Thank you for the opportunity to appear.
I've had the pleasure of working for SaskTel for over 40 years, 30 of which have been in a senior executive capacity. I saw our crown corporation deliver individual line service, cellular, and Internet throughout the province for the very first time. As the most rural province in Canada, we have a very good understanding of the challenges that arise in meeting the Internet and cellular needs of our rural residents.
Before delving into those challenges, I want to address the issue of acceptable high-speed Internet service. In that regard, we support the commission's target of fifty-ten, but would note that ultimately what you think of that goal depends on where you are today with regard to Internet connectivity. For example, if you're relying solely on satellite Internet, or if your service is subject to congestion, most of the people we speak to in Saskatchewan would call fifty-ten a pipe dream, and would settle for a consistent five-one or ten-two service. We note that the CRTC acknowledges the challenges of achieving fifty-ten for rural customers and suggests that rural improvements may take up to 15 years. That is far too long a time frame. Rural Canada needs better Internet service today, not up to 15 years from now.
There are realities that we've overcome to provide service. As I said, Saskatchewan is the most rural province in Canada due to the wide open spaces between most rural residents. It is hard to bring this to life for people familiar with their own rural areas in eastern Canada. Basically, think about the distances between farms and houses in your rural areas that you're familiar with and multiply those distances by a factor of about seven.
We recently took DSL Internet to Kendal, Saskatchewan, a village of 77 people. While Kendal is in the middle of productive farmland, with other towns and villages dotting the highway every 13 kilometres, the biggest town around is Indian Head, with 1,900 people, some 35 kilometres away on a grid road. After that it's Regina, which is 80 kilometres away. The issue for us is that in telecommunications, the lack of density drives up capital costs per person served, and distances between groups of people drive up capital costs. We've overcome many things to meet the current situation in Saskatchewan, where virtually any community of any size has wireline Internet service, virtually any town of a decent size has adequate cellular service, and we've recently announced a plan to expand cellular service to those small towns.
The backbone, the backhaul, is a building block for our Internet service. We continue to invest heavily in backbone facilities, facilities that are all made available to competitors at prices that have what I would call the “oversight of regulation”. This job will never be 100% complete, as the data traffic will continue to grow, and we will continue to have to invest. But today, other than a few uneconomic backbone routes that are part of a Connect to Innovate application, our backbone will be meeting our current needs until we need more capacity.
For non-cellular, the next biggest challenge is “last-mile” facilities. If it's wired service, then we require the installation of more fibre, more cabinets and, ultimately, to meet the fifty-ten goal for us, fibre to the premise. We recently fibred Rosthern, Saskatchewan, for $1.8 million for 1,083 residences. That's $1,700 a residence. We won't get all the customers, because there is a cable competitor in that town. For a fixed wireless service, it's all about spectrum, and not cellular spectrum. In rural Saskatchewan we have lots of cellular spectrum. It's the non-cellular spectrum that we need, which is constraining our ability to meet customer demands.
In terms of cellular service, we've been doing a lot of work on the economics of expanding cell service to fill in many of the unserved and underserved areas of Saskatchewan. To cut to the chase, each unserved area requires a new fibre-fed cell tower and the equipment required to be installed at the cell site. On average, it's $1 million per cell tower. Basically, most of the expansion is uneconomic due to the relatively small number of people in the footprint of these new towers. I want to remind you that cellular spectrum is not at all an issue. We have all of our unused cellular spectrum available for these towers. It's the high initial capital costs involved in building a tower.
I have four recommendations for what we need.
First, for fixed wireless Internet service, we need more spectrum suitable for fixed wireless Internet service. Currently, our fixed wireless service offering is spectrum-constrained and we have stopped cells in a number of sectors. Ultimately, in the absence of changes in technology spectrum utilization or spectrum assignment, we do not see a path to 50-10 for fixed wireless Internet service.
Second, rural Canada needs a program in addition to the CRTC program: $750 million, minus the money designed for far north satellite, is a drop in the bucket. The current timelines for deep rural essentially mean that the digital divide between rural and urban Canada will continue to grow.
Third, to meet the future need for speed, ultimately fibre will need to be installed for as many customers as Canada can afford; where fibre is unaffordable, those customers will need to be served by fixed wireless and satellite. That means in terms of fibre, we'll need a capital contribution for locations that are close to being economical. For those that are extremely uneconomical, in addition to a capital contribution, there will be a need for ongoing financial support.
Fourth, for unserved and underserved cellular areas, there will be a need for a capital contribution for those locations that are close to being economical, and—again for more sparsely populated areas—an ongoing subsidy program, because the capital for cellular does not stop with the initial installation, and that capital will be uneconomical as well.