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News

$543-million Internet plan

LIME, Flow partnering with Gov't to boldly go where no one has gone before

BY INGRID BROWN Senior staff reporter browni@jamaicaobserver.com

Thursday, April 07, 2011



THE relentless march towards a future powered by the Internet and travelling on optical fibre cables, is about to envelop schools, public libraries and post offices, including remote areas of Jamaica.

Over the next 18 months, the Government and telecommunications providers LIME and Flow will be combining to roll out a high-speed broadband service that will change the way many ordinary Jamaicans communicate from isolated pockets of the island.

Minister without portfolio in the Office of the Prime Minister, Daryl Vaz, who has responsibility for telecommunications, signed the $543-million pact with the telecoms providers yesterday and immediately promised that the deployment of high-speed Internet services would be accelerated in the associated communities and within communities traversed by the optical fibre cables on which the services would be provided.

"Any community, however remote, which has a public secondary or high school will be provided with facilities for Internet access," an animated Vaz told the signing ceremony at Jamaica House in Kingston.

According to Vaz, the plan is to increase the number of institutions throughout the life of the project.

The five-year project is expected to facilitate modern services such as video conferencing as well as more efficient use of teaching resources through the establishment of virtual classes. It will also provide access to the server farm, hosting critical educational resources.

"These resources will allow students to access stored subject matter lessons and to take online practice tests and examinations to improve their understanding and knowledge of selected subject matters," he added.

Vaz said the providers would be held to the agreed standard of 99.9 per cent availability with the target being for no more than an accumulative total of 8.77 hours serviced degradation or downtime per year.

Funding for the build-out of the islandwide broadband network is from the Universal Access Fund Company Limited (UAFCL), which manages the levy charged to telecommunications companies for incoming international calls to Jamaica.

The fund has already provided approximately $2.4 billion for teacher education and school projects through the e-Learning project.

Dr Andre Foote, chairman of the UAFCL, said the agreement took longer than usual to reach this stage as Government took the time to ensure it would not be rendered obsolete by technology in the near future or governmental duplication.

"The agreements we enter into today are intending to benefit the people of Jamaica; we will hold our partners accountable for their performance," he said.

Hugh Cross, managing director of the UAFCL, said although the current provision was for a 100 megabits per second, there was a stipulation that this could be evolved to one one gigabit per second as the demand increased.

He said currently there were 283 institutions under contract with more to be added during the life of the project.

Garry Sinclair, managing director for LIME in Jamaica and Cayman Islands, said while the company was excited at the commercial side of the project, the real satisfaction came from knowing it would be part of an initiative that would be a critical catalyst in Jamaica's development.

He noted that the project involved two major areas where LIME had been working tirelessly to make a difference — the infusion of the ICT in education and increasing of access to ICT to the general population to bridge the digital divide with Jamaica, as well as between more developed nations.

"Specifically, we have been doing this through our provision of free Internet to more than 300 schools and the establishment of several community-based cyber-clubs across the island," he said.

Michele English, president and chief operating officer of Flow, said this had significant benefits to the schools, particularly those in more remote areas.

Jamaica, she said, had access to the best broadband and converge technology which had made the country among the top 15 countries in the world, ranking higher than the United States, the United Kingdom and Canada.

"It is a pretty significant move to have this kind of technology broadly available throughout the country," she said.



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COMMENTS (7)

Tris McPhee
4/7/2011
Its been so long that I have been waiting to see the government, stake holders and the private sector provide schools with much needed technology. Every teacher should have a computer in their classroom so that they can use it for instruction, increase productivity as well as to give grades so that parents can easily log on to see their children's grades. Its time to role out technology like the SMART Board if we want students to improve students academic success in the 21st century.
Le View
4/7/2011
Optical fiber technology is a good route. There are many benefits and uses--many that go outside the bounds of education, post offices etc. I suspect LIME will eventually branch out into those other areas to become the leading service provider. Way to go LIME!
Is optical fiber technology the same technology used to support railway systems?
Isaac Riley Jr.
4/7/2011
This is long overdue. Last year our company met with Minister of Education to lay the groundwork for comprehensive school management software. Broadband service will most definitely bring our school system into the 21st century.
Malcolm Schenker
4/7/2011
I laud this effort, to whomever conceived it, my regards, but making good on the promises that put you in office makes you no hero, its just doing your job, but my regards nonetheless. The next side of this venture that WE must pay attention to is it's maintenance. WE must physically maintain it so that the infrastructure will last more than JUST five years and WE must also monitor its usage so that I won't end up seeing some sex video posted on the net by our teens who now have net access.
Leroy Gordon
4/7/2011
Way to go...great move.
Izett Gordon
4/7/2011
Vision and foresight! I am wondering if the minister of government in charge of these outcomes know of the genesis of all this? Does anyone remember the rural electrification programme? Well, many of the infrastructural developments on which these telecommunication giants now ride were put in place simultaneously. I must say thanks to the Venezuelan people who helped us 'back in the day' when Jamaica was thinking for itself. The stone that the builder refused is now the head of the corner!
Lloyd Stanbury
4/7/2011
Excellent. Well done LIME and FLOW. Definitely a step in the right direction to facilitate access to information and further economic development.

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