Calgary Herald

National broadband plan in the works

- EMILY JACKSON

Canada will develop a national broadband strategy with the goal of getting high-speed internet into rural, remote and Indigenous communitie­s that still don’t have access to the fast, reliable broadband services available to city dwellers.

Innovation, Science and Economic Developmen­t Canada announced Friday night that the federal government will team up with its provincial and territoria­l counterpar­ts to develop a strategy to ensure universal access to broadband in the name of economic growth, innovation and social progress.

“Access to reliable and quality high-speed Internet is no longer a luxury,” ISED Minister Navdeep Bains said in a statement.

Bains lauded the existing networks, but said more needs to be done to connect all Canadians. The strategy plans to target areas where the market has failed to provide access.

“The commitment to a strategy we made today reflects the ambition we all share to get all Canadians online and participat­ing in the digital economy,” he said.

The announceme­nt comes nearly two years after the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission declared broadband a basic service and establishe­d download and upload speed targets of 50 megabits per second and 10 Mbps, respective­ly.

The CRTC had called on the federal government to develop a national strategy, reasoning that Canadians without access to broadband are “profoundly disadvanta­ged.” It argued it could not create it alone, noting the federal and provincial government­s are better placed to tackle issues such as spectrum access, broadband affordabil­ity and digital literacy.

In the absence of a single strategy, numerous parties are working to deploy internet in harder-toreach places where it’s required for participat­ion in an increasing­ly online world. The federal government plans to dole out $500 million by 2021 through the Connect to Innovate fund and the CRTC will award $750 million for internet projects in the worst-served areas over five years. Numerous municipali­ties have decided to build their own fibre infrastruc­ture where private players don’t see a business case.

It’s not yet clear who will work on the strategy, when the work will begin, how long it is expected to take, how much money the government will dedicate, either to developing the strategy or to spending on broadband afterward. ISED was not able to answer these questions by deadline Monday.

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