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Principals 

Focus on Infrastructure, especially use and application of high speed broadband, which is the next essential utility, as vital to economic growth as clean water, highways and electricity. As the Internet of Things is upon our doorstep, it connects your computer, smart phone and other smart devices to billions of devices and users around the world, creating a digital overlay to our physical world that is revolutionizing how we work, play, live, educate and entertain ourselves, govern our citizens and relate to the world. It must however be accessible and affordable for all our citizens to use and benefit from. Robust and affordable broadband and excellent logistics capabilities are key attractors of FDI (investors) and talent to communities.

Broadband and Information Technology


Canadian Intelligent Communities have been successful at in attracting investment in broadband networks from a mix of private-sector, Federal and Provincial sources as well as from within their own budgets. In 2012, the last year for which statistics are available, residential broadband availability in Canada was 97% on a national level, 100% in urban areas and 85% in rural ones. The average reported by the Canadian Intelligent Communities was 98% for both urban and rural communities. Forty-seven percent of the Intelligent Communities reported offering 100% residential availability.

According to the CRTC, average broadband adoption in Canada was 77% in 2012. Average adoption across the Intelligent Communities reporting in 2015 was 85%. The CRTC also reported that, as of 2012, only 35% of Canadian households had access to broadband speeds of 100 Mbps or greater. By contrast, 93% of the Intelligent Communities provided speeds in excess of 100 Mbps, and 60% offered speeds in the gigabit range. The broadband offerings in Canadian Intelligent Communities are also cost-effective. Of the communities submitting data, 75% have an average cost per megabit per month of $2 or less.

Impacts on the Community’s Competitiveness
The report provides descriptions of the strategies and programs through which Canada’s Intelligent Communities create and deploy broadband assets. Communities covered include:

  • Hamilton, Ontario

  • Montreal, Quebec

  • Moncton, New Brunswick

  • Stratford, Ontario

  • Sarnia-Lambton County, Ontario

  • Sherbrooke, Quebec

  • Toronto, Ontario

  • Winnipeg, Manitoba

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