From the CBC:
“Trudeau
promises to connect 98% of Canadians to high-speed internet by 2026”
After some
pandemic-related delays, the Liberal government says it's now on track to
connect 98 per cent of Canadians to high-speed internet by 2026. The
announcement comes as more Canadians find themselves living online while stuck
at home due to COVID-19 restrictions. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and a
handful of cabinet ministers held a news conference in Ottawa to launch the
$1.75 billion universal broadband fund — a program unveiled in the federal
government's 2019 budget and highlighted on the campaign trail and in
September's throne speech. Most of the money was announced in last year's budget.
"We were ready to go in March with the new Universal Broadband Fund and
then the pandemic hit," Rural Economic Development Minister Maryam Monsef
told reporters. The prime minister said the government is now on track to
connect 98 per cent of Canadians to high-speed by 2026 — an increase over the
previously promised 95 per cent benchmark — and to link up the rest by 2030. "These
are ambitious targets and we're ready to meet them," Trudeau said.
About $150
million from the fund will be freed up to fund projects aimed at getting
communities connected by next fall. Senior officials with the department of
Innovation, Science and Economic Development said applications will be reviewed
on an ongoing basis until Jan. 15, 2021, with a goal of having projects
completed by mid-November, 2021. Deciding who gets upgraded connectivity first
will depend on the service providers applying, they said. Josh Tabish is
corporate communications manager at the Canadian Internet Registration
Authority, the not-for-profit agency that manages the .ca internet domain. He
said he's hoping that a rapid build will bring relief to many Canadians over
the next year. "In terms of action, I think this is great news for
Canadians who are stuck at home suffering from slow, crappy internet," he
said. But Tabish also said he hopes the
government will look at need when deciding which projects should get approval
first. His group has been working to identify the communities that have the
slowest rates in Canada. "What we really want to see happen is communities
who are suffering with slow, sluggish connectivity get those upgrades
first," he said. The prime minister said the government also has reached a
$600 million agreement with Telesat for satellite capacity to improve broadband
service in remote areas and in the North. "Good reliable internet isn't a
luxury. It's a basic service," he said. "Now more than ever, a video
chat cutting out during a meeting or a connection that's too slow to upload a
school assignment — that's not just a hassle, that's a barrier."
Tories call
out timelines The Opposition
Conservatives criticized the government's timelines, arguing Canadians need
better access now more than ever. "This is absolutely unacceptable
and a slap in the face to the nearly one million Canadians who don't have
internet access at home, much less a reliable cell phone signal," said MP
John Nater, Conservative critic for rural economic development. "For
months, Canada's Conservatives have been demanding concrete action to connect
Canadians. We will continue to advocate for lower cell phone prices and for
real improvements to broadband internet services, so that Canadians living in
rural and remote areas have consistent access to these essential
services." The CRTC declared broadband internet a basic
telecommunications service in 2016. But its data suggest just 40.8 per cent of
rural Canadian households have access to download speeds of at least 50
megabits per second (Mbps) and upload speeds of 10 Mbps. The government
said those speeds will allow Canadians to work and learn online and access
telehealth services.
^ 2026 seems
like too long of a wait for the majority of Canadians to not have high-speed
Internet. Trudeau needs to do a much sooner time-frame. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/broadband-internet-1.5794901
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