Stephen Timms (East Ham) (Lab) I beg to move, That this House has
considered the matter of tackling the digital divide. I am
delighted to be serving under your chairmanship this afternoon, Ms
Ali. It strikes me, and I am pleased to see, that with you, me and
the Minister, we have strong east London representation in the
Chamber today. I am also pleased that the Work and Pensions
Committee is strongly represented in the debate. I think there is a
significant crossover...Request free
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(East Ham) (Lab)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the matter of tackling the digital
divide.
I am delighted to be serving under your chairmanship this
afternoon, Ms Ali. It strikes me, and I am pleased to see, that
with you, me and the Minister, we have strong east London
representation in the Chamber today. I am also pleased that the
Work and Pensions Committee is strongly represented in the
debate. I think there is a significant crossover between the
digital divide and the concerns the Committee has been engaged
with.
Let me begin with a tribute to the hon. Member for North Devon
(), who is chair of the
all-party parliamentary group for broadband and digital
communication—I am the vice-chair of that group. Before her
recent well-deserved promotion, she was the sponsor—the
initiator—of this debate. She is not able to lead on it, given
her current position, but I am pleased to have the opportunity to
do so as a rather poor substitute.
As we all know, there has been dramatic progress in getting
people online since March of last year. Lloyds Bank’s UK consumer
digital index, published in May, reported:
“In the last 12 months, 1.5 million more people have started
using the Internet, resulting in 95% now being online… We have
made five years’ worth of progress in one”.
It has been a pretty dramatic change. The report makes the point
that it is
“well evidenced that people using digital tools and services have
a real advantage”.
It also points out that digital skills have moved from being an
advantage to being a necessity during the pandemic.
The fact that so many have come newly online is an opportunity
for us to build on. But 2.6 million people still are not online.
Ofcom reported in July that 2 million households struggle with
the cost of broadband or smartphone services, with some staying
offline as a result of those cost barriers. Ten million people
also lack basic digital skills.
I am sorry to say that the Government’s digital inclusion
strategy has not been updated since 2014. It is high time that it
was. The topic has not had the priority in Government that I hope
it will have in the period ahead. I warmly welcome the Minister
to her post, which she took up relatively recently. I hope that
in winding up the debate she will be able to hold out the
prospect of new priority being given to digital inclusion and of
policies enabling real progress on it in the period ahead.
The Good Things Foundation focuses its impressive range of
programmes on the digital divide. Its document “A blueprint to
fix the digital divide”, published in September, identifies three
requirements. No.1 is digital skills, No. 2 is community support
and No. 3 is affordable internet, and I will use those three
headings in my remarks.
First, on digital skills, progress is very important for
levelling up. The Lloyds Bank report pointed out that people
using digital services are
“more likely to build their savings reserves, find new ways to
save money and can more easily find and access new information,
plus manage their well-being”.
We might add that they can also more readily look for a job,
apply for universal credit and manage their universal credit
account online.
There is a real levelling-up challenge here. Whereas, according
to Ofcom, fewer than 21% of people in London are limited internet
users, that proportion is almost twice as high—38%—in the
north-east, the region represented by my hon. Friend the Member
for Newcastle upon Tyne Central (), who is the shadow Front Bencher for this
afternoon’s debate. The other nations and regions fall between
those two figures, and within regions levels of engagement are
much lower among benefit claimants than among other people. I
hope that digital inclusion and the development of digital skills
will be supported by the UK shared prosperity fund, and that the
Government will support local initiatives to tackle the problem,
such as Andy Street’s digital catch-up programme in the west
midlands to help those who cannot use the internet to learn
digital skills, and Andy Burnham’s ambition for Greater
Manchester, which is to help all people who are 25 and under,
over 75 or disabled to get online.
The Government’s entitlement for people to get full funding for
essential digital skills qualifications is welcome, but we need
to go further. Level 1 qualifications are not meeting the needs
of local employers, while those who stand to gain the most are
least likely to engage if they do not first get informal,
community-based help. Age is the biggest determinant, with older
people less likely to have digital skills. Age UK reports that in
the first quarter of this calendar year 40% of over-75s and 12%
of 65 to 74-year-olds had not used the internet in the previous
three months. However, there is also a big group of younger
people who need help. Ofcom’s 2021 technology tracker research
found that among school-aged children—those aged between four and
18—eight in 10 had access to an appropriate device at home all of
the time, enabling them to connect to the internet for online
schoolwork or learning as needed. Of the remainder, 13% had
access some of the time, but 2% rarely had access and 2% never
had access, meaning that a significant group of school-age
children are fully excluded.
