Revenues for iProvo lag
Billings optimistic despite failure to meet projection
IProvo's direct revenues from customers were projected to be $562,594 during fiscal year 2004-05, which ended June 30. The actual income was $298,017 or 53 percent of projections, according to documents obtained from the city through the Government Records and Access Management Act.
The city maintained a healthy overall revenue picture for iProvo despite the shortfall because of several serendipitous windfalls unrelated to consumer demand, including nearly $335,000 more than anticipated in interest income from iProvo bonds.
"The system did meet budget," Mayor Lewis Billings said Thursday. "It didn't meet it in the way forecasted, and there's logical factors for why revenues and the number of subscribers were not as projected in the plan."
Until this week, no city official would provide an exact count of iProvo subscribers despite repeated verbal requests by the Deseret Morning News.
"I think you'll see remarkable leaps in subscriptions in the next 60 days," Billings said in an interview after the July press conference to introduce two new service providers. "We'll go from under 2,000 subscribers to iProvo to 4,000 in 60 days. We'll be nearly halfway to where we need to be. I think you'll see us go into Thanksgiving with 4,000 to 5,000 subscribers, which would put us ahead of schedule."
On Thursday, Billings said, "I might have said within 60 days we'll see a tremendous momentum shift."
That certainly has happened this month, with more than 600 new subscribers.
"It was a bold prediction," Billings said, adding that he still expects 4,000 by the November holiday. "Our next goal is hitting 5,000 subscribers. We're expecting that to take some time, into March."
As of Sept. 9, iProvo had 2,267 customers, according to the documents obtained under GRAMA. By Thursday, the number had jumped to 2,600, said Mary DeLaMare-Schaefer, marketing and customer relationships manager for Provo City Power, which oversees iProvo.
She said the city expects to add large apartment complexes over the next few weeks. The complexes could bring 200 or 300 customers at a time.
"We'll likely see 3,000 by end of September or early October," DeLaMare-Schaefer said.
Officials say the project needs about 10,000 subscribers roughly one-third of city households to succeed. Success is critical because the City Council approved a $40 million bond to finance the ambitious fiber-optic system.




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