forecasters will soon be able to predict seasonal climate affects, such as the extreme drought followed by the extreme floods experienced in the American West in the past few years. Speeding up these weather predictions will save lives and property, helping California communities protect themselves against climate change. Scott Sellars, at the Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes at UC San Diego, is part of a multi-institutional group of scientists who have developed the CONNected objECT (CONNECT) algorithm, designed to study a weather phenomenon known as “atmospheric rivers” — rivers in the sky. Until recently, scientists were limited in applying the algorithm to historical data to better understand why certain weather events occurred in the past. Now, with the computing power offered through the Pacific Research Platform, the speed of the data download is challenging the algorithm itself. Questions that once took scientists months to answer now take hours.
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Pacific Wave Connects International Researchers Across the Pacific Rim For more than 20 years, Pacific Wave has done more than just envision super high-performance and highly flexible interconnection, exchange, and peering among research and education networks and connectors; it has set the standard for research and education exchanges everywhere. Moving forward, Pacific Wave is extending its reach to allow more interconnection points and additional experimentation with new technologies. Pacific Wave is a distributed international network peering facility for the Pacific Rim and beyond with peering points for network connections in Seattle, Sunnyvale, Palo Alto, and Los Angeles. Supporting 29 networks representing over 47 countries, Pacific Wave is a joint project between CENIC and the Pacific Northwest Gigapop. Pacific Wave supports advanced services including connectivity with the Pacific Research Platform (PRP),
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AutoGOLE dynamic circuit provisioning, experimental interdomain SDX collaborations, and access to 100 Gbps Data Transfer Nodes (DTNs) to accelerate large data transfers over long-haul high-capacity international links.
CENIC ANNUAL CONFERENCE CONNECTING SPEAKERS, PARTICIPANTS, AND COMMUNITIES CONFERENCE PROGRAM COMMITTEES INNOVATIONS IN NETWORKING AWARDS
Read all these stories and more at www.cenic.org/blog.
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Conference Program Committees The work of the program committee is crucial to the success of CENIC’s annual conference, and we are grateful for their
Connecting Speakers, Participants, & Communities
hard work, vision, and leadership.
2018 MEMBERS CHAIR | Jeffrey D. Weekley, University of California Merced •
Mount V. Allen III, SFJAZZ Center
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George Peek, University of California, Santa Cruz
CENIC’s annual three-day conference convenes over 400 leaders from research, education, and technology
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Melinda Cervantes, Contra Costa County Library
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communities to share successes that have come from leveraging CENIC’s California Research and Education
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Jeanette Contreras, Placentia Library District
John Rolon, California State University, Office of the Chancellor
Network (CalREN). The conference typically has over 45 sessions with plenty of opportunities for participants to
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Jarrid Keller, Sacramento Public Library
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Ralph Looney, Coast Community College District
Antonio Romayor Jr., El Centro Elementary School District
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Ivette Magaña-Birger, K-12 High Speed Network
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Steve Shiotsu, SFJAZZ Center
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Glenda Williams, Long Beach City Library
network, ask questions, and get inspired. In workshop sessions, conference participants learn about and discuss innovative uses of the CENIC network to support diverse California research and education projects; state-of-the-art and future network technologies; wireless technologies that extend CENIC’s network reach; cybersecurity and cyberinfrastructure; transformations in K-12 education and public libraries; broadband public policy; and new global collaborations supported by an
2019 MEMBERS
interconnected research and education world.
CHAIR | Jeffrey D. Weekley, University of California Merced
“The conference brings together a remarkable and diverse group of leaders from California research, education,
•
Mount V. Allen III, SFJAZZ Center
•
Gladys N. Palpallatoc, CETF
technology industry, and policy and government sectors, along with peers from around the US and representa-
•
Scott Bauer, Pacific Grove Public Library
•
Antonio Romayor Jr., El Centro School District
tives from nearly 20 countries to learn from one another on topics as varied as emerging network technologies
•
Jason M. Borgen, Santa Cruz County Office of Education
•
Jeffrey Seed, West Hills Community College District
•
Jon Legree, Placentia Library District
•
Melissa Slawson, GeoLinks
•
Jarrid Keller, Sacramento Public Library
•
•
Enoch Kwok, Oak Park Unified School District
Samuel Sudhakar, California State University San Bernardino
•
Ralph Looney, Coast Community College District
•
Glenda Williams, Long Beach City Library
•
George Peek, University of California, Santa Cruz
•
Ryan Wyatt, California Academy of Sciences
and applications to issues of access, equity and affordability of high-speed broadband,” said CENIC President and CEO Louis Fox. “The seeds for new collaborations, new ideas, and new projects are planted during these three days of rich dialogue.” The 2018 conference featured keynotes by Vint Cerf on “The Unfinished Internet,” Ilkay Altintas on “Collaborative Data Science in a Highly Networked World,” and Kireeti Kompella on “The Self-Driving Network.” Ilkay Altintas, Graham Kent, Matt Rantanen, and Frank Vernon discussed the many opportunities offered through “Wireless Extensions of R&E Networks.” Kristie Ebi, Victoria Keener, David Lassner, Gerald Meehl, and Marla Meehl discussed how the Pacific Wave International Exchange is supporting ambitious research in climate science. Rachelle Chong, Sklyer Ditchfield, Dane Jasper, Kim Lewis, and Sunne Wright McPeak tackled the many speedbumps, and potential accelerators, on the road toward “Internet for All in California.” In 2019, the keynote by John Delaney presented the past, present, and future of oceanic research technology supported by fiber-cabled observatories as we learn about submarine eruptions. A panel with Carlos Casasus, Louis Fox, Jen Leasure, Inder Monga, Howard Pfeffer, and Tripti Sinha brought forward issues facing “R&E Networks at a Crossroads.” Another panel updated the audience on the latest “Strategies for Addressing the Broadband Digital Divide”: Skyler Ditchfield, Louis Fox, Steve Huter, Sunne Wright McPeak, and Matt Rantanen. Amy Garmer, John Horrigan, Sara Jones, and Jarrid Keller inspired with national, state, and local efforts to “Reimagine Public Libraries as Platforms for Learning and Technology.” All of these sessions and others are available on the YouTube Channel for “CENIC News.”
CENIC is an extraordinary gathering of highly technical people, educators, administrators and leaders in our K-14, public and private University members, and public trust organizations like SF Jazz or essential community institutions, such as the Sacramento Public Library System. The conference focuses on bringing these diverse communities together to advance the use of the network, ensure that it’s connected to the community it serves by sharing stories of successes as well as challenges, challenges like equitable access for rural communities and emerging technologies that will impact research and education across the state and region. CENIC leads the way, in many respects, and the conference is a shining example of excellence in regional networking. Jeffrey D. Weekley Director of CyberInfrastructure & Research Computing, University of California Merced, Office of Information Technology
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CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
CENIC Innovations in Networking Awards CENIC’s Innovations in Networking Awards are presented annually at the conference and serve to highlight exemplary people, projects, and organizations that leverage ultra high-bandwidth networking, particularly efforts that have the potential to transform how instruction and research are conducted or that further the deployment of broadband in underserved areas.
