Penticton Herald

High speed Internet for all

-

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission aims to ensure that all Canadian households have access to highspeed Internet service within 10 to 15 years. It’s a recognitio­n that the internet is no longer a luxury, but has become a necessity.

“Access to broadband internet service is vital and a basic telecommun­ication service all Canadians are entitled to receive,” said CRTC chairman Jean-Pierre Blais as the commission announced plans last week to make broadband Internet service available all across Canada.

Most of us take the internet for granted — it works almost in the background — but about two million Canadians have no internet service or connection­s so slow they are practicall­y useless.

The CRTC aims to remedy that with the co-operation of telecommun­ications companies that will have access to a $750-million industry-sponsored fund over the next five years to invest in broadband infrastruc­ture.

The internet is the conveyor of much that is useless, frivolous, nasty and downright ugly, but it is also an indispensa­ble servant. In 1993, it handled only one per cent of the world’s two-way telecommun­ications. That grew to 51 per cent by 2000, and by 2007, more than 97 per cent of telecommun­icated informatio­n was flowing through the Internet. It has changed the way we do almost everything.

Therefore, those without decent access to the internet are left out. Getting them connected will help erase some of the disadvanta­ges of living in remote communitie­s.

Instead of driving for hours to get to a government office, for example, a person can go online to fill out applicatio­ns for programs or services or express concerns.

Advancemen­t in education no longer need be limited by distance — the internet allows people to take classes, interact with tutors and write exams from their homes. The internet expands and creates new opportunit­ies for business. Where healthcare services are limited, medical consultati­ons can take place online.

Add to those benefits the immeasurab­le value of being able to keep strong the bonds with friends and family, and to be aware of what is happening in the rest of the world.

Given the constant stream of inane trivia, fake news and social-media shaming, we can be excused for occasional­ly thinking we don’t need the Internet. But for all its drawbacks, it is a marvellous developmen­t.

“The internet has revolution­ized the computer and communicat­ions world like nothing before,” says a posting on the website of the Internet Society.

“The internet is at once a worldwide broadcasti­ng capability, a mechanism for informatio­n disseminat­ion, and a medium for collaborat­ion and interactio­n between individual­s and their computers without regard for geographic location.”

But in rural and remote areas of Canada without good Internet service, that geographic location is a handicap.

Just as electricit­y and landline telephone services came to be known as essential basic services, so too is the internet, for all its warts and blemishes.

— Victoria Times Colonist

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada