Calgary Herald

CRTC wants to know your digital needs

Fact- finding process launched ahead of hearings

- TERRY PEDWELL

OTTAWA Canada’s telecom regulator is asking Internet users whether they’re getting enough speed — and enough bang for their buck.

The Canadian Radio- television and Telecommun­ications Commission has launched a major factfindin­g process to assess whether Canada has the right telecommun­ications to be a world- class player in the digital economy.

It wants to know what services Canadians need to be digitally competitiv­e, what kind of upload and download speeds are needed, whether there should be funding tools in place for upgrading telecom equipment and how the industry players should be regulated.

The CRTC says it will gather informatio­n before holding public hearings on the issue a year from now. The regulator says it also wants to find out what areas of the country are being under- served by digital technology.

Under current CRTC policies, Canadians in every region are expected to have access to a low- speed Internet connection, at a minimum.

But as more government and public services are moved online, the regulator said it’s concerned that not everyone will benefit from such things as digital banking, health and other services.

“As our habits change in this digital age, our telecommun­ications services must keep pace,” CRTC chairman Jean- Pierre Blais said in a statement.

“Canadians are looking to the future, and the CRTC wants to ensure that the technology they depend on does so as well,” he said.

The CRTC also expressed concerns about the pressure being placed on existing services from new emerging technologi­es, such as so- called smart meters used by municipal and provincial utilities to measure energy, water or natural gas consumptio­n.

Those meters, like so many other things, require broadband access.

The consultati­ons were announced in tandem with the release of a report on the Canadian satellite services market.

The report, prepared by CRTC commission­er Candice Molnar, found that communitie­s dependent on satellites for Internet access rely almost exclusivel­y on Telesat’s satellite network.

The CRTC said it will hold a separate public consultati­on to review Telesat’s current price ceiling.

 ??  ?? Jean- Pierre Blais
Jean- Pierre Blais

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