Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Advocacy Group Calls On Ottawa To Legislate Access To Communication Services

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Mar, 2015 11:25 AM

    OTTAWA — A consumer advocacy group says communications services are so essential to Canadians, some people are willing to give up on food and health care purchases to make sure they stay connected.

    And because cellphone, Internet and other services have become a vital part of everyday life, the Public Interest Advocacy Centre is calling on the federal government to make access to affordable communications the law of the land.

    In a report released Monday, the group recommends Ottawa adopt an enforceable, universal service obligation, incorporated into legislation including the Telecommunications Act.

    The report notes average monthly communications expenses in Canada range from just over $100 to $212.

    And for many low-income Canadians, those costs have forced them to rack up substantial debts to maintain service, with some people choosing to forego essentials such as food to pay their phone, cable and Internet bills.

    Communications expenses ate up an average of 7.67 per cent of the monthly income of low-income households, with smaller families of between one to four people spending proportionately more.

    Despite the costs, many consumers told the group they were reluctant to cancel their communications services, even under tight household budgets.

    "Those who were not willing to further reduce or cancel their communications services said that money would have to come from other expenses, such as occasional cinema movie trips for children, holiday and Christmas gifts, smoking, and any personal spending for the adults," said the report, entitled No Consumer Left Behind: A Canadian Affordability Framework for Communications Services in a Digital Age.

    "Some consumers were even willing to cut other basic expenses, including food, clothing and health care, rather than cancel their communications services."

    The report also recommended that the government introduce affordability guidelines, with average communications costs ranging from four to six per cent of a household’s income.

    Affordability, however, is subjective and depends on an individual or household's ability to control their expenses, said the report's authors, who gathered their findings from focus groups, regulators and academic researchers.

    Participants were asked to rank the importance of each communication service.

    Telephone service, whether corded or wireless, was ranked almost unanimously as the most important.

    "Although this was partly because mobile phones especially allowed consumers to carry out a variety of activities, it was above all because telephones kept consumers in contact with the rest of society — family and friends, but also doctors, social workers, employers, clients and service providers," said the report.

    Most people who had home Internet service also said they would be extremely reluctant to cancel the service, with many saying they use the Internet to carry out many day-to-day activities such as banking and searching for information.

    Television service was considered essential by some low-income groups, including consumers who were less mobile.

    The report also recommends that the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission provide the public with annual research reports on the affordability of all major communications services to Canadians.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Slumping Oil Prices Cast Shadow On World Heavy Oil Congress In Edmonton

    Slumping Oil Prices Cast Shadow On World Heavy Oil Congress In Edmonton
    Organizers expect 20 per cent fewer people to attend the three-day international conference that has the theme: Producing More With Less.

    Slumping Oil Prices Cast Shadow On World Heavy Oil Congress In Edmonton

    Feds Spend $4.3 Million On Medicinal Pot For Vets, 10 Times More Than Year Before

    Feds Spend $4.3 Million On Medicinal Pot For Vets, 10 Times More Than Year Before
    OTTAWA — The cost of providing medical marijuana to the country's injured soldiers under a Veterans Affairs program jumped to more than $4.3 million this fiscal year, an increase of 10 times what was spent last year.

    Feds Spend $4.3 Million On Medicinal Pot For Vets, 10 Times More Than Year Before

    One Dead, Two Injured After Collision Involving CP Train Near Kamloops

    One Dead, Two Injured After Collision Involving CP Train Near Kamloops
    Eagle Valley Rescue Society Captain John Moore says the incident happened around 9:45 p.m. Saturday in Malakwa, east of Kamloops, B.C.

    One Dead, Two Injured After Collision Involving CP Train Near Kamloops

    More US Production Helps BC Film Business Bounce Back To Blockbuster Level

    More US Production Helps BC Film Business Bounce Back To Blockbuster Level
    More than 30 feature projects in B.C. in 2012-2013 were exclusively visual effects work, including "Iron Man 3" and "Edge of Tomorrow," while visual effects for "The Host" and "Hunger Games: Catching Fire" contributed to Quebec production spending.

    More US Production Helps BC Film Business Bounce Back To Blockbuster Level

    RCMP Say 20-Year-Old Man Shot At US-Canada Border Wanted For Murder Of Alberta Teen

    RCMP Say 20-Year-Old Man Shot At US-Canada Border Wanted For Murder Of Alberta Teen
    Mounties say they were in the process of obtaining a first-degree murder warrant for 20-year-old Jamison Childress when he was killed by a U.S. Border Patrol agent near the Sumas, Washington, crossing.

    RCMP Say 20-Year-Old Man Shot At US-Canada Border Wanted For Murder Of Alberta Teen

    One Person Arrested In Montreal Student-Organized Anti-Austerity Demonstration

    One Person Arrested In Montreal Student-Organized Anti-Austerity Demonstration
    MONTREAL — Several thousand angry protesters marched in downtown Montreal on Saturday to denounce the provincial government's austerity measures.

    One Person Arrested In Montreal Student-Organized Anti-Austerity Demonstration