Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

CRTC's ‘Basic service' Internet Decision Welcomed By Indigenous Group

The Canadian Press, 25 Dec, 2016 09:01 PM
    WINNIPEG — As grand chief of an organization representing northern Manitoba First Nations, Sheila North Wilson has a lot of experience dealing with spotty Internet and cell phone service.
     
    North Wilson carries two phones — one which she says works some of the time, and the other hardly at all. Some communities have dial-up Internet while others rely on a combination of phone and satellite reception. Still others have nothing.
     
    It's why her group, Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak Inc., welcomes the recent decision by the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission to declare broadband Internet access a basic service across the country.
     
    "Not to say that technology is the end-all and the be-all, because there are some people that don't want any part of it and are quite comfortable being away from technology in our communities," North Wilson said.
     
    "But for day-to-day business and accessibility to the rest of the world, it's high time we received this connectivity in our communities."
     
    The aim of Canada's telecommunications regulator is to ensure that within the next 10 to 15 years, service providers offer Internet to all households and businesses at speeds of at least 50 megabits per second for downloading data, and 10 megabits per second for uploads. 
     
    The regulator also says mobile wireless service should be made available to all households and businesses throughout Canada, as well as along all major Canadian roads.
     
    It's big news for Canada's smallest towns, where slow Internet means more than just difficulty sharing cat videos.
     
     
    Farming organizations have long called for improved Internet service.
     
    A document prepared by the Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan earlier this year prior listed broadband Internet and cellphone coverage amongst its issues of concern.
     
    Producers like Leeann Minogue, who farms with her husband east of Weyburn, Sask., said in the document that people living in cities and towns don't think twice about downloading large files or videos. But on farms, she said download speeds using towers and dishes are much slower than broadband Internet.
     
    Minogue, who called for better service, noted things like phone and power all came to rural Saskatchewan after a fight.
     
    The commission is giving telecom firms access to an escalating $750 million dollar industry-sponsored fund over the next five years to invest in broadband infrastructure if they guarantee a set price for service.
     
    North Wilson said businesses in remote communities need better service.
     
    "We have, for example many artisans or people that offer services that could be out there more if there was better connectivity," she said.
     
    She said residents of remote communities also need reliable Internet because government services and information are moving online.
     
    Her organization played a role in the CRTC hearings, noting their input was mentioned a number of times in the landmark decision.
     
    Last year, North Wilson was dealing with the deaths of three people in a house fire on the Bunibonibee Cree Nation. Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett phoned her to pass along a message of condolence to the community, but North Wilson said she didn't get it right away.
     
     
    In some communities, she said it's likely she wouldn't have received the message at all.
     
    "They want to be connected, like the rest of the world, to the rest of the world," North Wilson said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Designer Basks In Glow Of 'kate Effect' After Royal Wears Canadian Coat

    Toronto Designer Basks In Glow Of 'kate Effect' After Royal Wears Canadian Coat
    TORONTO — Bojana Sentaler is quickly learning just what it means to feel the full force of the "Kate effect."

    Toronto Designer Basks In Glow Of 'kate Effect' After Royal Wears Canadian Coat

    Wedding Day Crisis Averted Thanks To Handy Syrian Refugee's Intervention

    Wedding Day Crisis Averted Thanks To Handy Syrian Refugee's Intervention
    A Toronto bride is crediting a newly arrived Syrian refugee with salvaging both her wedding gown and the day itself.

    Wedding Day Crisis Averted Thanks To Handy Syrian Refugee's Intervention

    Canine Rescue Groups Bringing Banned Pitbulls From Montreal To East Coast

    HALIFAX — Animal rescue groups in Atlantic Canada are rallying to find new homes on the East Coast for pitbull-type dogs they say may now face euthanasia in Montreal.

    Canine Rescue Groups Bringing Banned Pitbulls From Montreal To East Coast

    Online Program Tackles Anxiety And Depression Of Cancer Survivors

    Online Program Tackles Anxiety And Depression Of Cancer Survivors
    TORONTO — According to her doctors, Deanna Ratzlaff is cancer-free. And to anyone who looks at her, she appears to be in great health.

    Online Program Tackles Anxiety And Depression Of Cancer Survivors

    As Seas Heaved, 20-tonne Pipe Fell To Within 12 Metres Of Offshore Oil Well

    As Seas Heaved, 20-tonne Pipe Fell To Within 12 Metres Of Offshore Oil Well
    When heaving waters in the North Atlantic wrenched a string of massive steel pipes from a drilling ship off Nova Scotia's coast, one of the 20-tonne sections of the plummeting coil struck the seabed just 12 metres from the top of an undersea oil exploration well.

    As Seas Heaved, 20-tonne Pipe Fell To Within 12 Metres Of Offshore Oil Well

    KPU psychology instructor named open education research fellow

    KPU psychology instructor named open education research fellow
    The OEG is an interdisciplinary organization that conducts research on the impact of open education resources. 

    KPU psychology instructor named open education research fellow