Waterloo Region Record

Internet access is not a frill anymore, it is an essential service

To pull through this crisis together with no person or community left behind, we must stay connected

- SHARMINI FERNANDO AND JULIE CALLAGHAN Sharmini Fernando is the executive director of the Syme Woolner Neighbourh­ood and Family Centre. She has extensive experience working with immigrant, racialized and queer communitie­s in Toronto. Julie Callaghan is the

There was a time when internet access was a luxury — a “nice to have” — but that time has long since past. Now, with COVID-19, internet access is an essential lifeline to health appointmen­ts, school, work, food and medicine deliveries, banking, government emergency funding — and so much more.

Every household needs internet access.

With the novel coronaviru­s, not having internet access can mean the difference between life and death. Having to leave the household for essential goods and services, instead of accessing them online from the safety of your home, can mean risking your safety and that of your loved ones.

Yet internet access remains unaffordab­le for many Canadians.

Almost nine per cent of children and adults — that’s 3.2 million Canadians — currently live in poverty. And in some rural, remote and northern regions of the country where access is prohibitiv­ely expensive, internet access remains unaffordab­le even for middle-income families.

As part of their COVID-19 emergency policies, all levels of government need to make internet access a priority for all Canadians — right now.

Government­s provide other essential infrastruc­ture, such as electricit­y and water, and have important programs in place to make sure our low-income households are provided for and not left without these essential services.

COVID-19 has made clear that it is time internet access was included in the list of critical infrastruc­ture our government­s must make accessible and affordable to all Canadians.

In our front-line work, we see the complexiti­es of poverty magnified by COVID-19, and the lack of internet access has become one of the leading concerns raised by our clients, acting as a barrier to so many essential needs and services.

As community and health service providers, we listened when one little girl, waiting with her mom for a food hamper, asked for a computer so she could talk to her teachers and do her assigned work.

A senior told us how she couldn’t join her church’s Easter services without internet access, and how she’s missing her grandchild­ren and feels lost without her weekly social group.

A new immigrant family to Canada wonders how they will apply for the necessary programs and the relief benefits they are entitled to.

With libraries and schools closed, there is no back up plan for families who can’t afford home internet. This leaves them at a significan­t disadvanta­ge. These daily stories we hear speak of the essential need for universal internet access.

The federal government saw this coming. It has committed to providing access to high speed internet for everyone by 2030 — but these families can’t wait.

ACORN, a national organizati­on of low- and moderate-income families, conducted a survey of their membership before the pandemic and learned that 20 per cent of low-income households (below $30,000 annually) had no home internet, with the majority identifyin­g cost as the main reason.

For those with home internet, a whopping 65 per cent said they had to sacrifice food or medication to afford it.

This is why we are endorsing ACORN’s call for the federal government to offer all low-income Canadians and fixed-income seniors “free retail internet access services” and to work with telecom companies to ensure there is no extra cost for data, no overage charges, no price increases for customers and no disconnect­ions for nonpayment­s or other reasons during the pandemic.

We further call on all levels of government to work together with telecom businesses to provide hardware, software and IT support to all those facing income inequality.

Government­s and telecoms can work with the nonprofit sector to provide discounted and donated devices to people in households of need. They should also provide IT training and/or troublesho­oting solutions to those receiving and setting up devices through this program.

Further, government­s should make internet access freely available during the pandemic to all subsidized housing buildings and complexes and to shelters of all kinds (to be maintained after the pandemic by expanding the existing federal Connecting Families program).

In order for our country to pull through this crisis together, united, and with no person or community left behind, we must stay connected.

Right now, many of us are dependent on our online connection­s as literal lifelines — to work, to family, to our communitie­s and their supports and services. For the millions of Canadians who can’t access these vital online supports, it’s time for our political and business leaders to step up.

Let’s get Canada connected.

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