Research Applications: UC Santa Cruz’s Hyades Supercomputer
2018 Awardees
Cluster Connected to LBNL’s NERSC
Experimental Applications: WIFIRE, HPWREN, & AlertTahoe for Bringing
Advanced IT & Telecommunications to the California Wildfire Risk • lkay Altintas, San Diego Supercomputer Center •
John Graham, Qualcomm Institute, UC San Diego
•
Graham Kent, Nevada Seismological Laboratory, University of Nevada, Reno
•
Frank Vernon, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego
Cloud Applications: CalState’s CMS Data Center Transformation from Private Cloud to Hybrid Cloud •
George Mansoor, CSU Office of the Chancellor
Broadband Applications: UC Agriculture and Natural Resources for Extending Broadband to Connect Rural Researchers •
Tolgay Kizilelma
•
TuTran
•
Gabriel Youtsey
Educational Applications: Broadband Infrastructure Improvement Grants for Bringing Advanced Broadband Capacity to K-12 Schools
•
Shawfeng Dong, UCSC
•
J. Xavier Prochaska, UCSC
My team and I are absolutely honored to have been
•
John Graham, Calit2
•
Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz, UCSC
recognized for CENIC’s 2019 Christine Haska Distinguished
•
Piero Madau, UCSC
•
Brad Smith, UCSC
Service Award. CENIC has been an invaluable ally in
•
Peter Nugent, LBNL
•
Joshua Sonstroem, UCSC
•
George Peek, UCSC
•
Jim Warner, UCSC
•
Joel Primack, UCSC
•
Stan Woosley, UCSC
our efforts to both close the digital divide in California and equip the state with the infrastructure needed for wildfire early detection, prevention and recovery. Ultimately it has been our public-private partnership with CENIC that has truly enabled us to deliver accelerated life-changing broadband solutions across the state, and we hope to be notified of any upcoming opportunities so we can continue to help the
Christine Haska Distinguished Service Award: For Advancing Science and Preserving the Environment, Culture and Community Across the Pacific Islands
community in any and every way we can. •
David Lassner, President, University of Hawai’i
Skylar Ditchfield CEO, GeoLinks
R&E Network Partner: Internet2 for Renewing, Enriching, and Extending the R&E Ecology
•
Patricia de Cos, California State Board of Education
Corporate Partnership: GeoLinks for Building Last-Mile Connections
•
Teri Sanders, K-12 High Speed Network
to K-12 and UC ANR
•
Jerry Winkler, California Department of Education
•
Luis Wong, K-12 High Speed Network
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CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
2019 Awardees
•
R&E Network Partner: Energy Sciences Network (ESnet) for
Research Applications: John Delaney and Interactive Oceans for
Collaborating on Cybersecurity, Network Design, and Technology Adoption to Enrich the CENIC Network
Transforming Ocean Research •
John Delaney, University of Washington
Experimental Applications: USC-Caltech Team for Demonstrating RecordBreaking Data Transfer Rates and Accelerating Scientific Discovery
•
Inder Monga
•
Lauren Rotman
•
Eli Dart
•
Michael Sinatra
•
Chin Guok
•
Denise Sumikawa
•
Azher Mughal, University of Southern California
•
Andy Lake
•
Brian Tierney
•
Harvey Newman, California Institute of Technology
•
John MacAuley
•
Jason Zurawski
•
Shashwitha Puttaswamy, California Institute of Technology
•
Kate Mace
•
Joseph Chiu, Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
•
Celeste Anderson, University of Southern California
Broadband Applications: Inland Empire Regional Broadband Consortium
for Pioneering Broadband Solutions and Bringing High-Speed Internet Access to Rural Underserved Communities •
Martha van Rooijen, Inland Empire Regional Broadband Consortium
•
Steve Massa, City of Riverside
•
Jennifer Hilber, County of San Bernardino
•
Tom Mullen II, County of Riverside
Serving as a member of the CENIC 2019 Program Committee gave me the opportunity to review high quality proposals submitted by my colleagues from the various segments served by CENIC, and understand the value CENIC is providing to accomplish their mission. Myself and my colleagues who served on the committee with me gained a fresh perspective into how each of the segments leverage CENIC resources to foster and support innovation in their organizations.
Corporate Partner: CenturyLink for Committing to Support HighSpeed Broadband for Research and Education Communities •
Stan Aschenbrenner
•
Lynda Santoro
•
Craig Cupachs
Samuel Sudhakar, Ph.D. Vice President for Information Technology Services and CIO
Educational Applications: Irvine Unified School District for Leveraging
High-Speed Broadband to Transform K-12 Education •
Terry Walker, IUSD Superintendent
•
Harmony Briscoe, IUSD Principal
•
Brianne Ford, IUSD Chief Technology Officer
Christine Haska Distinguished Service Award: GeoLinks, AT&T, CENIC Network Operations for Ensuring Emergency Connectivity to Communities and Organizations Affected by Catastrophic Wildfires •
Ryan Adams, GeoLinks
•
Cheryl Santiel, AT&T
•
Skyler Ditchfield, GeoLinks
•
Stanley Han, CENIC Network
•
Rhonda Lutz, AT&T
Operations Center
California State University, San Bernardino
Save the Date for 2020! CENIC 2020 will be held in Monterey, California, at the Hyatt Regency on March 16-18, 2020. Registration will open in December. If you have a concept for a conference presentation, watch for the call for proposals in October and subscribe for updates. www.cenic.org/conference
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CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
Expert Teams Keep Data Flowing CENIC’s greatest asset is its staff. Our technical teams are dedicated to CENIC’s mission and members, and work tirelessly to operate and improve the network. •
The Operations group runs the Network Operations Center and keeps the technical environment operating seamlessly for thousands of organizations throughout the state.
•
The Core Engineering group is instrumental in connecting millions of Californians with reliable and forwardthinking solutions, from basic broadband to advanced services for experimental networks.
•
The Network Consultation and Design group designs, configures, deploys, and maintains all layers of our network infrastructure in consultation with our member constituents to meet their requirements.
•
The Project Management Office ensures that new connections and connectivity upgrades are completed as efficiently as possible by coordinating tasks internally and externally throughout numerous project stages.
•
The Internet Services group oversees our traffic peering and exchange relationships with key internet service providers, content providers, and cloud service companies.
•
The Security group leads strategy on enterprise and network security and privacy issues as traffic demands and capacity increase over time.
