Clare
CURRAN
ICT Spokesperson
31July 2014 MEDIA STATEMENT
Slow, sluggish, not sweet at all
Rural communities, frustrated by slow and unstable broadband, have been delivered a two fingered salute by Steven
‘Everything’s Sweet ’Joyce, Labour’s ICT spokesperson Clare Curran says.
“Mr Joyce deliberately obfuscated and refused to answer questions on the actual connection numbers to both rural and
broadband schemes in Parliament today in an attempt to cover up the National Government’s sluggish progress on both
schemes.
“Steven Joyce needs to front up rather than playing cagey at question time. Not doing so only increases suspicions the
numbers might be embarrassing.
“A report released last week for the Commerce Commission by True Net showed that the speed of rural copper broadband had
declined in the last two years. Communities across New Zealand are becoming increasingly frustrated and unable to
properly function with low broadband speeds and lack of availability of affordable broadband.
“While Mr Joyce couldn’t provide a percentage figure for the numbers connected to the taxpayer-funded rural fibre
broadband scheme, a report by the Auditor General in May raised concerns about that rollout.
“The Government has serious questions to answer about why it can’t – or won’t - provide accurate figures on take-up and
what the state of rural connectivity actually is.
“There are rural businesses struggling to make a living, children who need to do their homework but can’t connect, and
families unable to access internet television and take advantage of the opportunities offered to their urban cousins.
“After six years of a National Government more than one in five New Zealanders still don’t have regular access to the
internet and 62,000 households with school-aged children don’t have access to the internet at home.
“While National is overseeing a slow crawl to an ultrafast highway the digital divide in both urban and rural New
Zealand is increasing,” Clare Curran says.