Over a fifth of the respondents to a survey quoted in a Vodafone
report on the UK’s digital divide last month did not have the
software in their household to complete their work, education or
leisure pursuits. We also need to reflect on the digital skills
that more and more people in work are going to have to acquire,
and the Government’s lifetime skills guarantee needs to address
that issue directly. techUK has highlighted the gap between, on
the one hand, the upsurge in demand for digitally skilled workers
in areas such as coding and, on the other, the limited
opportunities to retrain in those fields, with a need for
immediate action to close that growing digital skills gap. By
2030, it is estimated that nine out of 10 workers are going to
need to learn new skills to do their job, at a cost of well over
£1 billion a year.
That brings us to the second area, community support. Helen
Milner, the chief executive of the Good Things Foundation, has
called for support to develop
“a national network of at least 10,000 trusted places where
people can get community help with digital inclusion—reaching
into villages, towns and cities, and supporting COVID-19
recovery.”
A very good example of such a place is Skills Enterprise, a
charity based in Bonny Downs Baptist Church in my constituency
and founded in 2006 by the energetic social entrepreneur Malathy
Muthu. It is a small but very effective training provider, which
quickly reorganised for the pandemic to stop people who were
already digitally excluded being further isolated. The Good
Things Foundation helped by providing devices that Skills
Enterprise could distribute through its DevicesDotNow partnership
with FutureDotNow, which raised over £1.5 million nationally to
supply devices and data. Skills Enterprise used those devices to
ensure that people who would not otherwise have been able to get
online could do so during the pandemic.
The number of service users Skills Enterprise supported increased
by 50% during the pandemic, and it is now supporting 160 people.
I presented certificates to a number of them on a visit last
month. It has helped people who were setting up businesses, who
were home-schooling, or who were simply having to
self-isolate—showing them how to download and use things such as
Zoom. Skills Enterprise has helped people with online shopping
and banking, and it has helped a large number of people to apply
for universal credit, as applications became online-only during
the pandemic. It found that virtual form-filling sessions
typically lasted around three hours over the telephone for
applicants who were not digitally confident and who needed to be
talked through the process of applying for universal credit. I am
pleased to say that Skills Enterprise has worked with Jobcentre
Plus as well. Two people were able to save £300 a year after
Skills Enterprise helped them to switch energy providers online,
and 23 people it has worked with have found jobs during the
pandemic thanks to the acquisition of new digital skills.
Skills Enterprise is an example of exactly the kind of place that
the Good Things Foundation rightly says we need across the
country. It is having a positive local impact, but there are not
enough centres like that around. Funding from central Government
is needed urgently to deploy digital champions around the country
and to support grassroots organisations to address the
divide.
The third area is affordable internet. The scaling back of the
Government’s ambitions for connectivity has been a big
disappointment. The Government started with a target of 100%
fibre by 2025. That was downgraded to 100% gigabit by 2025, and
then down again to 85% gigabit by 2025. We are now falling
further behind the rest of Europe, and we really should be doing
better. Some £5 billion has been provided, but I understand that
only a fraction of that will now be invested by 2025; the rest
will not be invested until later.
Openreach has estimated that a nationwide full-fibre deployment
could add £59 billion to the UK economy by 2025. With growth so
elusive in the economy and the Chancellor forecasting that it
will be down to 1.3% by the end of his forecast period, that sort
of growth is a prize that we cannot afford to forgo.
The Government’s shared rural network scheme aims to provide 4G
coverage to 95% of the UK by 2025. I think Vodafone has announced
coverage of two Welsh villages under the scheme, but I do not
know of any other announcements on increasing coverage that have
been made by UK mobile operators as part of this initiative. Will
the Minister update us on its progress and on whether there are
prospects for more such projects in the near future?
