April 4, 2003
Ottawa to invest $2 million to
get Nunavik online
Cash will cover almost
half the cost of project
ODILE
NELSON
The federal government
blew a financial snowfall Nunaviks way March 26 with an agreement investing
$2 million in the regions Internet development.
Canada Economic Development
will contribute $1.8 million to the Kativik Regional Governments Internet
project, Guy St-Julien, Liberal MP for Abitibi-Baie James-Nunavik, told delegates
last week at Makivik Corp.s annual general meeting in Puvirnituq.
The money will cover roughly
40 per cent of the regions $4-million to $5-million project. The provincial
government has already committed $900,000 toward the projects first phase
and has promised another $1 million. The KRG is contributing another $900,000.
In an interview with Nunatsiaq
News, St-Julien said the money should benefit the entire region.
"This is for the people.
The Internet is very important for everybody, kids, children, people, you know?
Its not easy [getting] Internet in the North. It is not easy but I am
happy," he said. "The money is coming back to the North."
Last year, the KRG set
up a central Internet system in Kuujjuaq using $900,000 from the Internet project
fund. It also bought satellite equipment and pads for Nunaviks 14 communities.
Two other communities, Tasujiaq and Quaqtaq, are now poised to go online.
But the regions current
Internet capabilities vary significantly from community to community. Some villages
continue to rely on slow, telephone dial-ups while the Fédération
des coopératives du Nouveau-Québec provides cable Internet access
in Puvirnituq, Salluit and Inukjuak.
The federal windfall will
help bring every communitys infrastructure up to speed by purchasing electronics,
setting up satellite dishes with broadband capabilities and constructing buildings
to house the electronics.
Johnny Adams, chairman
of the KRG, said getting the funding has taken years of lobbying.
"Its pretty
well been forever. Its been a long process. Weve had to go through
a lot of hurdles to get to where we are," he said. "[But] were
at a point where we can honestly say that we will have Nunavik connected to
the Information Highway. I guess were slowly getting out of the Dark Ages
and catching up to the rest of the world."
Adams said the KRGs
regional offices would be hooked up to the Internet. But the regional government
is negotiating using the FCNQ as the Internet Service Provider for community
businesses and private homes.
The KRG also plans to offer
publicly accessible computers in every community, Adams said.
For communities accessing
the Internet using telephone dial-ups, the anticipated infrastructure should
be a good improvement, said Alain Rochefort, a pedagogical counsellor with the
Kativik School Board in Kangiqsualujjuaq.
Nunaviks Internet
hook-up may never equal Southern speeds, he said, because the region relies
on satellites, and not ground connections. But the promised infrastructure should
at least speed up the regions Internet connections and open up other telecommunication
possibilities.
"I think the big thing
about the system that the KRG wants to put in the communities, is that, at least
infrastructure-wise, they are going for something that will be expandable in
the future and that will allow to incorporate things like videoconference and
other applications that require a lot of bandwidth," he said.
Still, he cautioned that
establishing infrastructure is only one part of Nunaviks Internet puzzle.
"If we get that big
infrastructure put in place and theres no funding going to be secured
for the cost to use it, thats going to be a problem," he said.
The KRG hopes to have all
communities online by the fall.
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