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Outlook> 2007
> November
Broadband guarantee for all
EIGHT further broadband providers have been approved under the $163 million Australian Broadband Guarantee.
"The Australia Broadband Guarantee is a safety net for Australians who
cannot receive an affordable metro-comparable broadband service,"
Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts, Helen
Coonan, said on announcing the approvals.
"A subsidy of up to $2750 is available under the Australian Broadband
Guarantee for each premises that cannot currently access a
metro-comparable broadband service.
"There are now 14 applicants for registration under the Australian
Broadband Guarantee that have been approved to participate in the
programme. These providers are committed to offering affordable
broadband to households, small businesses and Indigenous Community
Councils right around the country," Senator Coonan said.
Seven applicants have finalised the registration process and have
entered into funding agreements with the Government. Currently
registered providers are Australian Private Networks, Elders,
HarbourIT, Internode, Westnet, Westvic Broadband and Wideband Networks.
Senator Coonan said a further seven applicants have been approved to join the programme.
"In order to be registered and to be able to offer subsidised services,
these applicants need to execute their funding deeds with the
Government. These applicants are Amcom, Broadband Wireless, McPherson
Media, Ocean Broadband, Optus, Skymesh, and Telstra. Unless and until
the funding deed has been duly executed by the provider, the providers
will not be able to participate in the programme.
"Those applicants that have already been invited to finalise their
registration under the programme and have been offered a funding deed,
have until Wednesday, October 10, 2007 to return to the Department
executed copies of the funding deed.
"The remaining applicants will shortly be invited to finalise their
registration under the programme and will be sent a funding agreement
for execution. These providers will be given one week from the date of
offer to execute and return the funding agreement to the Department,"
Senator Coonan said.
The Department will be writing to all impacted applicants separately to
advise them of the deadline that will apply to their offer of
registration. If an applicant does not execute and return the funding
deeds to the Department within the notified deadline, the offer of
registration for the programme will lapse.
Senator Coonan said after the second registration round which closed on
October 2, 2007, the Government does not intend to offer any future
registration rounds under the Australian Broadband Guarantee.
"Applicants should therefore ensure they take the necessary steps
before the notified deadlines if they wish to participate in the
programme.
"The Australian Government's Australia Connected initiative provides a
seamless plan that guarantees an affordable broadband service for 100
per cent of Australians regardless of where they live.
"This is in stark contrast to the Labor Party who will leave around 25
per cent of the Australian population stranded under its poorly costed
and light on detail proposal. Labor's fibre-to-the-node proposal is a
fantasy for millions of rural and regional Australians that live more
than 1.5 kilometres from a node.
"This proves the point that Labor will turn regional and rural
Australia into a telecommunications backwater with no targeted
government assistance for future telecommunications upgrades .
"The Australian Government has protected the $2 billion principal of
the Communications Fund so that only the interest earned from the
fund's investments - up to $400 million every three years - can be
spent.
"This legislation ensures that the Communications Fund, which the Labor
Party has committed to drain, will continue to support areas that need
ongoing targeted government assistance - that is rural and regional
areas where commercial solutions are not always viable," Senator Coonan
said.
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