The Prince George Citizen

Internet options good for consumers, report finds

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Smaller internet service providers play an important, positive role in Canada’s telecom market even though only a minority of consumers chose one of them over a major phone or cable company, the Competitio­n Bureau concluded in a report issued Wednesday.

The federal government­al agency, which gathered public opinion from thousands of people through surveys and focus groups over the course of a year-long study, says that it found 90 per cent of Canadian consumers surveyed were “satisfied” or “very satisfied” with their internet service provider.

Customers of the independen­ts, however, were significan­tly more likely to say they were “very satisfied” than customers of the facilities­based carriers that account for about 90 per cent of the total market.

Additional­ly, the presence of an alternativ­e allowed them to negotiate lower prices or other inducement­s from phone and cable companies such as Bell Canada, Rogers, Telus, Shaw, Sasktel, Videotron, Cogeco and Eastlink, the 77-page report said.

The federal agency found that one million Canadian households get their internet or broadband service from dozens of independen­t ISPs that it calls “wholesale-based competitor­s.” These providers, such as TekSavvy, Distibutel and VMedia, buy capacity on another telecommun­ications company’s network at regulated rates.

“Under this wholesale access regime, independen­t competitor­s gain access to parts of existing telephone, cable, and fibre optic networks at regulated wholesale rates, and in turn use these connection­s to serve consumers in direct competitio­n with network owners,” the report says.

“In these respects, the wholesale access regime appears to be fulfilling its promise to bring about greater consumer choice and increased levels of competitio­n for Canadian consumers.”

The report concedes, however, there’s a “significan­t exception” in remote and rural areas of Canada, where consumers typically have “fewer, and less modern, options for internet services.”

For example, it said, about 99 per cent of Canadian homes in large population centres have access to internet transfer speeds of at least 50,000 bits per second (50 Mbps), only 37 per cent of rural and remote homes have such access.

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