The universal service obligation, launched by the Government in
March, which I welcome, allows rural households to demand
connectivity from BT, but some of that connectivity might have a
very high price indeed, with reports of 60,000 households being
charged up to £100,000 each in order to gain the access being
provided. Will the Minister give us some reassurance that the
access that the USO ensures will be affordable, and will she give
an indication of the extent to which the USO has been effective
in extending access in the first six months or so of its
operation? I commend the work of the Broadband Stakeholder Group,
which has set out a range of ideas for steps that the Government
can take to increase access in the hardest-to-reach areas, and I
hope Ministers will take those ideas forward.
The price to users is a major issue. Households with the lowest
incomes spend nearly four times more as a proportion of their
disposable income on fixed broadband than the average. Ofcom
reports that at least 100,000 households, and possibly many more,
are unlikely to gain internet access in the next year because of
the price they would have to pay to get it. Ofcom research also
found that 4% of families with school-age children relied solely
on mobile devices during the pandemic.
I welcome the efforts of telcos and others with innovative
partnerships and new social tariffs. TalkTalk’s partnership with
the Department for Work and Pensions provides eligible jobseekers
with an uncapped broadband service for six months to help them
search for jobs, with the DWP paying the fixed cost of the
connection and TalkTalk offering the service on a not-for-profit
basis. I welcome that imaginative approach and the partnership
that has been established.
Vodafone has a buy one, give one scheme in partnership with the
Trussell Trust, which I also welcome. BT, Community Fibre,
Hyperoptic, KCOM, Virgin Media and VOXI each offer at least one
targeted tariff with unlimited internet access, priced with
varying degrees of affordability. Some are priced at £10 per
month, which is very good, and some at rather more than that. Is
the Minister keeping under consideration the possibility of
imposing a requirement for social tariffs on all providers?
There is clearly a great deal more to be done on this front.
After the pandemic, there can be little dispute about the central
place of digital inclusion in any programme for levelling up. The
pandemic has rapidly accelerated take-up, but it has also
deepened the disadvantage experienced by those who do not yet
have digital access. I hope that the Minister will be able to
reassure the House that the Government recognise the crucial
importance of this issue and that she will prioritise making
progress on it in the spending review period ahead.
13:47:00
(North Devon) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Ali. I
thank the right hon. Member for East Ham () for his kind words and for
standing in to take over this debate. As the original sponsor and
the chair of the APPG on broadband and digital communication, I
am delighted to speak in the debate.
I also speak as the MP for North Devon, a part of the country
where our broadband speed lags behind not just the rest of the
country but the rest of the south-west. That is why I have
committed myself to the APPG to see what more can be done to roll
out better broadband to north Devon and beyond. While I warmly
welcome last week’s announcement that more rural properties will
be reached through Project Gigabit, it is still over two and a
half years away.
Gigabit broadband is available to 28.7% of the population in the
UK as a whole, but to just 20.3% in North Devon. Superfast
broadband across the UK is at 95% coverage, whereas in North
Devon we are at just 86.7%. Our average download speed is just
42.1 megabits per second, compared with a south-west average of
64.8 megabits per second and a UK average of 72.9 megabits per
second. Some 3.1% of rural areas are unable to receive decent
broadband, compared to 0.4% in the UK and 0.6% in the south-west,
and 6.3% of my constituents are unable to receive 10 megabits per
second. After Brexit, broadband was the No. 1 issue on the
doorstep in the election campaign of December 2019. With those
figures, it is no wonder.
The challenge of the digital divide, when it is as extreme as it
is now in rural parts of the UK, such as my constituency, is that
people have no idea what they have, could have or should have.
After all, what does gigabit capable mean? If people have had
under 10 megabits per second, they find superfast broadband
exciting—do they need to go faster? They do not know what they
are missing out on because they have no way of accessing it.
Smaller companies, such as Jurassic Fibre, have installed
gigabit-capable fibre, but take-up has not been high, as lack of
understanding, awareness, cost and the inconvenience of changing
service provider—these are not wholesalers—is holding back our
speeding up.
I want to put on record my thanks to Openreach for connecting up
Tawstock primary school and Umberleigh primary school during the
pandemic, but how do we still have schools that are unable to
access the web? Children as young as six have explained to me how
lessons are interrupted with a “circle of doom”. Is it any wonder
that local employers complain of a skills gap? How are students
going to learn digital skills with the circle of doom as their
learning companion?
