Jamaica Gleaner

USF poised to spread its wings

More free access points to be made

- Adrian Frater/News Editor

DANIEL DAWES, chief executive officer of The Universal Service Fund (USF) has said the entity is poised to broaden its range across the island as plans are in place to set up offices in the parishes of St James, Portland and Manchester.

“This strategic move will help to support the USF projects and programmes, and our valued stakeholde­rs, as we seek to increase Internet access across Jamaica,” said Dawes, while addressing the recent staging of a Community Access Point conference in Montego Bay, St James.

The conference, which was attended by over 150 stakeholde­rs from Western Jamaica, alongside other prominent stakeholde­rs in the region, was designed to look at critical issues about the relevance of the USF’s Community Access Point (CAP), which is being viewed as a critical platform in expanding the reach of the project.

“The purpose of the conference is to meet with the CAP leadership in order to discuss the challenges being face by them and to strengthen cooperatio­n with current stakeholde­rs in the region,” explained Delroy Dobney, the USF’s project coordinato­r.

Montego Bay Mayor Homer Davis, who also spoke at the event, lauded the USF for the significan­t investment it has made in the region so far, which includes the recently launched open-source Wi-Fi in Sam Sharpe Square in the western city.

“It is making a positive impact in Montego Bay,” said Davis, in regard to the Wi-Fi in Sam Sharpe Square. “I want to use this opportunit­y to urge the participan­ts attending this conference to make good use of the equipment at the Community Access Points (CAP) provided by the USF.”

At the Sam Sharpe Square event, Dawes announced that a number of other major township were poised to join Sam Sharpe Square with free Wi-Fi service.

“Our next public Wi-Fi hotspot will be in May Pen, Clarendon; Ocho Rios in St Ann; and Port Antonio in Portland,” said Dawes, who urged users to use the facility for personal developmen­t and not just texting. “We are also working with the Ministry of Labour and Social Security to make sure that disabled persons receive the benefit of free Internet facility.”

The USF is an agency under the umbrella of the Ministry of Science, Energy and Technology. It is mandated to ensure access to informatio­n and communicat­ion tools to facilitate ICT developmen­t in Jamaica.

The USF has, over the years, commission­ed in excess of 318 CAP sites to bring informatio­n communicat­ions technologi­es access to underserve­d areas in Jamaica. Sixty-two of these CAP sites are in western Jamaica.

In addition to Davis, other critical stakeholde­rs in attendance included St James Custos Bishop Conrod Pitkin, Central St James Member of Parliament Heroy Clarke, and Digicel Marketing Executive Elon Parkinson.

 ??  ?? From left: Member of Parliament for Central St James Heroy Clarke, Elon Parkinson, Digicel marketing executive, and Daniel Dawes, chief executive officer, Universal Service Fund, during the recent staging of a Community Access Point conference in Montego Bay.
From left: Member of Parliament for Central St James Heroy Clarke, Elon Parkinson, Digicel marketing executive, and Daniel Dawes, chief executive officer, Universal Service Fund, during the recent staging of a Community Access Point conference in Montego Bay.

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