TECHNICAL OPERATIONS & IMPROVEMENTS EXPERT TEAMS KEEP DATA FLOWING CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENTS TO LAYERS 1-3 CENIC’S NOC IS ALWAYS ON DUTY CIRCUIT ADDITIONS AND UPGRADES
•
The Systems Engineering group ensures that our internal systems are operating effectively and securely to helps CENIC maintain a focus on customer demands.
These groups collaborate with one another and throughout the organization to ensure seamless connectivity.
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CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
Continuous Improvements to Layers 1-3 CENIC’s California Research and Education Network (CalREN) is a multi-tiered, advanced network-services fabric serving the majority of research and education institutions in the state. The CalREN backbone includes roughly 8,000 miles of CENIC-owned and managed fiber, last-mile fiber, and hundreds of optical components. CENIC engineers perform regular upgrades at the three network layers outlined below. As of May 2019, recent network upgrades include:
LAYER 1: OPTICAL BACKBONE •
Upgrades in multiple segments of the Southern optical route to move legacy discrete 10 Gigabit services onto 10x10 GE over 100 GE transponder hardware (July 2018)
•
Upgrade the hardware in the Southern optical route to increase maximum 100 Gigabit Ethernet (GE) circuit capacity (September 2018)
•
Upgrade to advanced ROADM hardware for the Southern optical route at Los Angeles, Riverside, and Tustin (enabling 400 GE waves to be deployed) (December 2018)
•
Implement 400 GE optical circuit between Los Angeles and Riverside (expected September 2019)
•
Coastal route: Migration of all legacy 10 GE services between Los Angeles and Sunnyvale onto 10x10 GE over 100 GE coherent transponders. Removal of dispersion compensation units in preparation for deploying Flex Spectrum ROADMs (expected December 2019)
LAYER 2 (DC/HPR CUSTOMER ACCESS, COMMODITY PEERING TRANSPORT, AND PACIFIC WAVE EXCHANGE) •
Pacific Wave/Western Regional Network: 100 GE hardware technology generation upgrades (Spring 2017)
•
DC backbone for the Los Angeles to San Diego to Riverside region: Upgrade from 1x100 GE to 2x100 GE (Spring 2018)
•
Pacific Wave: Los Angeles to Sunnyvale backbone upgrade from 1x100 GE to 2x100 GE (June 2018)
•
Pacific Wave: Dedicated 100 GE between Los Angeles and Sunnyvale now available for SDN/SDX research activities (September 2018)
•
Pacific Wave/Western Regional Network backbone extended to Houston, Dallas, Tulsa, and Kansas City (September 2018)
•
Pacific Wave: Upgrade the 1 Wilshire location from 100 Gbps to 400 Gbps capacity (January 2019)
•
Pacific Wave: Sunnyvale to Seattle backbone upgrade from 1x100 GE to 2x100 GE (expected June 2019)
•
DC/HPR customer access: Layer 2 hardware technology generation upgrades (expected December 2019)
LAYER 3: ROUTED NETWORKS (DC AND HPR BACKBONES) •
Upgraded the core DC backbone ring from 1x100 GE to 2x100 GE (Spring 2018)
•
DC backbone links for downtown Sacramento hub site: Upgraded the primary path from 4x10 GE to 100 GE (Summer 2018)
•
New DC backbone router platform for the University of California Riverside hub site (expected July 2019)
•
New DC backbone router platform for the Level 3 (Century Link) Tustin hub site (expected August 2019)
•
New DC backbone router platform plus 100 GE backbone links for the California State University Palm Desert campus hub site (February 2019)
•
DC backbone links for the downtown Sacramento hub site: Upgrade the secondary path from 4x10 GE to 100 GE (May 2019)
•
DC backbone links for the San Francisco hub site: Upgrade from 2x10 GE to 100 GE (May 2019)
•
New DC backbone router platform plus 100 GE backbone link for the Cal Poly SLO campus hub site (expected July 2019)
•
New DC backbone router platform for the Level3 (CenturyLink) Bakersfield, Corning, and Soledad hub sites (expected August 2019)
•
Upgrade the core DC backbone ring from 2x100 GE to 3x100 GE (expected September 2019)
•
Upgrade the DC backbone from 2x100 GE to 3x100 GE over the LA-Tustin-San Diego-Riverside segments of the southern path (expected December 2019)
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CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
CENIC’s NOC Is Always on Duty Once an institution is connected to CalREN, CENIC’s Network Operations Center (NOC) is the first point of contact for any issue or question that arises. NOC staff monitor the network 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. CENIC members who experience a problem notify the NOC and are placed in immediate contact with an experienced, highly trained network engineer who begins to troubleshoot with them. These engineers have experience sufficient to resolve most issues, and fewer than 1% of incoming tickets are escalated to a more senior engineer. NOC engineers also diagnose and resolve problems identified by network monitoring tools, which generate an alarm
Engineers who work in the Network Operations Center gain broad experience and a deep understanding of CENIC. As a result, they become valuable assets to the organization and are frequently promoted elsewhere within CENIC, bringing their expertise to other departments.
The CENIC Internship: Gateway to Networking CENIC’s paid, part-time internship presents a thorough, hands-on inroad to the world of computer networking. Many interns come from California Community Colleges and many have completed Cisco certification programs.
when an issue is detected on the network. This alarm system often allows engineers to detect problems before they
Students work in CENIC’s Network Operations Center (NOC), where a small team of highly skilled network engi-
affect users and work to quickly resolve them.
neers are on duty around the clock to maintain CENIC’s 8,000-mile network. NOC engineers ensure that California’s
CENIC’s NOC uses a ticketing system to track issues that need resolution. Many issues can be resolved on the same day, while some are more complex and take longer. In fiscal years for CENIC July 2017- July 2019, we:
research and education institutions are provided with fast, reliable broadband Internet access, which involves everything from resolving hitches in the network to implementing backbone upgrades. Several past interns have found a home among the ranks of CENIC’s professional staff. Demand in the job market for engineers will only continue to grow. CENIC is proud to offer students an opportunity to learn about the world of computer networking, training them to meet the needs of CalREN and beyond, and promote opportunities for California’s workforce of tomorrow.
NOC engineers also coordinate and communicate third-party maintenance and repair activities, perform equipment updates, replacements, and upgrades, decommission retired equipment, and handle tasks in support of circuit installations, service upgrades, and backbone upgrades. In fiscal years 2018-2019, we: •
July 2017 - 2018 - Performed 1,690 maintenance procedures, and completed 411 tickets related to operationalizing new circuits and devices.
•
July 2018 - 2019 - Performed 1,626 maintenance procedures, and completed 486 tickets related to operationalizing new circuits and devices.
As the Woolsey wildfire surrounded Pepperdine University in Malibu, the campus’s primary internet connections burned. “A lot of lines went down... CENIC and Pepperdine staff had to make quick adjustments to make the most use out of our remaining bandwidth during the disaster. It happened very fast. I was impressed. That’s an agile organization.” – Rita Schnepp, IT director at Pepperdine University
NOC staff from left: Stanley Han, Alaa Shaheen, Eugene Ho, Mark Lozada (back), Phat Tran, Ola Gamal, Viet Do (back), Jose Gonzalez (back), Gary Sun, Travis Sevigny, and Ozzie Reyes. Not pictured: Thomas Araneta, Bryan Barnett, James Bellon, Kenny Calalang, Josh Dickman, George Dolidze, Ron Esteban, Michael Gong, Dan Hegarty, Lawrenze Morales, Steve Shibley, and Mark Swank.
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CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
California State University System
Circuit Additions & Upgrades
CSU SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
CAL POLY POMONA
100 Gbps
4/18/19
NEW
CSU FULLERTON
100 Gbps
7/27/18
UPGRADE
CSU LONG BEACH
100 Gbps
6/8/18
UPGRADE
CSU NORTHRIDGE
100 Gbps
8/17/18
UPGRADE
CSU SAN BERNARDINO
100 Gbps
3/29/19
UPGRADE
SACRAMENTO STATE
100 Gbps
12/30/18
UPGRADE
SAN FRANCISCO STATE
100 Gbps
7/1/18
UPGRADE
SAN JOSE STATE
100 Gbps
7/13/18
UPGRADE
CMS-SANTA CLARA
1 Gbps
1/11/18
NEW
CENIC is a member-driven organization focused on delivering a high level of service. We shape our network to meet the multi-faceted and dynamic needs of our research and education communities. The CalREN network is reliably and carefully monitored by a 24x7x365 Network Operations Center (NOC). Because NOC engineers continuously monitor shared network capacity to ensure that available bandwidth is always higher than demand, robust bandwidth is available to all organizations on the network. Network capacity is greater than what is typically expected from a commercial network, and engineers consult with members to solve performance issues as they arise. CENIC members are continually assessing their networking needs and planning for connectivity upgrades to provide constituents the highest level of service. The following upgrades have taken place or are in progress since May 2019.
University of California System UC SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
UPGRADE
UC ANR SIERRA FOOTHILL REC
250 Mbps
7/31/17
NEW
UC ANR WESTSIDE REC
1 Gbps
5/3/17
NEW
UC COOPERATIVE EXTENSION EL DORADO
100 Mbps
IN PROGRESS
NEW
UC COOPERATIVE EXTENSION GLENN COUNTY
100 Mbps
IN PROGRESS
NEW
UC COOPERATIVE EXTENSION PLACER
100 Mbps
IN PROGRESS
NEW
UC COOPERATIVE EXTENSION RIVERSIDE MORENO
100 Mbps
IN PROGRESS
NEW
UC COOPERATIVE EXTENSION SHASTA FSNEP
100 Mbps
IN PROGRESS
NEW
UC DAVIS
10 Gbps
1/4/19
UPGRADE
UC PATH CENTER
1 Gbps
8/24/18
NEW
UC SAN DIEGO
4x10 Gbps
12/19/18
UPGRADE
UC SANTA CRUZ
100 Gbps
1/30/19
NEW
UC SANTA CRUZ ENTERPRISE TECHNOLOGY CENTER
10 Gbps
1/24/19
NEW
Other Universities, Scientific, and Cultural Institutions SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
CHAPMAN UNIVERSITY
10 Gbps
4/13/19
UPGRADE
PEPPERDINE UNIVERSITY
10 Gbps
6/28/18
UPGRADE
PEPPERDINE UNIVERSITY (CALABASAS)
100 Mbps
4/9/18
NEW
STANFORD UNIVERSITY
100 Gbps
2/9/19
UPGRADE
STANFORD UNIVERSITY
100 Gbps
4/5/17
UPGRADE
UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI'I
100 Gbps
1/27/18
NEW
USC WRIGLEY MARINE SCIENCE CENTER
1 Gbps
2/15/19
NEW
STANFORD REDWOOD CITY CAMPUS
Dark Fiber
IN PROGRESS
NEW
GETTY
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
NEW
GETTY
10 Gbps
2/13/19
NEW
USD
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
NEW
CITY OF HOPE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
NEW
CITY OF HOPE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
NEW
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CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
California Community College System
CCC SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
UPGRADE
EAST LOS ANGELES COLLEGE
10 Gbps
7/18/18
UPGRADE
CCC SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
UPGRADE
EAST LOS ANGELES COLLEGE
10 Gbps
7/18/18
UPGRADE
ALLAN HANCOCK COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
EL CAMINO
10 Gbps
5/15/17
UPGRADE
ALLAN HANCOCK COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
EL CAMINO COLLEGE, COMPTON COLLEGE
10 Gbps
6/2/17
UPGRADE
BERKELEY CITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/14/18
UPGRADE
EL CAMINO COMPTON CENTER
10 Gbps
4/19/17
UPGRADE
BERKELEY CITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/14/18
UPGRADE
FOOTHILL CCD
10 Gbps
2/5/18
UPGRADE
CAÑADA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
11/22/17
UPGRADE
FOOTHILL CCD
10 Gbps
2/10/18
UPGRADE
CAÑADA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
11/22/17
UPGRADE
FULLERTON COLLEGE
10 Gbps
11/7/18
UPGRADE
CANYON COUNTRY EDUCATION CENTER
10 Gbps
10/4/17
UPGRADE
FULLERTON COLLEGE
10 Gbps
10/14/17
UPGRADE
CERRITOS COLLEGE
10 Gbps
2/9/18
UPGRADE
GAVILAN CCD
10 Gbps
2/18/19
UPGRADE
CERRITOS COLLEGE
10 Gbps
4/8/18
UPGRADE
GLENDALE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/19/17
UPGRADE
CHAFFEY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
3/31/18
UPGRADE
GLENDALE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/19/17
UPGRADE
CITRUS COLLEGE
10 Gbps
1/4/19
UPGRADE
10 Gbps
12/19/17
UPGRADE
COLLEGE OF ALAMEDA
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
GLENDALE COMMUNITY COLLEGE, GARFIELD CENTER
COLLEGE OF ALAMEDA
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE
10 Gbps
5/1/19
UPGRADE
COLLEGE OF THE CANYONS
10 Gbps
8/29/18
UPGRADE
GROSSMONT CCDO
10 Gbps
1/30/19
UPGRADE
COLLEGE OF THE CANYONS
10 Gbps
7/26/18
UPGRADE
GROSSMONT CCDO, CUYAMACA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
COLLEGE OF THE DESERT
10 Gbps
6/29/18
UPGRADE
IMPERIAL VALLEY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
COLLEGE OF THE DESERT
10 Gbps
6/29/18
UPGRADE
IMPERIAL VALLEY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
COLUMBIA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
4/14/17
UPGRADE
IRVINE VALLEY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
4/11/18
UPGRADE
COMPTON COLLEGE
10 Gbps
4/24/18
UPGRADE
KERN CCD
10 Gbps
7/5/18
UPGRADE
CONTRA COSTA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
7/14/18
UPGRADE
LAKE TAHOE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
2/9/19
UPGRADE
CONTRA COSTA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
7/6/18
UPGRADE
LAKE TAHOE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
2/22/19
UPGRADE
COPPER MOUNTAIN CCD
10 Gbps
6/29/18
UPGRADE
LANEY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
9/16/18
UPGRADE
CRAFTON HILLS COLLEGE
10 Gbps
10/14/18
UPGRADE
LANEY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
9/18/18
UPGRADE
CRAFTON HILLS COLLEGE
10 Gbps
10/14/18
UPGRADE
LONG BEACH CITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
9/17/17
UPGRADE
CUESTA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
3/10/19
UPGRADE
LONG BEACH CITY COLLEGE, PCC
10 Gbps
10/22/17
UPGRADE
CUESTA COLLEGE NORTH COUNTY CAMPUS
10 Gbps
3/12/19
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES CCD
10 Gbps
7/18/18
UPGRADE
CUYAMACA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES CCD
10 Gbps
7/8/18
UPGRADE
CUYAMACA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
3/7/19
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES CITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/19/17
UPGRADE
CYPRESS COLLEGE
10 Gbps
8/2/18
