Sherbrooke Record

Is your internet too slow? It’s probably not you

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(NC) We all know the aggravatio­n of a school lesson that just won’t stop freezing or the family video call that looks more like a photo montage. And, as we adjust to the impact of COVID-19 on our day-to-day, that slow connection can have frustratin­g consequenc­es.

Working from home and learning remotely, both need fast, stable internet, something not enough Canadians have yet. Even if you have fast devices in your home, if the infrastruc­ture in your area is not optimal, your connection won’t be either.

Right now, cities have the infrastruc­ture needed to ensure access. But rural and remote communitie­s are hugely underserve­d, with fewer than half having high-speed internet, and fewer than a third of households on reservatio­ns have high-speed connection­s.

Fortunatel­y, change is coming. The Universal Broadband Fund is backing projects across Canada right now to ensure the reliable, high-speed internet connection­s families need to work, study, access services online, and safely stay in touch with each other.

The fund existed before COVID, but as a response to the pandemic, its timetable has been moved up by four years to a target of 98 per cent of Canadians with high-speed internet access by 2026. With the faster pace, at least 90 per cent of us should be connected by the end of 2021.

The fund is focused on improvemen­ts in rural and remote communitie­s across Canada to fix the disconnect between internet access for urban and rural households. This means more remote work opportunit­ies, better access to remote learning and safer access to healthcare, no matter where you live.

It’s not just for good connection­s at home, either. The improvemen­ts mean much better access to mobile networks on highways between remote communitie­s. The result is better, safer navigation and access to emergency services for your family, even on the road in the middle of nowhere. Mobile projects will be focused on serving Indigenous communitie­s and the roads leading to them.

The shape these improvemen­ts will take in your area will depend on where you live. Canada is huge, and its communitie­s are hugely diverse, with diverse needs. Keep an eye out for local projects — they’re a small part of something much bigger.

Find more informatio­n at canada.ca/ getconnect­ed.

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