Yukon to study 2nd telecommunications link to south
Minister says slow and expensive Internet is hurting economic growth
CBC News
Posted: Feb 15, 2013 10:35 AM CST
Last Updated: Feb 15, 2013 12:04 PM CST
Related
Related Stories
The Yukon Government is promising to do something about slow and expensive internet and telecommunications services in the territory.
Economic Development Minister Currie Dixon made the surprise announcement at a Chamber of Commerce luncheon Thursday in Whitehorse.
Dixon told the crowd a recent report to the government confirmed what most Yukoners already know. Compared to southern Canada, download speeds are much slower and consumers pay double for half the service.
"Our consumers pay 40 per cent more for 5 MB download service than southern Canadians do for 10 MB download service, and this gap increases significantly if users exceed their monthly usage cap,” he said.
“For businesses, the gap is 800 per cent — Yukon businesses pay eight times what a business in the South pays for a 50 MB per second service."
The report calls for a new department in government, a Technology and Telecommunications Development Directorate.
"The high cost and slow speed are making local businesses less competitive and constraining growth and diversification of the Yukon economy," Dixon said.
He promises a feasibility study for a second telecommunications link to the south, through Skagway and Juneau.
Yukon technology analyst Rick Steele said he welcomes the news.
"That's been a crying need forever,” he said. “If you start doing the math on this you will make your money back."
The work will be co-ordinated by the newly-created directorate.
Share Tools
Latest North News Headlines
- Yellowknife students launch helmet blitz
- Students from St. Patrick High School will be offering prizes and coupons Saturday afternoon to encourage the use of helmets by cyclists and skateboarders. more »
- Arsonist died in Iqaluit townhouse fire, say RCMP
- RCMP say a fire that killed two people at the Creekside Village in Iqaluit in 2012 was arson. more »
- Hockey Canada votes to ban bodychecking in peewee hockey
- Hockey Canada's board of directors voted to eliminate bodychecking from peewee-level hockey on Saturday in Charlottetown. more »
- Selling caribou meat online may hasten herds' decline: biologist
- Wildlife managers in Nunavut are worried the growing online market for caribou meat may put extra stress on some caribou populations. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- 3 more suspects arrested in slaying of U.K. soldier
- British police investigating the savage killing of an off-duty soldier in London have arrested three more suspects. more »
- Hockey Canada votes to ban bodychecking in peewee hockey
- Hockey Canada's board of directors voted to eliminate bodychecking from peewee-level hockey on Saturday in Charlottetown. more »
- Neil Macdonald: How serious is Obama about curbing the drone surge?
- In a key speech this week, the U.S. president set out a host of supposed new safeguards for America's controversial practice of remote-controlled rough justice. But as Neil Macdonald writes, the underlying rationale for drone use has not fundamentally changed. more »
- Ontario man lost in Australian mountains has survival skills
- The sister of an Ontario man who disappeared in Australia's Snowy Mountains nearly two weeks ago says she remains hopeful he will be found, partly because of his training as a Canadian Forces reservist. more »
- Japanese plane makes unscheduled landing in Whitehorse
- Japanese 747 waits for maintenance crew in Whitehorse
- Arsonist died in Iqaluit townhouse fire, say RCMP
- Selling caribou meat online may hasten herds' decline: biologist
- Kimmirut woman remembered at volleyball tournament
- Canada ranks 3rd last in paid vacations
- Boats collide, killing 77-year-old woman
- Police deem N.W.T. woman's death suspicious
- Nunavut government spends millions on overtime