Given how far behind we are in connectivity, parents are often
also in no position to assist with technical challenges. Our
schools, parents and students have all done a fantastic job
getting through the pandemic despite the connectivity challenges
they have faced, but the situation has gone on for far too long.
Parish councillors—many of mine doing a sterling job now in their
80s—may not be best placed to decide on the right broadband
solution, as they are being asked to. We now see some villages
with multiple operators putting up poles and promoting their
services, while others languish with nothing.
It is not just our broadband speeds that needs accelerating, but
the roll-out. I thank Openreach for tackling the Lynton and
Lynmouth rural build project, which has generated dramatic photos
of the fibre passing down the funicular railway; but that project
came to fruition due to a chance meeting between me and the chief
executive. While I am grateful for that, what would have happened
without it?
I recognise that Connecting Devon and Somerset is doing its very
best in difficult circumstances to connect up North Devon, but it
too needs speeding up. The approach of connecting up one or two
remote properties at a time does not seem joined up or a good use
of vital engineers or taxpayers’ money. This week, it took my
intervention to prevent the Building Digital UK programme from
over-fibring in one village that Openreach has already connected
up as a commercial build. It keeps putting up additional poles in
beautiful North Devon, rather than using existing assets, which
is creating so much extra work. I hope that more can be done to
effectively manage the programme; with so much still to connect,
having some places connected by multiple providers does not seem
a good use of taxpayers’ money.
I urge the Minister to rethink what more can be done to help
rural constituencies such as mine to join the digital revolution
before we move into yet another phase, with landlines potentially
to be switched off, when we have no mobile service either. If I
move my head during a call at home, I lose my connection, on both
wi-fi and mobile calls. I say to the Minister, please do not turn
my landline off. What will I do if there is ever an
emergency?
I am not on commission with Openreach—if CityFibre wants to
rebrand as RuralFibre, I am happy to welcome it instead—but we
need one wholesale company to come and connect the whole of
Devon, rural or not, commercially viable or not. We are falling
behind not only the rest of the UK, but the rest of the world. To
my mind, hard-to-reach, remote rural constituencies such as mine
need better digital connectivity than more well-connected urban
areas.
Across the south-west, connectivity is poor in terms of both
transport and digital infrastructure. In Cornwall and Devon, the
number of jobs that are reachable within 60 minutes by car is two
times lower than the UK median, and the number of jobs that are
reachable within 90 minutes is five times lower than the median.
When we talk about levelling up in North Devon, it is primarily
digital infrastructure that we seek. We have been left behind for
too long with poor transport infrastructure, and our geography
means we will never get any closer to the nearest city, but the
technology is available to connect us digitally. I hope the new
Secretary of State will bring the drive she has shown in
addressing other inequalities in our society to bridging the
clear rural digital divide.
13:53:00
(Orkney and Shetland)
(LD)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Ali. I
congratulate the right hon. Member for East Ham () and the hon. Member for
North Devon () on securing this time for
what is, for my constituents, an important debate.
We have had an interesting contrast in two different definitions
of what constitutes the digital divide. They are both very
legitimate cases but, with absolutely no disrespect to the right
hon. Member for East Ham and in no way wishing to belittle the
very important issues he identified, I would love to have a lot
of those issues in my constituency. The problems of access to
software and so on are only really problems if we have the
necessary hardware. Unfortunately, I am afraid that the
experience of my constituency is rather closer to that of the
hon. Member for North Devon and her constituents than to
the—apparently very well-represented—east end of London.
To explain the scale of what we are talking about, in Orkney we
have 65.93% superfast coverage—that is 30 megabits—and 1.48% full
fibre. In Shetland, the comparable figures are 75.26% and 1.5%,
and for Scotland as a whole they are 94.8% and 28.01%. When we
talk about digital divides, I do not think there is a better
illustration of the nature and extent of that divide than in
these figures for the Northern Isles.
I do not think my constituents have ever been unreasonable on
this. We always knew that there would be issues, given our
geography, but it has now got to the point where it was revealed
today, in The Press and Journal, that the Scottish Government’s
Reaching 100% target is being put back to the end of 2026 and
into 2027 for completion. The target was set in 2017, and it was
originally to be completed by 2021. That allows us—or would allow
us, were it ever to be completed—to catch up and to get what
other people already have. That means that it will have been a
full 10 years before we get that level of connectivity.