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES CITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/29/17
UPGRADE
CYPRESS COLLEGE
10 Gbps
9/4/18
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES HARBOR COLLEGE
10 Gbps
3/7/18
UPGRADE
DEANZA CCD
10 Gbps
4/12/18
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES HARBOR COLLEGE
10 Gbps
2/25/18
UPGRADE
DEANZA CCD
10 Gbps
5/3/18
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES MISSION COLLEGE EAST CAMPUS
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
DIABLO VALLEY
10 Gbps
6/19/18
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES PIERCE COLLEGE
10 Gbps
3/23/18
UPGRADE
DIABLO VALLEY
10 Gbps
6/21/18
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES PIERCE COLLEGE
10 Gbps
11/19/18
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES SOUTHWEST COLLEGE
10 Gbps
1/19/18
UPGRADE
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CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
CCC SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
UPGRADE
CCC SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES SOUTHWEST COLLEGE
10 Gbps
1/4/18
UPGRADE
SHASTA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES TRADE TECH COLLEGE
10 Gbps
10/31/17
UPGRADE
SIERRA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
4/20/19
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES TRADE TECH COLLEGE
10 Gbps
10/21/17
UPGRADE
SIERRA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
4/20/19
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES VALLEY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
11/22/17
UPGRADE
SKYLINE COLLEGE
10 Gbps
7/13/18
UPGRADE
LOS MEDANOS COLLEGE
10 Gbps
7/12/18
UPGRADE
SKYLINE COLLEGE
10 Gbps
7/12/18
UPGRADE
LOS MEDANOS COLLEGE
10 Gbps
6/24/18
UPGRADE
SOLANO COMMUNITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/14/18
UPGRADE
MERCED COLLEGE
10 Gbps
3/29/19
UPGRADE
SOLANO COMMUNITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
2/11/19
UPGRADE
MERCED COLLEGE
10 Gbps
3/27/19
UPGRADE
SOUTHWESTERN COLLEGE
10 Gbps
2/2/19
UPGRADE
MERRITT COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/22/18
UPGRADE
VENTURA COUNTY CCD
10 Gbps
4/16/18
UPGRADE
MERRITT COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/22/18
UPGRADE
VENTURA COUNTY CCD
10 Gbps
3/5/18
UPGRADE
MIRA COSTA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
9/1/18
UPGRADE
VICTOR VALLEY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
MIRA COSTA COLLEGE, SAN ELIJO CENTER
10 Gbps
4/13/18
UPGRADE
VICTOR VALLEY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
MISSION COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/19/18
UPGRADE
WEST HILLS COLLEGE
10 Gbps
3/17/19
UPGRADE
MISSION COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/19/18
UPGRADE
WEST HILLS COLLEGE LEMOORE
10 Gbps
7/25/18
UPGRADE
MONTEREY PENINSULA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
WEST HILLS COLLEGE LEMOORE
10 Gbps
7/25/18
UPGRADE
MT. SAN ANTONIO COLLEGE
10 Gbps
8/2/17
UPGRADE
WEST LOS ANGELES COLLEGE
10 Gbps
1/23/18
UPGRADE
MT. SAN JACINTO COLLEGE, SJ CAMPUS
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
WEST LOS ANGELES COLLEGE
10 Gbps
1/23/18
UPGRADE
NAPA VALLEY COLLEGE
1 Gbps
4/12/17
UPGRADE
WEST VALLEY MISSION CC
10 Gbps
10/2/18
UPGRADE
OHLONE COLLEGE
10 Gbps
9/22/18
UPGRADE
WEST VALLEY MISSION CC
10 Gbps
9/28/18
UPGRADE
OHLONE COLLEGE
10 Gbps
9/22/18
UPGRADE
WOODLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
10/27/18
UPGRADE
OXNARD COLLEGE
10 Gbps
9/14/18
UPGRADE
YOSEMITE CCD
10 Gbps
4/13/17
UPGRADE
PERALTA CC
10 Gbps
8/1/18
UPGRADE
YOSEMITE CCD
10 Gbps
4/13/17
UPGRADE
PERALTA CC
10 Gbps
8/10/18
UPGRADE
YUBA CCD, CLEAR LAKE CAMPUS
1 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
RIO HONDO COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
RIO HONDO COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/4/18
UPGRADE
RIVERSIDE CITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
4/5/19
UPGRADE
SADDLEBACK COLLEGE
10 Gbps
2/9/18
UPGRADE
SAN BERNARDINO VALLEY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
7/17/18
UPGRADE
SAN MATEO CCD
10 Gbps
1/6/18
UPGRADE
SAN MATEO CCD
10 Gbps
1/6/18
UPGRADE
SANTA ANA CC, RANCHO SANTIAGO CCD
10 Gbps
12/18/17
UPGRADE
SANTA ANA CC, RANCHO SANTIAGO CCD
10 Gbps
2/11/18
UPGRADE
SANTA BARBARA CITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
5/24/17
UPGRADE
SANTA BARBARA CITY COLLEGE
10 Gbps
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
SANTA ROSA JUNIOR COLLEGE
10 Gbps
4/5/17
UPGRADE
SHASTA COLLEGE
10 Gbps
12/7/18
UPGRADE
46
47
CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
California K-12 System K–12 SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
UPGRADE
CONTRA COSTA COE
100 Gbps
5/5/19
UPGRADE
DEL NORTE COE
10 Gbps
9/27/18
UPGRADE
FRESNO COE
100 Gbps
2/21/19
UPGRADE
FRESNO COE
100 Gbps
9/15/17
UPGRADE
FRESNO COE
100 Gbps
2/21/19
UPGRADE
KERN COE
100 Gbps
1/24/19
NEW
LAKE TAHOE USD
10 Gbps
1/2/19
UPGRADE
LAKE TAHOE USD
10 Gbps
1/2/19
UPGRADE
LASSEN COE
1 Gbps
11/16/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES USD VAN NUYS
100 Gbps
2/22/19
UPGRADE
MONTEREY COE
10 Gbps
1/25/19
RING TOPOLOGY
NORTHERN HUMBOLDT UHSDO
10 Gbps
9/25/18
UPGRADE
POMONA USD
10 Gbps
12/13/17
UPGRADE
LIBRARY SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
SACRAMENTO COE
100 Gbps
7/7/18
NEW
ALAMEDA COUNTY LIBRARY - FREMONT
10 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
SAN BENITO COE
10 Gbps
4/10/19
UPGRADE
ALAMEDA COUNTY LIBRARY - FREMONT
10 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
SAN BERNARDINO CSS
100 Gbps
3/31/18
UPGRADE
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN BERNARDINO CSS
10 Gbps
4/21/19
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - GOLETA VALLEY
SAN JOAQUIN COE
100 Gbps
2/3/19
UPGRADE
SAN MATEO COE
10 Gbps
1/3/19
NEW
SANTA CLARA COE
100 Gbps
1/4/19
UPGRADE
SANTA CLARA COE
100 Gbps
1/11/19
NEW
SANTA MARIA JH USD
10 Gbps
9/25/18
UPGRADE
SISKIYOU COE
1 Gbps
4/13/18
UPGRADE
SONOMA COE
10 Gbps
1/29/19
NEW
STANISLAUS COE
10 Gbps
3/22/17
RING TOPOLOGY
TEHAMA COE
10 Gbps
2/17/19
UPGRADE
TEHAMA COE
10 Gbps
2/22/19
NEW
TRUCKEE HIGH SCHOOL
10 Gbps
1/2/19
UPGRADE
California Public Libraries
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SAN LUIS OBISPO - CAMBRIA
250 MBPS
2/22/18
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SAN LUIS OBISPO - CAYUCOS
100 MBPS
11/7/18
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SAN LUIS OBISPO - CRESTON
100 MBPS
11/27/18
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SAN LUIS OBISPO - NIPOMO
250 MBPS
2/23/18
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SAN LUIS OBISPO - OCEANO
100 MBPS
11/9/18
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SAN LUIS OBISPO - SANTA MARGARITA
100 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SAN LUIS OBISPO - SHANDON
100 MBPS
11/20/18
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SANTA BARBARA - BUELLTON
100 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SANTA BARBARA - CARPINTERIA
100 MBPS
12/4/18
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SANTA BARBARA - EASTSIDE
200 MBPS
7/3/18
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SANTA BARBARA - MONTECITO
100 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
48
49
CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
LIBRARY SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
LIBRARY SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM - SANTA BARBARA - SOLVANG
100 MBPS
4/3/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - CASTAIC
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
