THEME IV: INTRODUCING COHERENCE INTO THE COMMUNITY NETWORK
MOVEMENT August 19 1.30 - 2.15 pm TELECOMMUNICATIONS STRATEGY
AND THE CAMPAIGN FOR AN ONTARIO INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE
Rory O'Brien, Member, Council for an Ontario Information
Infrastructure and WEB Program Coordinator Mr. O'Brien's
speech has been put up on the conference log (Conference
Paper no. 5). The theme of his presentation was the Ontario
Telecommunications Strategy. He referred both to the Task
Force report "Telecommunications: Enabling Ontario's Future"
(August 1992) and the Telecommunications Strategy which was
announced last February by Premier Bob Rae and Economic
Development and Trade Minister Frances Lankin as the
government's response. Further information and documentation
can be obtained by contacting Anna Larsen, Ministry of
Economic Development and Trade(phone: 416-325-6686). This
multi-year strategy is a government-wide commitment to invest
strategically in Ontario's future. There are two program
components. Some $100 million in jobsOntario funding will be
made available over four years for the delivery of the
Ontario Network Infrastructure Program (ONIP) - a program
designed to accelerate the development of telecommunications
based information networks, in partnership with the private
sector, which will foster business competitiveness,
strengthen Ontario's R&D capability, provide
opportunities for lifelong education and training, support
community development and create jobs. Telecom sector
projects will also have access to the $150 million Sector
Partnership Fund (SPF). Finally a new Council has been
formed, of which Mr. O'Brien is a member; this council will
work with Minister Lankin to recommend priorities,
initiatives and timetables, as well as comment on project
proposals. ONIP project funding has already been approved for
the National Capital FreeNet, Onet (the Ontario regional
component of CA*net) and for a project to provide a telecom
enabled community economic development strategy for
North-western Ontario. Groups seeking project funding must
submit complete proposals by October 1. COMMUNITY ACCESS TO
THE ELECTRONIC HIGHWAY: FREEWAY OR TOLL ROAD? Brian Penney,
CANARIE Associates and Vice President, Gandalf Technologies
This presentation focussed on the CANARIE (Canadian Network
for the Advancement of Research, Industry and Education)
initiative. Further information on CANARIE can be obtained by
contacting Rafiq Khan (phone: 613-660-3998) or Tess McLean
(phone: 416-943-3532, e-mail: mclean@vm.utcc.utoronto.ca).
The mission of CANARIE is to support the development of the
communications infrastructure for a knowledge-based Canada,
and thereby contribute to Canadian competitiveness in all
sectors of the economy, to prosperity, job creation and the
quality of life. There are two thrusts: to stimulate the
telecommunications sector by accelerating the development of
next generation technologies and advanced network products,
systems and services; and to use telecommunications to
support Canada's advance to a knowledge-based society by
pushing research, education and certain key sectors of the
economy. The government has approved Phase I funding of $26
million, which will be handled by CANARIE Inc. This will
include an upgrade of CA*net, the national backbone for
Canadian Internet nodes, to T1 speeds; the implementation of
a high speed test network, consisting initially of two or
three nodes, by Stentor and Unitel; and a $16 million fund,
which must be spent by March 31,1995, to stimulate the
development of high speed network applications and services.
CANARIE Inc. will also look at a number of policy issues.
These include the tariffs that will be charged for network
use; eligibility criteria for using the network (including a
commercial use policy); relationship to the telecom carriers;
applications development directions; and terms of funding.
FreeNet developers across Canada should engage CANARIE Inc.
in a serious discussion regarding direct and subsidized
access to the Internat and to the network of FreeNets.
NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT OF COMMUNITY NETWORKS: ALTERNATIVES FOR
STRUCTURE Garth Graham, Community Access Network Information
Services Garth Graham's paper has been put up on the
conference log (Conference Paper no. 6). Garth stated that
one of his agendas for the conference was the emergence of
some kind of a national organization that would promote the
development of FreeNets, and support the growth of community
telecomputing networks in Canada. He referred to the
following quotation from the article "Domesticating
Cyberspace" (Scientific American, August 1993) "The Internet
is a wonderful sociological experiment. The question is can
it be scaled up to an industrial strength network and still
retain its flavour?" The objectives of such a national
organization could include: increase the number of networks
for community development; link FreeNet organizations; create
a network culture and educate for computer mediated
communications; support the right to learn and to know; and
to create global economic opportunities for all Canadians.
Its tasks could include: acting as a clearinghouse for
information, research and evaluation; harmonizing the
interests of FreeNets with CA*net, CANARIE and the
telecommunications carriers; dealing with other national
organizations and the federal government; and representing
the public interest with respect to community computing at
telecom policy fora, to influence the evolution of policy and
the regulatory environment in a direction which will support
community computing and widespread access to this new
communications medium. Garth discussed four types of models
for a national network: Each One Teach One (replication); a
Central National Organization (like the NPTN in the U.S.); a
Council of Regional Networks (like the regional components of
CA*net); and a Community of Networked Communities, along the
lines of the Internet model. The last model, with its
decentralized organization structure, equality of partners,
horizontal links, no hierarchies and no owners, is his
preferred one. He also proposed a variety of possible names
for the national organization including: National Association
for Community Networking (NACN); Canadian Public
Telecomputing Network (CPTN); Canadian Alliance for Community
Network Access (CACNA); and the Canadian Council for Communet
Practices (CCCP). His preferred one is CYBERBIA. SUMMARY In
addition to expediting the development of more FreeNets,
which serve as the foundation for everything else, the
Canadian FreeNet community should start discussing a number
of issues which go beyond local ones and will affect the
environment in which community networks develop in Canada.
These include: whether a national organization is needed to
represent the interests of FreeNets, and if so what model is
most appropriate; direct access by FreeNets to the Internet,
via a national backbone like CA*NET, and the terms and
conditions of such access; and the question of "commercial
use" by the small business community. Let the debate begin!