), an
optical + mobile network in the north of Canada ( Sioux Lookout Ontario).
It looked like a well developed and sustainable community ICT service
provider, that took advantage of support from the Canadian government
after previous failures and advocacy from the community. These news
looks connected to that case. One of the lessons they claimed was the
importance of the govt to working with the local communities to find
ways to effectively have a transformative experience (and not waste
subsidies in the large and ineffective operators, ineffective in
"serving underserved" but effective in attracting funding).
Regards, Leandro.
On 19/12/16 06:30, Nicolas wrote:
Awesome Jane!
On Mon, 2016-12-19 at 00:38 +0000, Jane Coffin wrote:
Hi All –
Just a head’s up that we a journalist/videographer that has been
spending time with a community network in Northern Canada in a First
Nations community. I have no idea when the video will be ready, but
we’ll try to introduce that team to DC-3.
Also note the info below on a huge new initiative by the Canadian
Government…they are keen to work on community networks and with their
first nations communities. We will send more data when we have it:
Rural broadband program aims to bring 300 communities up to speed
News | THE WIRE REPORT
Published: Thursday, 12/15/2016 5:11 pm EST
WAKEFIELD, Que. — The federal government’s new rural broadband
program will focus on making high-speed connections, as opposed to
simply forging Internet connections for rural and remote communities,
Innovation, Science and Economic Development Minister Navdeep Bains
said Thursday, in announcing some of the long-awaited details to the
Liberal commitment outlined in this spring’s budget.
The new program, which will operate under the name Connect to
Innovate, picks up where the previous government’s Connecting
Canadians program left off, with $500 million through 2021 to improve
the Internet connections in 300 communities across the country.
The government is focused on “investments to really provide
businesses and households the ability to have higher speeds and
higher connectivity so they can get the data they need so they can
run their businesses, for example, so they can get a good quality
education; it really impacts their lives,” Bains told reporters after
announcing the new program parameters in the Wakefield, Que., library.
The program will primarily support, on a cost-sharing basis, what
Bains called the “digital highway,” the middle-mile backbone
infrastructure, with an emphasis on fibre, “because the idea is we
want to increase the speed and capacity, and fibre connectivity is a
key part,” he said. Some of the program’s funds will also be
allocated to create last-mile connections for households and
businesses that don’t have access to speeds of at least 5 Mbps.
The new program keeps the previous government’s high-speed threshold
of a 5 Mbps download speed, though Bains said he “must confess that’s
very, very slow. It’s the bare, bare minimum.”
Bains added: “We are now in 2016, there are many Canadians who need
much higher speeds, a much better response rate. That’s why we’re
focused on broadband connectivity — so once you get that
fibre-to-the-institute, fibre-to-the-home, hopefully that speed will
increase enormously, and be 10 times, potentially, faster than that.”
John Lawford, executive director of the Public Interest Advocacy
Centre, noted in a phone interview the low speed and highlighted the
CRTC’s basic services proceeding during which some said that a 5 Mbps
target was outdated, while others called it sufficient for a basic
service.
During the public hearing in the spring, northern Internet Service
Providers (ISPs) said that setting minimum speeds was less important
than having resources to build backbone infrastructure.
According to the program’s website, 1 Gbps is the threshold for
funding new, or upgrading existing, backbone connections.
The focus on the middle mile is a course correction from the previous
program, Stuart Jack, a partner at Nordicity, said in a phone interview.
“I think they’ve got it right in terms of enabling more middle-mile
investment, bringing fibre into the town and then letting various
service suppliers compete within the town itself,” Jack said. “From
an economics point of view, of how do you enable competition best
with public investment, that’s probably the right balance.”
In an email statement, Rogers Communications Inc. spokesman Andrew
Garas said the company is “pleased to see the government’s investment
in connecting the remaining Canadians who don’t yet have access to
high speed Internet and we look forward to reviewing the program
details.”
Looking ahead to next week when the CRTC unveils its decision from
the basic service hearing, the federal program will serve as a
“helpful stop-gap measure for access” until the implications of that
decision are fully meted out, Lawford said, adding that overall the
program was positive, though not the whole solution.
“Consider the climate four years ago,” Lawford said of broadband in
Canada. “It was a complete wasteland… We’ve come a long way.”
In a press release, advocacy group OpenMedia said any investment is
welcome, but that the country needs a “comprehensive National
Broadband Strategy to ensure rural and remote Canadians can catch up.”
Connect to Innovate is open to any entity aside from individuals and
other federal bodies.
Where Connecting Canadians initially set a goal of connecting 280,000
households, the new program doesn’t have such a target, focusing
instead on hitting 300 out of the 1,600 communities the department
has identified as eligible for new backbone funding.
“But I’m confident that our objective right now is to get that
fibre-to-the-institute, fibre to the communities. And in some cases,
we might focus on the last mile, in other cases, once we get it
there, that’s significant enough to do the hub-and-spoke model which
will allow that connectivity to go to different homes,” Bains said of
the variable number of households Connect to Innovate will affect.
More than 250 stakeholders were consulted while putting together the
program, Bains said at the announcement, which was attended by nearly
a dozen Liberal MPs who represent rural ridings.
The consultation led to creating a flexible model, said Bains, though
he noted that satellite-dependent communities still face challenges.
“The minute we receive the proposals, we’re going to be evaluating
them and getting the money out quickly. It’s really, really
important,” he said, adding that “there’s many communities that are
reliant on satellite, for example, for Internet connectivity and
there’s capacity issues. So we’re very mindful that we have to act
very soon.”
Applications will be accepted from Jan. 16 to March 13.
— With reporting by Charelle Evelyn at cevelyn(a)thewirereport.ca
<mailto:cevelyn@thewirereport.ca> and editing by Anja Karadeglija at
akarad(a)thewirereport.ca
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