BLACK GOLD COOPERATIVE SYSTEM SANTA MARIA - ORCUTT
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - CHARTER OAK
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
100 MBPS
5/7/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - CHET HOLIFIELD
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
BUTTE COUNTY LIBRARY - BIGGS
1 GBPS
2/23/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - CITY TERRACE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
BUTTE COUNTY LIBRARY - COUNTY DATA CENTER
1 GBPS
1/24/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - CLAREMONT
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
BUTTE COUNTY LIBRARY - GRIDLEY
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - CLIFTON M BRAKENSIEK
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
CALABASAS CITY LIBRARY
1 GBPS
12/19/17
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - COMPTON
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
CALAVERAS COUNTY LIBRARY - ANGELS CAMP
1 GBPS
9/27/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - CUDAHY
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
CALAVERAS COUNTY LIBRARY - ARNOLD
1 GBPS
7/5/18
NEW
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
CALAVERAS COUNTY LIBRARY - MURPHYS
1 GBPS
6/29/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - CULVER CITY JULIAN DIXON
CALAVERAS COUNTY LIBRARY - VALLEY SPRINGS
1 GBPS
6/28/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - DATA CENTER
100 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
CALIFORNIA STATE LIBRARY
1 GBPS
2/28/19
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - DIAMOND BAR LIBRARY
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
CALIFORNIA STATE LIBRARY - CAPITOL BRANCH
1 GBPS
2/28/19
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING (VICTORIA PARK)
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
CALIFORNIA STATE LIBRARY - SUTRO
1 GBPS
3/31/19
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - DUARTE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - EAST LOS ANGELES
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
CAMARILLO PUBLIC LIBRARY CITY OF COMMERCE PUBLIC LIBRARY - GREENWOOD
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - EAST RANCHO DOMINGUEZ
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
COVINA PUBLIC LIBRARY
1 GBPS
1/28/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - EL CAMINO REAL
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
EL DORADO COUNTY LIBRARY - GEORGETOWN
1 GBPS
9/18/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - EL MONTE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
GLENDORA PUBLIC LIBRARY & CULTURAL CENTER
1 GBPS
2/8/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - FLORENCE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
HEMET PUBLIC LIBRARY
1 GBPS
1/21/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - GARDENA MAYME DEAR
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LINCOLN PUBLIC LIBRARY
1 GBPS
2/15/19
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - GEORGE NYE JR
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LONG BEACH PUBLIC LIBRARY - BRET HARTE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - GRAHAM
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LONG BEACH PUBLIC LIBRARY - MAIN
5 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - HACIENDA HEIGHTS
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - A C BILBREW
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - HAWAIIAN GARDENS
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - ACTON
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - HAWTHORNE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - AGOURA HILLS
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - ALONDRA BRANCH
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - HEADQUATERS COUNTY OF LA PUBLIC LIBRARY (LHQ)
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - ANGELO M IACOBONI
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - HERMOSA BEACH
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - ANTHONY QUINN
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - HOLLYDALE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - ARTESIA
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - HOLLYPARK
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - AVALON
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY HUNTINGTON PARK PUBLIC
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - BALDWIN PARK
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LA CAÑADA FLINTRIDGE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - BELL
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LA CRESCENTA
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - BELL GARDENS
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LA MIRADA
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - CARSON LIBRARY AND WEST REGION
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LA PUENTE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
50
51
CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
LIBRARY SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
LIBRARY SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LA VERNE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - TEMPLE CITY
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LAKE LOS ANGELES
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - TOPANGA
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LANCASTER
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LAWNDALE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - VIEW PARK BEBE MOORE CAMBELL
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LELAND R WEAVER
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - WALNUT BRANCH
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LENNOX
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - WEST COVINA REGIONAL LIBRARY AND EAST REGION
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LITTLEROCK
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - WEST HOLLYWOOD
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LIVE OAK
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - WESTLAKE VILLAGE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LLOYD TABER-MARINA DEL REY
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - WILLOWBROOK
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LOMITA
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - WISEBURN
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LOS NIETOS
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - WOODCREST
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - LYNWOOD
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
MONROVIA PUBLIC LIBRARY
1 GBPS
8/24/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - MALIBU
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
MOORPARK CITY LIBRARY
100 MBPS
7/2/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - MANHATTAN BEACH
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
MOUNTAIN VIEW PUBLIC LIBRARY
1 GBPS
8/15/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - MASAO W SATOW
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
NEVADA COUNTY LIBRARY - FOLEY
50 MBPS
6/22/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - MAYWOOD CESAR CHAVEZ
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
NEVADA COUNTY LIBRARY - GRASS VALLEY
500 MBPS
6/25/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - MONTEBELLO REGIONAL LIBRARY AND CENTRAL REGION
NEVADA COUNTY LIBRARY - PENN VALLEY STATION
