Countryside demands broadband speeds too
By Hani Megerisi
Posted on 4 Mar 2010 at 16:42
A dozen rural community groups have banded together to get the Government to roll out broadband to the countryside.
The Final Third First group highlights the fact that a substantial number of the population living in rural areas only have access to 28.8 or 56Kbits/sec dial-up connections.
I don’t think the Government has dismissed rural communities, I just think they don’t understand rural issues
The fact that such low speeds exist mean that the Government's commitment to provide 2Mbits/sec speeds as a universal standard will be “hard to achieve”, said the group, which is supported by the Country Land & Business Association (CLA).
The CLA's Dr Charles Trotman estimates the number of people without broadband speeds at between 18% to 20% of the UK population, with rural users placed at a disadvantage because they are deemed to be too far away from the exchange.
“I don’t think the Government has dismissed rural communities, I just think they don’t understand rural issues,” added Dr Trotman. “2Mbits/sec is only a start... a basic level [and] the Government has to put the money in”.
The main focus of the campaign will be to ensure that Government services can be accessed by everyone by 2012, before any attempt is made to bring next-gen services to the final third.
He added that firms such as BT, who are responsible for laying down the required digital infrastructure, were also to blame. “It’s a joint Government/industry problem. We recognise BT has to answer to its shareholders, but it does have a moral responsibility to bring fairness to the market.”
From around the web
Moral responsibility before shareholders? - They're still laughing!
By jayardine1 on 4 Mar 2010 ![]()
FTFC Information
The Final Third First Campaign lives at www.finalthirdfirst.org
By FiWiPie on 4 Mar 2010 ![]()
The government is increasingly moving to web-based services, and with that in mind I do have some sympathy for the view that the government needs to make those services accessible to the whole population.
However, this is why they are also available by 'phone and post.
By Penguat on 4 Mar 2010 ![]()
How long until broadband access is seen as an inalienable human right enshrined in the EU constitution and recognised by the UN?
By Phoomeister on 5 Mar 2010 ![]()
Stump up some cash then...
So you live in the Countryside....great. Wish I had the cash to live there. You want superfast Broadband....move to the city, or stump up the cash yourself.
By everton2004 on 5 Mar 2010 ![]()
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