Serving nearly five million Catholics in approximately 600 locations, including 287 parishes, over 250 schools, a seminary, cemeteries and mortuaries, and various social service, administrative, and ministerial offices. It encompasses Los Angeles, Santa Barbara and Ventura counties and serves over 100 ethnic groups, with Mass offered in nearly 50 languages and dialects each week. Archdiocesan schools currently serve over 68,000 students, and over 150,000 young people and adults participate in religious education programs.
The Archdiocese of Los Angeles is the largest Catholic Archdiocese in the United States.
In the 1960s, the Archdiocese initiated a leading role in reaching across traditional Catholic education models, by leveraging newly available FCC licenses to pursue an innovative technology solution for a broad-based, 8,000 square mile and challenging environment made up of loosely connected schools and parishes. The Archdiocese, through one of its civil corporations, acquired Instructional Television Fixed Service broadcast (ITFS) spectrum licenses issued by the FCC and now holds licenses for the Los Angeles and Santa Barbara Geographic Service Areas. For many years, these FCC licenses enabled the provision of instructional television (ITV) to Catholic schools through traditional “line-of-sight” broadcast signals. In 2004, when the FCC re-purposed the ITFS educational spectrum to the 2.5 Ghz Educational Broadband Service (EBS), the new rule configuration permitted cellular wireless broadband service, and the Archdiocese took the opportunity to do a full industry assessment seeking a lease and services arrangement with a business partner that would allow it to enter the new era and provide even more robust technology for education throughout the Archdiocese. This led to 30-year leases in 2006 for Los Angeles and Santa Barbara spectrum with Clearwire, which transitioned to the Clearwire/Sprint commercial arrangement and is now again transitioning with the T-Mobile merger. The leases followed the FCC rules allowing a lease of no more than 95% of the spectrum, with the Archdiocese retaining use of 5% of the spectrum under a services arrangement which has facilitated creative wireless initiatives for educational efforts in our schools and parishes.
The C3 effort is funded with the significant resources provided under T-Mobile (previously Sprint) leases and services agreements. Our leased EBS spectrum is in fact, a cornerstone of T-Mobile’s 4G and 5G broadband deployment in Los Angeles, while access to the portion of the spectrum retained by the Archdiocese, allows the Archdiocese to obtain both services from T-Mobile and other third parties and allows direct access to T-Mobile’s broadband network for connectivity for devices and services.
In 2009, the Archdiocese launched the Catholic Communication Collaboration, most commonly referred to as “C3”, initiative to use the EBS spectrum and lease benefits to expand use of and access to technology resources for educational purposes throughout the Archdiocese.
In 2010, a Working Group was assembled to oversee the C3 pilot project and it has since become the de facto technology advisory committee for the C3 efforts in the Archdiocese. The Working Group focuses on opportunities and programs that can be adapted to local needs.
In addition to the T-Mobile lease payments, which are directed to all education and technology aspects of the Archdiocesan Catholic Center budget and related efforts, direct funding and direct and indirect services have been provided under the T-Mobile (previously Sprint) services agreement to support the activities outlined below.
Serving nearly five million Catholics in approximately 600 locations, including 287 parishes, over 250 schools, a seminary, cemeteries and mortuaries, and various social service, administrative, and ministerial offices. It encompasses Los Angeles, Santa Barbara and Ventura counties and serves over 100 ethnic groups, with Mass offered in nearly 50 languages and dialects each week. Archdiocesan schools currently serve over 68,000 students, and over 150,000 young people and adults participate in religious education programs.
The Archdiocese of Los Angeles is the largest Catholic Archdiocese in the United States.
In the 1960s, the Archdiocese initiated a leading role in reaching across traditional Catholic education models, by leveraging newly available FCC licenses to pursue an innovative technology solution for a broad-based, 8,000 square mile and challenging environment made up of loosely connected schools and parishes. The Archdiocese, through one of its civil corporations, acquired Instructional Television Fixed Service broadcast (ITFS) spectrum licenses issued by the FCC and now holds licenses for the Los Angeles and Santa Barbara Geographic Service Areas. For many years, these FCC licenses enabled the provision of instructional television (ITV) to Catholic schools through traditional “line-of-sight” broadcast signals. In 2004, when the FCC re-purposed the ITFS educational spectrum to the 2.5 Ghz Educational Broadband Service (EBS), the new rule configuration permitted cellular wireless broadband service, and the Archdiocese took the opportunity to do a full industry assessment seeking a lease and services arrangement with a business partner that would allow it to enter the new era and provide even more robust technology for education throughout the Archdiocese. This led to 30-year leases in 2006 for Los Angeles and Santa Barbara spectrum with Clearwire, which transitioned to the Clearwire/Sprint commercial arrangement and is now again transitioning with the T-Mobile merger. The leases followed the FCC rules allowing a lease of no more than 95% of the spectrum, with the Archdiocese retaining use of 5% of the spectrum under a services arrangement which has facilitated creative wireless initiatives for educational efforts in our schools and parishes.
In 2009, the Archdiocese launched the Catholic Communication Collaboration, most commonly referred to
as “C3”, initiative to use the EBS spectrum and
lease benefits to expand use of and access to technology resources for educational purposes throughout the Archdiocese.
The C3 effort is funded with the significant resources provided under T-Mobile (previously Sprint) leases and services agreements. Our leased EBS spectrum is in fact, a cornerstone of T-Mobile’s 4G and 5G broadband deployment in Los Angeles, while access to the portion of the spectrum retained by the Archdiocese, allows the Archdiocese to obtain both services from T-Mobile and other third parties and allows direct access to T-Mobile’s broadband network for connectivity for devices and services.
In 2010, a Working Group was assembled to oversee the C3 pilot project and it has since become the de facto technology advisory committee for the C3 efforts in the Archdiocese. The Working Group focuses on opportunities and programs that can be adapted to local needs.
In addition to the T-Mobile lease payments, which are directed to all education and technology aspects of the Archdiocesan Catholic Center budget and related efforts, direct funding and direct and indirect services have been provided under the T-Mobile (previously Sprint) services agreement to support the activities outlined below.
The program has generated four Cohorts consisting of 132 schools with with over 43,000 T-Mobile (previously Sprint) connected devices deployed. The program is significantly focused on expanding initiatives, centered on utilizing technology to accelerate learning and expand Internet accessibility for students and families at school, home and anywhere in between.
The Thinker Tank program provides students, teachers, parishes, and ACC staff the opportunity to cultivate their creativity through maker projects and activities. The Thinker Tank also provides support and assistance to teachers and students as they develop their ideas, learn new skills and enhance working in a collaborative maker environment.
OLALA partners with schools, parishes and departments in the ACC to create online courses that serve parishioners and members of the Archdiocese in their ministries. Courses on Baptism preparation, mandated reporting, high school health, religious education and more are available now.
The C3 Technology Conference was initiated to inform and enhance the rapid acceleration of new technology, devices, and resources for all aspects of formal and informal education, ministry and administration. This conference is held annually and since 2012, it has had over 5,000 teachers, admins and parish staff who have participated in over 800 workshops.
The Connect Programs provide T-Mobile connected devices, free of charge, to Clergy, Sisters, and Parish Catechetical Leaders to assist in their ministry and support healthy boundaries in ministry by centering emails, calls and other communications on an Archdiocesan supported device.
C3 formed an E-Rate discounted infrastructure construction consortium in 2015 and an E-Rate discounted Internet service provider consortium in 2019. Jointly funded by the FCC's Universal Service Fund, T-Mobile (previously Sprint), schools, and philanthropic grants, these programs will have served more than 204 schools when the current construction and service grants have been completed.
A team of five individuals who assist parishes and schools to improve their use-of and access to technology. To date the Team has logged more than 2,000 consultations at locations-varying from a single visit to long term assistance in planning for and implementing a complete technology plan and revamp at the location.
Available online to all in the Archdiocese and beyond; regularly updated; data shows it is now understood as a core Archdiocesan resource and is also used daily by dioceses and other institutions around the world.
The program has generated four Cohorts consisting of 132 schools with with over 43,000 T-Mobile (previously Sprint) connected devices deployed. The program is significantly focused on expanding initiatives, centered on utilizing technology to accelerate learning and expand Internet accessibility for students and families at school, home and anywhere in between.
The Thinker Tank program provides students, teachers, parishes, and ACC staff the opportunity to cultivate their creativity through maker projects and activities. The Thinker Tank also provides support and assistance to teachers and students as they develop their ideas, learn new skills and enhance working in a collaborative maker environment.
OLALA partners with schools, parishes and departments in the ACC to create online courses that serve parishioners and members of the Archdiocese in their ministries. Courses on Baptism preparation, mandated reporting, high school health, religious education and more are available now.
The C3 Technology Conference was initiated to inform and enhance the rapid acceleration of new technology, devices, and resources for all aspects of formal and informal education, ministry and administration. This conference is held annually and since 2012, it has had over 5,000 teachers, admins and parish staff who have participated in over 800 workshops.
The Connect Programs provide T-Mobile (previously Sprint) connected devices, free of charge, to Clergy, Sisters, and Parish Catechetical Leaders to assist in their ministry and support healthy boundaries in ministry by centering emails, calls and other communications on an Archdiocesan supported device.
C3 formed an E-Rate discounted infrastructure construction consortium in 2015 and an E-Rate discounted Internet service provider consortium in 2019. Jointly funded by the FCC's Universal Service Fund, T-Mobile (previously Sprint), schools, and philanthropic grants, these programs will have served more than 204 schools when the current construction and service grants have been completed.
A team of five individuals who assist parishes and schools to improve their use-of and access to technology. To date the Team has logged more than 2000 consultations at locations-varying from a single visit to long term assistance in planning for and implementing a complete technology plan and revamp at the location.
Available online to all in the Archdiocese and beyond; regularly updated; data shows it is now understood as a core Archdiocesan resource and is also used daily by dioceses and other institutions around the world.
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