100 MBPS
6/26/18
NEW
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - NORTH REGIONAL OFFICE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - NORWALK REGIONAL LIBRARY AND SOUTH REGION
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - NORWOOD
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - PARAMOUNT
1 GBPS
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - PICO RIVERA
NEVADA COUNTY LIBRARY - SAN JUAN RIDGE NEVADA COUNTY LIBRARY - TRUCKEE
500 MBPS
6/25/18
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - 81ST AVENUE
500 MBPS
1/3/19
NEW
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - AFRICAN AMERICAN MUSEUM
250 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - ASIAN BRANCH
500 MBPS
1/3/19
NEW
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - BROOKFIELD
250 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - QUARTZ HILL
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - CÉSAR E. CHÁVEZ
500 MBPS
12/10/18
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - RIVERA
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - DIMOND
500 MBPS
1/3/19
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - ROSEMEAD
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - EASTMONT
500 MBPS
1/3/19
NEW
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - ROWLAND HEIGHTS
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - ELMHURST
250 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - SAN DIMAS
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - GOLDEN GATE
250 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - SAN FERNANDO
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - LAKEVIEW
250 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - SAN GABRIEL
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
250 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - SORENSEN
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - SOUTH EL MONTE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - MELROSE
250 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - SOUTH WHITTIER
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - MONTCLAIR
250 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - STEVENSON RANCH
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - PIEDMONT
250 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
LOS ANGELES COUNTY - SUNKIST
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - ROCKRIDGE
500 MBPS
12/14/18
NEW
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - TEMESCAL
250 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
52
53
CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
LIBRARY SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
LIBRARY SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
OAKLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY - WEST OAKLAND
250 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - CREST
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
ORANGE PUBLIC LIBRARY - CITY HALL
1 GBPS
4/16/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - DEL MAR
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
ORANGE PUBLIC LIBRARY - EL MODENA
1 GBPS
4/4/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - DESCANSO
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
ORLAND FREE LIBRARY
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - EL CAJON
10 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
PALOS VERDES LIBRARY DISTRICT - MALAGA COVE
200 MBPS
7/1/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - ENCINITAS
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
PALOS VERDES LIBRARY DISTRICT - MIRALESTE
250 MBPS
6/11/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - FALLBROOK
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
PALOS VERDES LIBRARY DISTRICT PENINSULA CENTER
1 GBPS
7/12/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - FLETCHER HILLS
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
PALOS VERDES LIBRARY DISTRICT - THE ANNEX
250 MBPS
6/11/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - IMPERIAL BEACH
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
RIVERSIDE PUBLIC LIBRARY - ARLANZA
1 GBPS
4/10/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - JACUMBA
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
RIVERSIDE PUBLIC LIBRARY - ARLINGTON
1 GBPS
4/10/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - JULIAN
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
RIVERSIDE PUBLIC LIBRARY - CASA BIANCA
1 GBPS
4/20/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - LA MESA
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
RIVERSIDE PUBLIC LIBRARY - CITY HALL
10 GBPS
4/13/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - LAKESIDE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
RIVERSIDE PUBLIC LIBRARY - EASTSIDE
1 GBPS
4/19/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - LEMON GROVE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
RIVERSIDE PUBLIC LIBRARY - LA SIERRA
1 GBPS
5/2/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - LINCOLN ACRES
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
RIVERSIDE PUBLIC LIBRARY - MARCY
1 GBPS
4/12/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - PINE VALLEY
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
RIVERSIDE PUBLIC LIBRARY - ORANGE TERRACE
1 GBPS
4/13/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - PORTRERO
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
ROSEVILLE PUBLIC LIBRARY - DATA CENTER
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - POWAY
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SACRAMENTO PUBLIC LIBRARY - COURTLAND
500 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - RAMONA
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SACRAMENTO PUBLIC LIBRARY - ELK GROVE
10 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - RANCHO SAN DIEGO
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SACRAMENTO PUBLIC LIBRARY - FRANKLIN
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - RANCHO SANTA FE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SACRAMENTO PUBLIC LIBRARY - ISLETON
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - SAN MARCOS
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SACRAMENTO PUBLIC LIBRARY - VALLEY HIGH, NORTH LAGUNA
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - SANTEE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - SOLANA BEACH
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SACRAMENTO PUBLIC LIBRARY - WALNUT GROVE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - SPRING VALLEY
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN BERNARDINO PUBLIC LIBRARY FELDHEYM CENTRAL
1 GBPS
10/16/18
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - VALLEY CENTER
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN BERNARDINO PUBLIC LIBRARY - INGHRAM
1 GBPS
1/31/19
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - VISTA
10 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN BERNARDINO PUBLIC LIBRARY - ROWE
1 GBPS
1/31/19
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY LIBRARY - EL CAJON
10 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN BERNARDINO PUBLIC LIBRARY - VILLASENOR
1 GBPS
1/31/19
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY LIBRARY - VISTA
10 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - 4S RANCH BRANCH
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM COALINGA HURON USD HQ
1 GBPS
7/9/18
RING DESIGN
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - ALPINE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
