Speech
From Throne
Throne Speech 2001
Connecting Canadians To The Digital
Economy
January 30, 2001
In the new, knowledge economy, the path to
national prosperity and personal opportunity travels the Internet.
Building a state-of-the-art, high speed
information infrastructure is as essential to Canadian success in the 21st
century as up-to-date roads, bridges, airports and ports were to our success in
the 20th century.
Harnessing the potential of the Internet is a
global race. To the victor will go the spoils: increased opportunity, good jobs,
higher standards of living and a better quality of life.
Our government is committed to building a fast
lane for Canada on the information highway. We are committed to:
- Giving Canadians the skills and
opportunities they need to become the
most Internet-savvy people in the world;
- Making
the Government of Canada the most
connected government in the world to its citizens;
- Helping
entire communities go on-line to connect with local governments, schools,
businesses, citizens and health and social services;
- Creating
the legal and regulatory framework to make Canada a world leader in e-commerce;
- Making
Canada a natural magnet for investment, research and development;
- Using
the power of the Internet to make
Canadians more aware of their unique history, identity and culture.
Since taking office, we have followed a national
vision and strategy -- called Connecting Canadians. It is based on
building new partnerships that make things happen fast - because we
understand that speed isn't everything in the knowledge economy, it's the
only thing.
A Record of Achievement
Through SchoolNet, we were the first
nation in the world to connect all our public schools and libraries to the
Internet.
We helped set up over
6500 public Internet access centres in rural and urban communities across
Canada.
By March 31, 2001, in partnership with the
private sector, we will have
provided 250,000 computers to Canada’s public schools and libraries.
We introduced legislation to protect
personal and business information in the digital world and to recognize
electronic signatures – key steps in reassuring Canadians that they can
do business on-line with the same expectations of trust, confidence and
reliability that now exist in everyday commerce.
We supported the development of the world’s
fastest and most advanced optical Internet, CA*net3, which is
revolutionizing telecommunications technology.
We have launched a redesigned Government of
Canada web-site – the first major deliverable in achieving our commitment
to be the world’s most connected Government to its citizens by 2004.
We created a National Broadband Taskforce
to advise the Government how Canadians together can achieve the goal of making
high-speed broadband access available to Canadians in all communities by 2004.
High-speed broadband, the next generation of the Internet, will provide
the foundation for improved services such as distance learning and
tele-health and will give small
businesses access to broader markets.
2001 SFT Commitments
- The Government will work with the private
sector to achieve the goal of making broadband access widely available to
citizens, businesses, public institutions and to
all communities in Canada by 2004.T
- The Government will continue to support the
Community Access Program and SchoolNet, ensuring that Canadians, their
communities and their schools can have access to the Information Highway.
- The government will continue to support the
development of digital content for the Internet and other new media in French
and English.
- The government will continue putting its
services on-line by 2004 to better connect with citizens.
- The government will continue to modernize
federal privacy law to safeguard the personal information of Canadians and
provide better copyright protection for new ideas and knowledge.
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