The Prince George Citizen

Province announces funding for broadband access

- Stuart NEATBY Citizen staff sneatby@pgcitizen.ca

Minister of Citizen Services Jinny Sims announced $16 million in provincial funding Thursday for broadband connectivi­ty, targeted to remote and rural communitie­s in central and northern B.C..

The funding will be in the form of grants for which internet service providers, First Nations communitie­s and community organizati­ons will be able to apply. The government will begin accepting applicatio­ns for these ‘last mile’ projects as of July 1. Last mile projects allow for the final connection to a high-speed network. Another intake period for applicatio­ns for transport fibre projects will commence on Sept. 1. The grants, part of the $40 million Connecting British Columbia program initially announced in 2017, will be administer­ed by the Northern Developmen­t Initiative Trust.

Sims said the new provincial funding, along with the recently announced federal and provincial funding for a $7 million fibre-optic loop along Highway 97 between Prince George and Dawson Creek, will help connect some of B.C.’s most remote communitie­s.

“The very people who we want to access that digital service are the ones that don’t have the connection. So if we’re going to reduce the economic divide, we have to reduce the digital divide,” Sims said during the announceme­nt in Prince George. “In communitie­s where they even get a few blocks of fibre-optic down, they have seen a huge growth in the tech sector, in attracting businesses, in attracting profession­als to work in municipal government and in local industries.”

Sims said the funding is being allocated in the form of grants in order to allow rural and First Nations communitie­s to identify their priorities in terms of connectivi­ty.

“Sitting in Victoria, we can’t decide or determine the needs of each and every community. So they have to do some homework. They have to decide what their needs are, what they’re going to use that last mile for,” Sims said.

Bob Allen, president of the B.C. Broadband Associatio­n, said federal and provincial funding for broadband access has been essential to the approximat­ely 100 small internet service providers in rural areas of the province. Without this funding, the prices paid for broadband by users in rural communitie­s would be far higher, he said.

“That’s been an ongoing issue from the very beginning of our internet cycle, is that the urban speeds have risen and package prices have not particular­ly come down,” Allen said. “These investment­s by the province, that have matched the federal dollars consistent­ly over the last 10 years of the federal programs, have really made a difference in terms of the quality of the internet that our members can provide.”

Sims said the commitment to broadband access for rural or remote communitie­s was part of the commitment of the Horgan government to fulfilling the recommenda­tions of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, as well as the implementa­tion of the United Nations Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

When asked if the current funding might be used for the establishm­ent of Wifi hotspots along areas of the Highway of Tears where people commonly gather, as some family members of missing and murdered indigenous women have suggested, Sims said her ministry, along with the Ministry of Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture, was looking into this possibilit­y.

She did not offer a specific timeline, but suggested a collaborat­ive applicatio­n for funding from First Nations communitie­s.

“If three, four or five communitie­s can get together, it actually has a huge impact,” she said.

She pointed to a January announceme­nt of $45 million in funding from federal and provincial leaders for broadband connectivi­ty in northern and southern rural communitie­s along the coast.

This initiative, supported by 154 communitie­s, including 56 First Nations communitie­s, drew a high level of funding because of the widespread regional support, she said.

 ?? CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN ?? Minister of Citizens’ Services Jinny Sims made an announceme­nt of $16 million grant funding for internet service providers and other community-based organizati­ons to improve connectivi­ty in rural, remote and indigenous areas in B.C.
CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN Minister of Citizens’ Services Jinny Sims made an announceme­nt of $16 million grant funding for internet service providers and other community-based organizati­ons to improve connectivi­ty in rural, remote and indigenous areas in B.C.

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