FUTURE PLANS This 2020 map of the new fiber optic network from Grover Beach shows connections to Singapore, Australia, Guam, and Hong Kong, but plans have since changed—starting this year, there will be two lines to Singapore, one to Japan, and one to an undetermined location. Credit: Screenshot From Grover Beach Staff Report

The Pismo State Beach parking lot near Fin’s Restaurant and Southeast Asia are about to have a common link.

On Oct. 13, the California Coastal Commission approved a coastal development permit for RTI Solutions to install and operate a fiber optic cable extending from West Grand Avenue in Grover Beach and snaking through state and federal waters until it finally terminates in Singapore.

“Anything you do on your cellphone, on your computer, anything electronic is converted to a digital signal and that is carried on a fiber optic cable,” said Chris Brungardt, the president of RTI Solutions Inc.

Brungardt added that telecommunications lines are digital highways that connect “the entire world,” and that “more than 95 percent” of all communication involves the use of fiber optics.

The fiber optic cable that won recent Coastal Commission approval is RTI’s second Singapore-bound line exiting from Grover Beach. The Coastal Commission greenlit the first cable to Singapore in 2020, which is already installed in Grover Beach. RTI is awaiting construction on the other side of the world.

These cables travel out of a Grover Beach-based conduit structure that was already approved in 2000. Each of the four cables requires a separate permit from the Coastal Commission. While RTI has secured permissions for the two Singapore cables, they have ambitions to connect a third one to Japan and the destination of the fourth cable in the project remains undetermined.

But Grover Beach isn’t the only Central Coast fiber optic cable hub.

“Between 1988 and 2005 multiple cables were installed into the Morro Bay area as well. So those had cables going to Australia, Japan, and Hawaii,” Brungardt said. “This region has been very active with fiber optic cables by different companies over time.”

In 2000, three other fiber optic cables were installed in Grover Beach and the Oceano Dunes area. Those travel to South America (incorporating Mexico and Costa Rica), Japan, and Washington state. Brungardt said that while different companies oversaw those installations over time, he has been personally involved with almost all those procedures, either by working as an engineer or a permitting consultant.

He said that Grover Beach has unique capabilities for fiber optics. For starters, it boosts geographical diversity.

“The industry term for that is redundancy. We have cables that come into Southern California … into the Point Arena area, and now we have cables that go into the Eureka area,” Brungardt said.

The other reason is that Grover Beach is the midpoint that links to other data hubs in major metropolitan areas like San Francisco and Los Angeles.

“The purpose of the cables isn’t to serve Grover Beach or this region necessarily, but to serve the entire country. They’re links in a global network,” he said.

But while the fiber optic cables threading underground through Grover Beach have no direct impact on residents, physical proximity to the lines holds some benefit. Describing the cables to be the size of garden hoses, Brungardt said that despite their small size, they hold tremendous power to carry large amounts of communications traffic.

“So, when a cable comes to shore here in Grover Beach, we terminate it at a cable landing station. Think of it as a really big pipeline coming into that station,” he said. “But there’s not enough smaller pipelines to carry that data out of this area.”

Bigger pipelines must be built into the area to carry the surplus traffic out. That’s where local carriers like Verizon, AT&T, and Astound come in.

“They will build additional fiber optic cable capacity to Grover Beach so they can carry this traffic,” Brungardt said. “When they do that, they oversize that capacity so they can pick up local traffic as well. So you have more supply, which brings the ability to bring individual customers.”

The city also stands to gain financially from RTI’s project to install the cables. When each of the four lines becomes operational, Grover Beach will receive $100,000 per cable. The first Singapore cable is expected to be working a year from now. The second Singapore cable will be installed in a year and will be operational six months after that.

“It’ll be general fund revenue, and it will be allocated by the City Council to meet city services, projects, and needs,” Grover Beach City Manager Matthew Bronson told New Times.

Since Grover Beach and RTI already built the conduit structure in 2020 to accommodate the four cables, no other construction work will interrupt life on the city streets.

“The construction activity will really only take place at the beach itself when the cable actually lands,” Bronson said. “It’s really cool. The cable starts offshore, goes through a line and lands at the beach. From there, it runs through the conduit under the city streets.”

“It reflects our location as a beachfront community right across the ocean from Asia. We have a relatively straight shot across the ocean for the cables to be installed,” he said.

Bronson attributed the COVID-19 pandemic with developing a sense of urgency about reinforcing communication systems.

“The pandemic showed us how vital virtual online education, training, and meetings were to keep our businesses and communities functioning,” he said. “All of that online activity requires data and it requires infrastructure like fiber optic cables in order to run it.” Δ

Reach Staff Writer Bulbul Rajagopal at brajagopal@newtimesslo.com.

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9 Comments

  1. At long last, Mr. Donegan may be onto something. It’s true that celebrities’ views are given outsized attention, and–who knows?–may influence bad behavior from fans. Consider, for example, GOP favorite Ted Nugent’s song “Jailbait,” with these lyrics:
    “Jailbait, you look so good to me..
    I don’t care if you’re just thirteen
    You look too good to be true
    I just know that you’re probably clean
    There’s one lil’ thing I got do to you
    Wait a minute officer
    Don’t put those handcuffs on me
    Put them on her and I’ll share her with you”
    Is it possible that, influenced by this song, Donald Trump visited Jeffrey Epstein’s island and engaged in child rape? At least one lawsuit says so, and Trump himself has bragged about walking in on undressed teenagers as head of the “Miss Teen USA” pageant. I rarely agree with Mr. Donegan, but on this we concur: Don’t formulate your opinions on the basis of actors, singers, athletes or other celebrities. Don’t take medical advice from politicians, and don’t assume that members of your local School Board have even the faintest notion what “CRT” is. I will even go so far as to recommend taking advice from retired attorneys with a grain of salt, or perhaps many grains of salt.

  2. I certainly don’t check celebrities views before casting my ballot.

    But, neither do I check the views of a biased right winger like Donegan.

  3. Have you forgotten that liberal heart throb Bill Clinton also visited Epstein’s island, and that celebrity predator Harvey Weinstein was a major Democratic supporter? I have no interest in Ted Nugent, but recall that Hollywood liberal hero Roman Polanski sure had an interest in 13 year olds.

  4. Here’s the difference, John: If it turns out that Clinton or any other Dem/lib raped children, he will become an immediate pariah to us progressives, because we like our politicians but don’t worship them. But—if Trump is proven guilty? His supporters will turn on the children.

  5. You had to respect Al Fonzi. Crazy as a bug, but he never once responded to a negative comment about one his columns.

  6. @tsankawl: I recall that you liberals were pretty quick to act as apologists for Bill Clinton during his “difficulties”. Even after the blue dress turned up, showing that he had lied and had actually had sex with Monica, his liberal defenders were arguing that oral sex isn’t really “sex”, and that he was innocent of perjury. And, of course, Democrats were quick to rally around Joe Biden after the reports of his assault on a campaign worker, despite having previously insisted during the Kavanaugh confirmation that “the woman must be believed”. I do not support Trump in his legal difficulties, but Democrats will always support their own.

  7. “Democrats will always support their own”

    Right, like they supported Thomas Eagleton, Gary Hart, John Edwards, Jim Wright, Ron Dellums, John Conyers, Al Franken, Anthony Weiner, Katie Hill, et. al.

    Last time I checked, swindlers and liars such as Donald Trump, Jim Jordan and Matt Gaetz still had Republican support.

  8. @tsankawi: Saying that school boards “don’t understand” CRT is like putting a smily face sticker on the electric chair. Both are just a facially transparent and ineffective attempt to disguise what is really going on.

  9. “Saying that school boards “don’t understand” CRT is like putting a smily face sticker on the electric chair. Both are just a facially transparent and ineffective attempt to disguise what is really going on.”

    Another tortured analogy from Mr. Donegan. I believe that the right-wingers on school boards and running for those seats really have no idea what CRT is. Before it came to the forefront on FoxNews, it was simply a topic in law school about how future cases, especially on reparations, should be solved. It has NEVER been a topic in public schools. For the most part, public schools have taught the truth.

    Unfortunately, the new wave of historical reconstructionists who are invading our school boards would like to eliminate much of the brutality that slavery entailed or any responsibility that our society has for it now, even though African-American families are more than twice as likely to live in poverty than white families.

    Take Chris Arend, an actual school board member, who wrote on CalCoastNews, that somehow racism ended with the Civil Rights movement and MLK, and that we need not teach anything more about racism. It is, in his opinion, a settled issue.

    https://calcoastnews.com/2020/09/the-myth-…

    Another strategy, memorialized in a Louisiana 8th grade textbook, actually tries to teach students about the hardships that slave-owner families endured after the Civil War. Poor Kate, the young protagonist of the story is driven from her family’s plantation and has to endure time away from her palatial surroundings as the war rages. She does, however, get to return, but laments that things just weren’t the same:

    “They were able to reclaim their planation but, due to emancipation (the freeing of the slaves), lost all of their property in slaves. The family had to face the new reality of planting and harvesting their fields with freed people who, Kate regretted, now demanded high wages.

    https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2021/6/14…

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