Thank you for the opportunity to be with you today.
My name is John Traversy. I'm the executive director of telecommunications at the CRTC. I am joined today by Namir Anani, executive director of policy development and research.
We would like to focus our comments on the following question, which was included in your study's terms of reference: what could be done to ensure that all Canadians, no matter where they live or what their socio-economic status is, have access to emerging and digital media.
As you know, digital media is part of how Canadians live and conduct business. Canadians are getting more and more of their information and entertainment from the Internet and through mobile devices. Content is available from almost anywhere at any time. This has given consumers more control over what they watch and when they watch it than ever before, and as a result business models are evolving to keep pace so that Canadian media companies can compete in the global environment.
Of course, none of these things are possible without an Internet connection, and more often than not in today's world, a broadband Internet connection. Through the regulation of telecommunications services, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission has a large role to play in making sure that Canadians have access to the Internet.
As to where things stand today, over the past four decades the commission has used economic incentives and other regulatory tools to ensure the deployment of telephone and cable television networks across the country. These nearly ubiquitous networks now serve as the underlying platforms for Internet access. We have relied primarily on market forces to encourage companies to upgrade their networks or to build wireless and satellite networks in order to allow for broadband Internet access.
Where market forces have not been sufficient, targeted subsidies from both provincial and federal governments have helped to expand broadband to rural and remote areas. Industry Canada funded a $225 million broadband Canada program to connect rural Canadians to the Internet. Several provinces have forged partnerships with the private sector to extend coverage to their residents. Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia now claim to be at 100% coverage.
As a result of these efforts, broadband Internet services are widely available in Canada. Broadband Internet services are available to 95% of Canadian households through telephone, cable or fixed-wireless networks. Most households that do not have access to these services can still get broadband Internet through a satellite connection. In addition, 96% of Canadians can access the Internet using a mobile device.
l'd now like to turn to the CRTC's role in ensuring that all Canadians have access to basic telephone and Internet services.
Given that Canada has a small population spread across a vast and diverse landscape, it has been a challenge to deliver a high-quality, reliable, and affordable telephone service to all. In the late 1990s the CRTC instituted measures to ensure that all Canadians had access to basic telephone service regardless of where they lived.
As part of these measures, the commission developed a minimum target for residential services that included access to dial-up Internet services at local rates. These measures have worked well for considerably longer than 10 years. Today, over 99% of Canadians have access to telephone services that meet or exceed our basic requirements.
However, dial-up Internet just does not cut it anymore for many consumers in light of the significant competitive and technological developments over the last few years. In response, the CRTC is in the process of reviewing its approach to basic telecommunications services.
I was at a public hearing that began in Timmins last week on October 26 and continued this week in Quebec on November 1. The CRTC has invited a range of interested parties to provide views on a number of key questions.
Not surprisingly, the most pressing questions revolve around the Internet. Does the CRTC have a role to play in the provision of high-speed Internet services where these are not currently available? Should a goal be set whereby all Canadians have access to high-speed Internet services; if so, at what speed and in what timeframe? The commission expects to publish its determinations by March 2011.
Mr. Anani.