"Partnerships"
August 15-18, 1997 Halifax, Nova Scotia
Note especially recommendation's 4.11 and 4.22 (GG) Information Highway Advisory Council (IHAC) Author - Industry Canada IHAC ACCESS STEERING COMMITTEE SUMMARY OF CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS Policy Issue "In an environment that will see local monopolies replaced by competition, and in the context of ongoing work to develop a national access strategy, what measures are needed by governments and the private sector to ensure affordability and equity in Canadians' access to essential services?" Background Study Access to the Internet: A Community Based Approach, Nordicity Group Ltd. (Sandi McDonald). Steering Committee Members Francis Fox (Chair) David Sutherland (Co-Chair) Neil Baker John MacDonald Colin Watson Elizabeth Hoffman Janet Yale Kenneth Engelhart Sheridan Scott Jim Savary Andrew Reddick Government Officials Richard Simpson, IHAC Secretariat Peter Ferguson, IHAC Secretariat Monique Lajeunesse, IHAC Secretariat John Sifton, IHAC Secretariat Prabir Neogi, Industry Canada David Niece, Canadian Heritage ACCESS STEERING COMMITTEE SUMMARY OF CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS [At its meeting on April 3-4, 1997, the Information Highway Advisory Council approved the following conclusions and recommendations flowing from the work of the Steering Committee on Access.] Access to the Information Highway is critical to Canada's future as an information society and its success as a knowledge economy. In Building the Information Society, the federal government indicated its intention to develop a national access strategy, reflecting the four access principles enunciated in IHAC's first report, Connection, Community, Content. The Council urges the government to meet its commitment to articulate such a strategy before the end of 1997 (Rec. 4.1). As the Information Highway has become more pervasive and significant in the economic, social and cultural life of Canadians, the scope and complexity of the access issue has increased. In consequence, an effective strategy dealing with access to the Information Highway must address at least three areas of public policy concern - (i) ensuring access to basic telecommunications and broadcasting, which represent Canadians' "on-ramps" to the Information Highway; (ii) promoting access to new networks and services that are appearing on the Information Highway, especially the Internet; and (iii) establishing a formal mechanism for defining access in a knowledge society. The Council believes the government must set forth clear directions and take appropriate action in all three of these areas. Consistent with its mandate to review progress, as well as to advise the government on access, the Council has concluded that much has been accomplished in this regard, but a great deal of work still needs to be done. Access to Basic Network Services In relation to basic network services in telecommunications and broadcasting, Canadians have achieved one of the highest levels of universality in the world. International data on penetration rates for telephones, broadcast services and cable television show Canada at or near the top in all three areas. In the broadcasting area, the Council praises the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) release in March 1997 of a policy framework for fair competition in broadcast distribution services and urges the Commission to meet its deadline of early 1998 for the promulgation of regulations. In telecommunications, the Council expresses satisfaction with CRTC decisions and planned proceedings intended to sustain universal access at affordable rates. The Council urges the CRTC to act quickly, and with appropriate attention to detail, on its expressed determination to monitor closely trends in telephone penetration rates and affordability indicators and to intervene when and if the principle of universality is threatened (Rec. 4.2.). Access to the Information Highway In the Council's view, the government should emphasize access to the Internet as a first step in ensuring equitable participation in a knowledge society. Any policies assessing access to the Information Highway must address access to the Internet (Rec. 4.3). Though unable to determine whether access to the Internet will be a problem, the Council calls on the federal government or the CRTC to monitor such access, focusing on people in remote areas and people with low incomes and disabilities. Statistics Canada should also develop ways to measure such access and collect and publish the statistics (Rec. 4.4). Because effective access to content largely depends on speed of access, the government, in cooperation with industry, CANARIE and public interest groups, should monitor deployment of high-speed Internet access and the arrival of more video-based services on the World Wide Web (Rec. 4.5). A key concern of the Council is the promotion of public access to the Internet. In the case of rural and remote areas, the Council recommends: that the government and the CRTC work with industry to develop the means to make Internet access available without long-distance charges (Rec. 4.6); and that the government in cooperation with industry proceed with the Advanced Satcom Initiative, with a view to encouraging satellite provision of Internet access to schools, libraries, community centres and other local institutions (Rec. 4.7). The Council welcomes the decision in the February 1997 Budget to put an additional $30 million into an expansion of the Community Access Program (CAP), and underscores the importance of the goal of establishing public access sites by the year 2000 in the 5,000 rural and remote communities with populations between 400 and 50,000 (Rec. 4.8). Given the key question of how to sustain these sites in the long term, the government should attach priority to providing the resources sufficient both to install and sustain community access points in locations to which the general public has easy access (Rec. 4.9). Since the majority of people with low incomes live in cities and can be reached without exorbitant cost, the Council recommends that CAP receive additional resources to extend community access sites on a sustainable basis to urban neighbourhoods lacking such sites (Rec. 4.10). The Council believes the existence of inclusive electronic public spaces is vital to the democratic health of the emerging knowledge society. Thus, the Council calls on governments to work closely with industry and public interest and consumer groups to make community networks and public spaces sustainable on the Information Highway (Rec. 4.11), and recommends that the federal government develop policies and procedures to contribute financially to non-profit Internet access providers for the electronic provision of government services and information to the general public (Rec. 4.12). While urging government to move to electronic provision of services and information, the Council emphasizes the continuing need for government to provide information and services in traditional forms to citizens without access to the Internet or public access sites (Rec. 4.13). In the Council's view, digital literacy is a key precondition for access to the Information Highway and success in the emerging knowledge society. To this end and in keeping with the present SchoolNet target of ensuring every school in Canada has full Internet access by the end of 1998, the Council calls on all governments, the educational community and the private sector to work together to meet this goal (Rec. 4.14). The Council also urges governments to encourage development of high-quality on-line tutorial and community-based instruction available via public access sites, community networks and the Internet (Rec. 4.15), and to provide resources to every publicly funded library to support sustainable public access sites and learning of basic computer and Internet skills by people who would not otherwise be served (Rec. 4.16). In September 1995, IHAC stated that Canadian content should have a prominent place and "eye-level... shelf-space" on the Information Highway. While noting progress in this respect, the Council recommends that Canadian Internet access providers be encouraged to place Canadian reference points on their home pages (Rec. 4.17), and that the federal government resource existing programs, and develop partnership strategies with others, to develop more Canadian content, particularly in new media services (Rec. 4.18). The Council also notes the relative lack of French-language content on the Internet and calls on governments to work closely with industry, and in cooperation with Francophone communities, to develop a critical mass of French-language content and services for the Internet (Rec. 4.19). Without availability of various alternative methods of access, the Internet can be inaccessible to people with disabilities. Universal design allows for this variety in methods of access. The Council recommends that the government carefully monitor Internet developments in this respect (Rec. 4.20); and fund an award program to honour achievements in design of assistive devices and in application of universal design principles in communications products, systems and services (Rec. 4.21). Defining Access in a Knowledge Society The Council believes the fundamental social and economic transformations attendant upon Canada's transition from an industrial to a knowledge society constitute a strong argument for bringing to bear in a focussed way on the access issue viewpoints beyond those of the federal government and the usual participants in the CRTC regulatory process. Decisions on what Information Highway services should be considered essential will have far-reaching ramifications and should be informed by the viewpoints of industry and the community at large in all its diversity. The Council, while reluctant to create another advisory body, believes on balance the issue is so important that the federal government should create a national access advisory committee, reporting to the Ministers of Industry and Canadian Heritage, to advise on emerging access requirements and what services will be essential in a knowledge society. The advisory committee should include balanced representation from industry and the non-profit sector (Rec. 4.22). Its operation should be fully consistent with the constitutional and statutory responsibilities of the federal government and the CRTC with respect to communications policy and regulation. Access Steering Committee, April 1997 _________________________________________________________________ References http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/SSGF/ih01632f.html http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/SSG/ih01632e.html