I will say two things about this news. First, I do not think that
it demonstrates a great deal of respect for the communities I
represent, or those around the highlands and islands, for this to
come into the public domain because a newspaper has put in a
freedom of information request to get that data. The reason for
the delay should be something that is open and transparently
disclosed by Government Ministers, but when asked by The Press
and Journal, a Scottish Government spokesperson refused to
comment. We do not even know why we are running up against this
extension to an already over-extended deadline.
However, I must also say—this touches on something that the right
hon. Member for East Ham said—that our experience regarding the
USO has been less than fruitful. For a connection under the USO,
my constituents are quoted exactly the sort of figures that the
right hon. Member spoke of: tens of thousands of pounds. There
are ways in which properties can pool together and share that
burden, but when we spoke about the creation of a “universal
service”, I do not think anybody imagined that it would be open
only to people with tens of thousands of pounds for something
that people in urban conurbations take for granted.
My frustration is that in Scotland, we have two schemes running:
the universal service obligation and the Reaching 100% scheme.
Nobody knows whether they should take the bird in the hand that
is the universal service, which would guarantee them 10 megabits,
or wait for the bird in the bush that Reaching 100% may be,
whenever we reach the Reaching 100% target, which would give 30
megabits. To be quite honest, I do not really care which route
people take.
We have two Governments in Scotland both spending taxpayers’
money, and the two schemes surely could be made to work better
than this. There surely is no reason why they should be set up
effectively in competition. Surely, for the benefit of the people
who are paying the taxes and requiring the service, it ought to
be possible to do something with one scheme that would actually
deliver. At the end of the day, I do not care which flag is on
the box that eventually arrives; all we care about is that we
have meaningful connectivity.
In July of this year, we had encouraging news about the shared
rural network and were pleased to see progress, but it has all
been very quiet since then. The shared rural network and the
availability of mobile phone connectivity are major frustrations
of constituents in the communities that I represent, and it is
something on which we would like to see faster progress. We were
pleased to see the progress. However, when things are going well,
Governments are always very quick to have announcements, press
conferences and photo opportunities; when things go quiet, being
the nasty, cynical, suspicious person I am, I am inclined to
wonder whether there might be problems somewhere. An update from
the Minister on the shared rural network would be most
welcome.
14:01:00
(West Bromwich West)
(Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Ali. This
is my first Westminster Hall debate since I was elected, so it is
a pleasure to be here to talk about this important issue.
We have seen from the contributions so far that this is a really
wide-ranging issue that has many impacts. We see that in our
communities. I do not share many of the experiences of the right
hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland (Mr Carmichael) or my hon.
Friend the Member for North Devon (), but I sympathise a lot
with what they say.
I have a few points to press with my hon. Friend the Minister,
particularly on how we build this digital infrastructure. We saw
the target for premises being fitted for fibre by 2025 reduced
from 100% to 85%. It is vital that we hit that, and as part of
that we must ensure that we get the processes right, particularly
by ensuring that procurement deadlines are met by the Department
for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport. There have been delays in
some of the procurement processes and, having spoken to
officials, I know that the Department is working on them.
However, it is important that we streamline those processes.
I have been heartened by the importance the Minister’s Department
is placing on ensuring that the delivery, which will be really
important as we build this digital infrastructure, actually
happens. From a process point of view, it is important that we
hit those benchmarks. I know that the Department has said it is
confident that it can hit that target. It is good to see that
confidence, but we need to see it translate through.
I think we can all agree that the other issue the Minister and
her Department need to address is the reform of access issues.
Particularly when it comes to construction and installation,
access issues have been really prominent. Whether that reform
relates to things such as wayleave or to broader access
issues—for example, access to residential blocks, working with
housing providers to ensure that no one is left behind and we can
truly roll out this new network—it is going to be vital. We must
ensure that everyone can see the benefits of the new network.
These are real operational issues; they are not particularly
controversial. It is clear that we all have an aim, which is to
see the roll-out happen. We just have to ensure that,
operationally, it can. It is really important, therefore, that we
solve the procedural anomalies to ensure that we can get the
systems fitted. Obviously, I welcome the overall £5 billion that
was provided for this. I know that £1.2 billion has been
identified as part of the spending review so far. It is obviously
important that we follow through on that. I think the Minister
would agree that it is vital to ensure that that investment
follows through and that we see its benefits. That is going to
come down to the internal processes around procurement,
contracting and relationships with the commercial sector in terms
of delivery.
