Community Access Program (Industry Canada)
In the mid-1990s, Canada’s
Community Access Program (CAP) program was used as a model for many member states in the
European Union (Pacific Community Networks Association, 2006).
CAP sites play an important role for many communities that do not yet have widespread local or household broadband infrastructure and connectivity services, and the program is widely utilized among communities in Northern Canada.
However, while some European nations built upon the
CAP model and incorporated it in nationally-oriented broadband strategies, in Canada “funding for
CAP in Canada was reduced, government utilization of the infrastructure was limited, and the program lagged in adjusting its mission and evaluative criteria to the changing realities of ICT in Canadian society” (Pacific Community Networks Association, 2006, p. 10; see also Smith, 2008). In March 2010, funding cuts to
CAP resulted in public outcry and (temporary) restoration of funding (Middleton, 2010, p.4).
Rather than a fund to support ongoing connectivity services,
Broadband Canada is linked to the federal government’s
Economic Action Plan, which focused on infrastructure development projects. This shift to short-term funding became more apparent in March 2010, when
CAP administrators across Canada began receiving letters advising them their funding would be terminated at the end of that month, unless their sites were located more than 25 km from a public library (Moll, 2012). The
CAP community responded by contacting MPs and the media, and the issue was raised during Question Period by members of all three opposition parties in the House of Commons.
According to Moll (2012): In a quick turn about, Industry Minister Tony Clement announced that there had been a bureaucratic misunderstanding and that the funding had never really been withdrawn. The program was good for another year but again funded through the temporary "
Connecting Rural Canadians" infrastructure program.
Federal funding for the broadband infrastructure-focused
Broadband Canada: Connecting Rural Canadians program ended on March 31, 2012. However, some governments, like the Government of Nunavut, continue to fund the program.