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Telecom executives call for more government funding

Telecom executives call for more government funding

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 15 Jun 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

SaskTel's chief executive says universal broadband service will require subsidies from the taxpayer, but a telecom consultant says we should not be asking the government for a bailout. Find out why consumers told KPMG they are concerned about wireless security

TORONTO -- Canadians living in rural and isolated areas won't get broadband Internet access without satellite service and government funding, according to speakers at the Canadian Telecom Summit.

"It is a public policy decision as to whether we have broadband access or not," said Robert Watson, chief executive officer of Regina-based Saskatchewan Telecommunications Holding Corp. (SaskTel), the province-owned incumbent telecommunication carrier in Saskatchewan. Comparing broadband access to roads, he said some people consider it their "God-given right" to have roads to their homes and businesses, and the same goes for broadband Internet access.

"If we make a public policy decision to fund broadband to everybody, it means the urban population will subsidize the rural population," Watson said. "It's that simple. It's your tax dollars that will do that."

Watson made his remarks to an audience of about 100 at a panel discussion on broadband access at The Telecom Summit, co-produced by Mark H. Goldberg Associates Inc. and NBI/Michael Sone Associates Inc. and held at the Toronto Congress Centre.

But not everyone attending the panel agreed with taxpayer-funded broadband.

Eamon Hoey, senior partner at Toronto-based Hoey Associates Management Consultants Inc., was among the audience members. During the question period, Hoey said the industry should be trying to get the government "out of the way."

"We need a much better policy than to say we need to be rescued by government," Hoey argued.

But Watson maintained private companies cannot be relied upon to fund Internet access to remote areas, and other panelists agreed.

"If private enterprise was (the solution) it would already have been done by now," said Mike Dixon, vice-president for wireless networks at Motorola Canada Ltd.

Dixon said the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development has rated Canada 29th out of 30 in "wireless penetration" and in rural areas, wireless and satellite technologies are the only way to provide broadband access.

Furthermore, satellite is the most cost-effective way to bring Internet service to communities with fewer than six households per square kilometre, said John Maduri, chief executive officer of Woodstock, N.B.-based Barrett Xplore Inc., which provides service using Telesat's Anik satellites.

Maduri said Canada has more than a million households in areas with fewer than six households per square kilometre. Although cellular service is the best way to provide broadband access to areas with between seven and 25 households per square kilometre, satellite is a "critical piece of the puzzle" to get 100 per cent broadband penetration in Canada, Maduri added.


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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