I should say that I sit on the Public Accounts Committee, and we
have looked at this issue recently. The role of, and the
relationship with, the private sector on the delivery has been an
interesting one; it has enabled this to be delivered in the way
that we wanted. Clearly, there are lessons to be learned. There
are also lessons to be learned about how we get this right more
broadly. I am not going to give it a 10 out of 10 for delivery.
There are definitely things we can learn for the other broader
public infrastructure projects that we will have to do as part of
levelling up.
I want to turn to what the digital divide actually means. The
right hon. Member for East Ham () touched on what it means
more broadly. I could not do justice to the way that he
articulated it; he talked about access to the universal credit
system, pensions, education and work—we know how important those
things are. The example that was felt most in my community,
particularly at the height of the pandemic last year, was that of
education and access to digital devices for some of the most
vulnerable young people in society. I pay tribute to Summerhill
Primary Academy in Tipton, which went above and beyond to ensure
that vulnerable young people could get devices. We know from the
research that around 105,000 devices were dispatched to
schools.
While that was a great initial response, there is clearly a
bigger issue here: people in deprived communities, a lot of the
time, do not have access to a basic digital device. As the right
hon. Member for East Ham touched on, as we progress, and as the
world of work develops and things change, it is going to become
so important that we get this right. We must enable people to
access those devices so that they can do basic things like
homework and access the important public services that they
depend on.
We heard about the skills work that has been done, particularly
in the west midlands with our Mayor, . Again, that happened because
it was identified that we had pockets of deprivation where people
did not have that skillset. It all intermingles with the
underlying social issues that we have to tackle. The digital
divide has highlighted the vulnerabilities in our society. We
must not just see the provision of infrastructure as one step; we
must look at the underlying issues that mean the infrastructure
is not there in the first place. I think that there is an
opportunity, in the work the Minister and her Department are
doing to tackle this, to examine why communities like mine have
for so long been excluded in this way.
I cannot touch on this issue in the same way that many hon.
Members have in their comments. I will say that the fibre
roll-out is a great opportunity, but the process has got to be
right. I implore the Minister to get the internal processes right
to realise that. On the digital divide more broadly, and the
vulnerabilities that it has uncovered, there has to be a holistic
approach. It is not just about the provision of devices and
broadband, important though they are; it is about the underlying
issues that this has uncovered. By addressing those, we can
ensure that we finally plug the divide that people, particularly
in my community, have had to deal with for so long.
14:08:00
(Motherwell and Wishaw)
(SNP)
It is a pleasure to serve for the first time under your
chairmanship, Ms Ali. I congratulate the right hon. Member for
East Ham () and the hon. Member for
North Devon () on securing this important
debate. The right hon. Member for East Ham made an extremely
well-informed and helpful contribution. As was mentioned by the
hon. Member for West Bromwich West (), someone does not have to be
in an outlying constituency, such as North Devon or the
constituency of the right hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland (Mr
Carmichael)—the most outlying in the United Kingdom—to realise
that there are problems. The digital divide is UK-wide.
The hon. Member for North Devon said that it is really important
that people are online. I think we have all come to that
consensus here. Several Members mentioned education, work
opportunities and actually being able to access Government
services, all of which is important. The right hon. Member for
Orkney and Shetland (Mr Carmichael) pointed out that the two
Governments in Scotland are, it would be fair to say, doing their
utmost to make sure that people across their governing areas are
covered. However, there are difficulties with geography and, as
the hon. Member for West Bromwich West said, processes.
I want to update the Minister on what the Scottish Government
have been trying to do. They are trying to eradicate digital
exclusion as best they can. They have made huge moves to get 88%
of Scotland online, but serious discrepancies remain. Access sits
at only 82% in the most deprived areas and 96% in the least
deprived. Access is at 66% for over-60s, whereas it is at 99% for
16 to 24-year-olds, so there is work to be done, and that has
been recognised. Across the UK, superfast broadband availability
averages 86% in rural areas and 97.2% in urban areas. In
Scotland, it averages 73% and 97.5% respectively. Again, there is
work to be done.
