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What makes New Brunswick so smart?

What makes New Brunswick so smart?

By:  Dave Webb  On: 09 Nov 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The Intelligent Community Forum named two New Brunswick cities among the seven most intelligent communities in the world. Why Fredericton and Moncton are leaders in the new economy. WITH VIDEO

"We could easily have disappeared from the face of the earth," Champoux said.

The timing was lucky. Moncton had to go back to the drawing board just when telecommunications began to change the way people worked, Champoux said. Location isn't as crucial in a knowledge economy.

Champoux credits local leadership, regional and intergovernmental collaboration, private sector engagement and infrastructure investment with creating 25,000 jobs - a 50 per cent increase - over the last 15 years.

Meanwhile, Fredericton was creating its first economic strategy. Leaders there recognized the city's institutional heritage meant something different in the knowledge economy.

"We realized we were a knowledge community, we'd always been a knowledge community," Fitzgerald said.

But broadband cost about three times what it did in Toronto or Boston, Fitzgerald said, and the community wasn't large enough for service providers to build out. So the city built its own telecommunications company.

This prompted the incumbents to try to recoup their market share, according to Fitzgerald. "That fuelled the switch from an institutional community to an entrepreneurial community," Fitzgerald said.

Fredericton now boasts Canada's largest Wi-Fi network, Fred-eZone, entirely free to use. In Moncton, the entire public transit system is Wi-Fi-enabled.

According to NewBrunswick Minister of Business Victor Boudreau, a recent deal with the province of Quebec will make New Brunswick even more attractive for business. The province's energy utility, NB Power, will be sold to Hydro Quebec, eliminating 40 per cent of the provincial debt. Boudreau said the deal freezes commercial and residential electrical rates for five years, and ties industrial rates to those in Quebec, which are among the lowest in North America, he said. It makes New Brunswick "the most cost-effective, technology-friendly jurisdiction in Canada," he said.

 










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Dave Webb Dave Webb Dave Webb is a journalist of 20 years experience in newspapers and magazines. He has followed technology exclusively since 1998 and was the winner of the Andersen Consulting Award for Excell... more
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