Thursday, June 25, 2026
ADVT 
National

PM pledges $1.75B to boost high-speed internet

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2020 06:40 PM
  • PM pledges $1.75B to boost high-speed internet

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday that his government is launching a $1.75-billion fund to expand high-speed internet to Canadians in rural and remote communities.

The Universal Broadband Fund that was part of the Liberal budget announcement in early 2019, months before last year's federal election, has taken longer than expected to be officially launched.

But the PM and several of his ministers said they used the time to make the funding process less cumbersome and more relevant to communities, recognizing that the COVID crisis has made good internet an even higher priority than before the pandemic.

"The program we are launching today … reflects the advice and recommendations on how best to solve the most important infrastructure challenge of our time, how to strengthen our connections," said Maryam Monsef, minister for rural economic development. "We were ready to go, in March, with the new Universal Broadband Fund. And then the pandemic hit."

In response, the government consulted with members of Parliament from rural areas and officials with local governments that were overloaded by the demands of the COVID crisis.

"We heard that the processes have to be streamlined and more easily accessible," Monsef said. "We also heard that communities are, rightfully so, impatient to see progress."

As a response, she said, the government is ready to accept applications immediately, there's a new service to assist with navigating the system, and $150 million of the $1.7 billion is designated for projects that are ready to be completed by next November.

Trudeau said the Universal Broadband Fund will see 98 per cent of Canadians connected to high-speed internet by 2026 — crucial in an era when virtual communication is an essential part of daily life.

“Good reliable internet isn’t a luxury, it’s a basic service," Trudeau said Monday at a news conference in Ottawa.

"We’re all going online to stay in touch with family and friends. Now more than ever a video chat cutting out during a meeting or a connection that’s too slow to upload a school assignment, that’s not just a hassle, that’s a barrier."

The program, announced originally in the Liberal government's 2019 budget as a $1-billion fund, includes $750 million of added cash to advance projects with partners such as the federal infrastructure financing agency.

In addition to the Universal Broadband Fund, the government announced a $600-million deal with Ottawa-based satellite company Telesat to link up particularly remote communities with high-speed broadband via satellite.

Innovation, Science and Industry Minister Navdeep Bains said Telesat's low-orbit satellites are scheduled to be deployed in late 2021 and service is projected to begin in 2022.

Bains also acknowledged that many communities in the North have faced bracingly high internet fees. He said the government believes competition among different service providers would "enable the price points to go down."

The Universal Broadband Fund is only one of many federal programs, often with similar or complementary mandates.

For example, it's partly an evolution of the Connect to Innovate program that the Trudeau government announced in its first mandate, to connect more households to the internet, and partly a complement to its $35-billion infrastructure bank.

The Liberals created the Canada Infrastructure Bank in 2017 to entice funding from private-sector partners to fuel what the government has called "transformational" infrastructure projects that would create 60,000 jobs.

However, the bank has been criticized for its relatively small number of investments in fewer than a dozen projects so far and both the Conservatives and NDP promised in the 2019 election to abolish the bank if they were voted into power.

MORE National ARTICLES

Brazil, Bolivia Assessing Needs After Canada Offers $15m Aid For Amazon Fires

Brazil, Bolivia Assessing Needs After Canada Offers $15m Aid For Amazon Fires
Adam Austen, spokesman for Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, says the minister spoke to her counterparts in both Brazil and Bolivia over the weekend.

Brazil, Bolivia Assessing Needs After Canada Offers $15m Aid For Amazon Fires

New Trial Ordered In Via Rail Terror Plot

Raed Jaser and Chiheb Esseghaier were found guilty in 2015 on a total of eight terror-related charges between them. They were sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole until 2023.    

New Trial Ordered In Via Rail Terror Plot

New Brunswick Education Minister Warns Against Anti-Vaccination Message

New Brunswick Education Minister Warns Against Anti-Vaccination Message
FREDERICTON - New Brunswick's education minister says people spreading misinformation about the effectiveness of vaccines are from the "far, far fringe."

New Brunswick Education Minister Warns Against Anti-Vaccination Message

Police Confirm Sea-To-Sky Gondola Cable Deliberately Cut

The investigation into the Sea to Sky Gondola is active and ongoing.

Police Confirm Sea-To-Sky Gondola Cable Deliberately Cut

Court Orders Women Accused Of Defaming Author Steven Galloway To Share Emails, Online Posts

Galloway, who is the former chair of the university's creative writing department, filed lawsuits against the woman and two dozen others last October

Court Orders Women Accused Of Defaming Author Steven Galloway To Share Emails, Online Posts

Olympic Gold Medallist Sylvie Frechette To Run As Conservative In Quebec

OTTAWA - Olympic synchronized swimming gold medallist Sylvie Frechette says she is comfortable with the social conservative views of her new boss, Tory leader Andrew Scheer.

Olympic Gold Medallist Sylvie Frechette To Run As Conservative In Quebec