The picture for gigabit broadband is more positive in Scotland,
with 45.4% of households having such speeds compared with 37.5%
in England, 71% in Northern Ireland and 29% in Wales. However,
the rural-urban divide persists for gigabit broadband in
Scotland, too. That needs to be addressed. The Scottish
Government and Convention of Scottish Local Authorities—COSLA
—have a joint digital inclusion strategy to try to help tackle
the digital exclusion in Scotland. They are investing in 4G
notspots to ensure greater coverage and investing £463 million in
the Digital Scotland superfast broadband programme, which has
extended fibre broadband access to more than 950,000 homes and
businesses across Scotland.
The Scottish Government and COSLA are also promoting the digital
participation charter, which has been signed by 673
organisations. That is important. Each organisation has committed
to supporting their employees and people across Scotland to
develop the essential digital skills needed to do their jobs,
live their lives and use digital services with confidence. Other
Members referred to the fact that we need to educate people on
how to use digital services. It is as important as rolling out
broadband and tackle the other fibre optic issues we have been
talking about.
The digital divide may have existed before the pandemic, but it
has been exacerbated by it. That is why the Scottish Government
have invested in several digital inclusion programmes throughout
the pandemic. So far they have invested £25 million for digital
inclusion among school-ages children. More than 72,000 devices
and over 14,000 connectivity packages have been distributed to
learners across Scotland via this funding. That goes over and
above the Connecting Scotland programme, which the right hon.
Member for Orkney and Shetland mentioned. He has pulled something
out of a hat, because I have not read The Press and Journal, but
I absolutely get his point. The Scottish Government were aiming
to have everything done by the end of the year.
Mr Carmichael
I did not honestly expect that the hon. Lady would know the
details. I say to her colleagues, perhaps through herself, that
the frustration that we have felt in our communities at the
moment is from not knowing. It comes from not being told in the
first instance and then not being given the explanation. There
may well be a reasonable explanation, but not knowing it just
leaves us wondering.
I thank the right hon. Member for his intervention. I assure him
that I will try to find out, if I can. I make no guarantees or
promises, but I will try. I do not think I can say any fairer
than that.
Local authorities in Scotland also bear the responsibility for
laptop and digital device provision to students, which is hugely
important. In many cases, it is easier to do such things in
Scotland through the 32 local authorities and COSLA, because it
is more joined up. There has been investment in the Connecting
Scotland programme, which helps to provide low-income households
with digital devices and support, and the Scottish Government
have now increased funding to more than £48 million.
In less than a year, Connecting Scotland has reached 9,000 people
who are at clinically high risk, or extremely high risk, from
covid-19. That was really important, because of the sense
of isolation. As the Scottish National party’s disability
spokesperson here at Westminster, I can vouch for the importance
of helping deprived people who also suffer from extreme
loneliness and physical disabilities to feel part of the
community, even if that is done digitally. The Scottish
Government are committed to tackling the digital divide in
Scotland, and they will continue to do so.
The right hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland referred to the
R100 contracts. It is now largely a full-fibre programme,
delivering full-fibre connections on the ground while the UK
Government are still planning to do so. Will the Minister tell us
how far they are getting along? If I talk about what is being
done in Scotland, it is not because I think that everything is
better in Scotland—though often it is—but because it is useful
for other parts of the UK to learn from what we are doing and not
to have to start reinventing wheels. The R100 contract delivery
will extend beyond the end of 2021. The Scottish broadband
voucher scheme will ensure that the 100% superfast commitment is
met. The main voucher offers up £5,000 to obtain a superfast
broadband connection, and the £400 interim voucher is available
to those for whom a R100 contract bill will be delivered after
2021. Again, this work is ongoing.
The SNP is going far beyond the commitment to deliver access to
superfast broadband, and a significant proportion of connections
are being delivered as full fibre. Such technology will
future-proof our connectivity, but Scotland’s topography means
that the build is complex and will take time. We all recognise
the different geographies and topographies across the UK, but if
we are to move forward, it is really important that we get
broadband out to everyone as soon as we can.