100 MBPS
5/2/17
RING DESIGN
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - BONITA-SUNNYSIDE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM COALINGA HURON USD HQ
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - BORREGO SPRINGS
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - CAMPO-MORENA VILLAGE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - CARDIFF-BY-THE-SEA
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN DIEGO COUNTY - CASA DE ORO
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - FRESNO COUNTY - BETTY RODRIGUEZ SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - FRESNO COUNTY - CLOVIS
10 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - FRESNO COUNTY - FIG GARDEN
10 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
54
55
CENIC Community Report, Summer 2019
LIBRARY SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
LIBRARY SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - FRESNO COUNTY - FIREBAUGH
100 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - MADERA HQ
100 MBPS
3/24/17
RING DESIGN
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - MADERA HQ
100 MBPS
1/14/19
RING DESIGN
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - FRESNO COUNTY - FOWLER SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - FRESNO COUNTY - GILLIS
10 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - MERCED COUNTY - LIVINGSTON
10 MBPS
7/29/18
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - FRESNO COUNTY - POLITI
100 MBPS
10/17/18
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - MERCED COUNTY - SANTA NELLA
10 MBPS
9/26/18
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - FRESNO COUNTY - REEDLEY
1 GBPS
9/28/18
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - MERCED HQ
100 MBPS
3/17/17
RING DESIGN
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - FRESNO COUNTY - SAN JOAQUIN
1 GBPS
3/19/19
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - MERCED HQ
100 MBPS
1/14/19
RING DESIGN
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - FRESNO COUNTY - SUNNYSIDE
10 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM PORTERVILLE PUBLIC - HERITAGE
10 MBPS
9/26/18
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - FRESNO COUNTY - WOODWARD PARK
10 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - TULARE COUNTY - ALPAUGH
100 MBPS
7/30/18
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM FRESNO COUNTY HQ
100 MBPS
3/17/17
RING DESIGN
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - TULARE COUNTY - DINUBA
10 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM FRESNO COUNTY HQ
100 MBPS
4/21/17
RING DESIGN
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - TULARE COUNTY - FARMERSVILLE
100 MBPS
12/4/18
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM KERN - BEALE HQ
100 MBPS
3/17/17
RING DESIGN
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - TULARE COUNTY - LONDON
100 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - KERN COUNTY - CALIFORNIA CITY
10 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - TULARE COUNTY - PIXLEY
10 MBPS
9/27/18
NEW
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - TULARE COUNTY - STRATHMORE
100 MBPS
7/30/18
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - KERN COUNTY - KERN RIVER VALLEY SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - KERN COUNTY - MOJAVE
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - TULARE COUNTY - TERRA BELLA
10 MBPS
9/27/18
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - KERN COUNTY - RIDGECREST
10 MBPS
1/22/19
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM TULARE PUBLIC HQ
100 MBPS
3/17/17
RING
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - KERN COUNTY - SOUTHWEST
10 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
SAN JOSE PUBLIC LIBRARY - MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.
10 GBPS
10/10/17
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM KERN COUNTY - TAFT
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN JOSE PUBLIC LIBRARY - MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.
10 GBPS
10/10/17
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - KERN COUNTY - WANDA KIRK
10 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
UPGRADE
IN PROGRESS
DIVERSITY
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM KINGS - HANFORD
1 GBPS
4/21/17
RING DESIGN
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - KINGS COUNTY - AVENAL
10 MBPS
10/3/18
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - KINGS COUNTY - CORCORAN
100 MBPS
10/17/18
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - MADERA COUNTY - NORTH FORK
50 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY LIBRARY SYSTEM - MADERA COUNTY - OAKHURST
100 MBPS
11/13/18
NEW
SANTA CLARA COUNTY LIBRARY SANTA CLARITA PUBLIC LIBRARY OLD TOWN NEWHALL
1 GBPS
1/31/19
NEW
SHASTA PUBLIC LIBRARIES - ANDERSON
100 MBPS
5/18/18
NEW
SHASTA PUBLIC LIBRARIES - BURNEY
100 MBPS
7/23/18
NEW
SHASTA PUBLIC LIBRARIES - REDDING
10 GBPS
8/6/18
NEW
SIERRA MADRE PUBLIC LIBRARY
1 GBPS
1/19/18
NEW
SIGNAL HILL PUBLIC LIBRARY
1 GBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SISKIYOU COUNTY FREE LIBRARY - DUNSMUIR
100 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SISKIYOU COUNTY FREE LIBRARY - MCCLOUD
100 MBPS
IN PROGRESS
NEW
56
LIBRARY SITE NAME
BANDWIDTH
DATE
NEW OR UPGRADE
SISKIYOU COUNTY FREE LIBRARY - WEED 2
100 MBPS
8/3/18
NEW
SOLANO COUNTY LIBRARY - RIO VISTA
500 MBPS
6/1/18
NEW
IN PROGRESS
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES CENTER SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - CENTRAL
10 GBPS
10/23/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - CLOVERDALE
500 MBPS
4/24/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - FORESTVILLE
500 MBPS
4/25/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - GUERNEVILLE
500 MBPS
4/26/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - HEALDSBURG
500 MBPS
4/27/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY HISTORY AND GENEALOGY
500 MBPS
4/26/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY NORTHWEST SANTA ROSA
500 MBPS
5/10/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - OCCIDENTAL
500 MBPS
5/2/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - PETALUMA
500 MBPS
5/2/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - RINCON VALLEY
500 MBPS
5/4/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY ROHNERT PARK COTATI
500 MBPS
5/4/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - SEBASTAPOL
500 MBPS
5/7/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - SONOMA VALLEY
500 MBPS
5/8/18
NEW
SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY - WINDSOR
500 MBPS
5/9/18
NEW
ST. HELENA PUBLIC LIBRARY
1 GBPS
4/23/19
NEW
IN PROGRESS
NEW
9/26/18
NEW
STOCKTON-SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY - MOUNTAIN HOUSE
IN PROGRESS
NEW
STOCKTON-SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY - STRIBLEY
IN PROGRESS
NEW
STOCKTON-SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY - ARNOLD RUE STOCKTON-SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY - FAIR OAKS
1 GBPS
TEHAMA COUNTY LIBRARY - CORNING
100 MBPS
2/6/18
NEW
TEHAMA COUNTY LIBRARY - LOS MOLINOS
100 MBPS
1/31/18
NEW
TORRANCE PUBLIC LIBRARY - SOUTH EAST
1 GBPS
1/10/18
NEW
VENTURA COUNTY LIBRARY - HILL ROAD
1 GBPS
8/17/18
NEW
IN PROGRESS
NEW
IN PROGRESS
NEW
WATSONVILLE PUBLIC LIBRARY - FREEDOM WATSONVILLE PUBLIC LIBRARY - MAIN
10 GBPS
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