Despite broadband investment remaining fully reserved to the UK
Government, which is where we get the two-Government approach,
the SNP Scottish Government have taken by making substantial
investments in Scotland’s digital infrastructure in order to
improve coverage. The Scottish Government are committed to
tackling the digital divide and will continue to do so. Will the
UK Government do more to match Scotland’s digital ambitions and
deliver key funding to tackle the digital divide? Will the
Minister confirm that Scotland will receive its fair share of the
£5 billion earmarked by the UK Government for investment in
gigabit-capable infrastructure in order to carry out these
ambitions? The SNP Scottish Government have chosen to focus on
delivering technology that will underpin economic growth and
connectivity for decades to come.
I have quoted several figures, but it is really important to
think of the people behind the digital divide—the people who
suffer because of it and who cannot be as ambitious as some of us
are. It sometimes seems like a first-world problem when we
complain about things such as not being able to get superfast
broadband, but it is very difficult when someone is disabled and
housebound and does not have the cash to buy digital equipment.
If the UK Government are serious about levelling up, they must
look at this issue in full, and commit to ensuring that those who
have suffered throughout, before and after the pandemic have
access to proper, good-quality broadband and digital equipment to
help them grow and prosper.
14:20:00
(Newcastle upon Tyne Central) (Lab)
It is a great pleasure to serve under your chairship, Ms Ali. I
thank my right hon. Friend the Member for East Ham () for having secured this
debate with the support of the APPG. He has long been an
exceptional champion for digital inclusion.
I welcome the Minister to her position: this is the first time we
have met on this brief, as it were. I hope that when addressing
this critical issue, she will show similar passion to that of my
right hon. Friend, and indeed the other Members who have
contributed to today’s interesting and well-reasoned debate. From
the hon. Members for North Devon () and for West Bromwich West
() and the right hon. Member
for Orkney and Shetland (Mr Carmichael), we heard what I can only
describe as damning examples of the digital divide in their
constituencies, about which they feel very strongly, and rightly
so.
The Labour party believes that technology can change lives for
the better, and it already has. Families separated by geography
are now connected online, and a world of experiences, advice and
memes are available to everybody from their smartphone. In 2020,
the pandemic placed technology firmly at the heart of our working
and social lives: last year, the average UK adult spent about a
quarter of their working life online. We are all digital citizens
now, but that is a truth that cuts two ways, given the digital
inequalities that so many face.
I start from the position that access to the internet should be a
right, not a privilege, and I ask the Minister directly to tell
us whether she believes that as well. Ensuring that access is a
right and not a privilege means providing people with the skills
and confidence to use the internet, as well as the necessary
infrastructure, and ensuring that no one is priced out of
important digital products and services. Unfortunately, digital
skills, digital confidence and digital infrastructure are exactly
what the Government have been getting wrong for the past 10
years, overturning the world-leading position they inherited from
the last Labour Government.
Let me take each in turn. On digital skills, all I need to say is
that the Government’s last digital inclusion strategy was
published in 2014. That included a target of 90% online, which
has largely been achieved. Is the Minister’s position then “job
done”? Is it okay that 10 million people still lack the basic
digital skills needed to function in today’s digital world,
according to the Good Things Foundation? Is it acceptable that
families have to choose between food and mobile data, and saw
their children left without access to education every time there
was a covid case at their school? Is it fine and dandy if small
businesses cannot compete online? Will the Minister say when we
will have a digital inclusion strategy?
A lack of digital skills can have wide-ranging implications, as
we heard during this debate. Professor Arpana Verma found that
digital inequalities have been increased by the digital
revolution, and has noted an inextricable link between health
literacy, digital literacy and financial literacy. Digital
illiteracy also leaves people excluded from employment, and
lower-income households are one of the groups most likely to face
digital exclusion. I agreed with the Scottish National party’s
spokeswoman, the hon. Member for Motherwell and Wishaw (), when she said that we
have to think about the people behind these statistics and
examples. The cost to society and individuals could not be
greater, but the Government’s investment in digital inclusion is
ad hoc and limited. Also, digital inclusion must include
businesses, who must be able to do business in digital
markets.
During the pandemic, many small businesses could survive only if
they moved online. Grainger Market in my constituency—a historic
and iconic covered market with many stallholders, none of whom
were online when lockdown started in March 2020—moved online
within three weeks, offering all kinds of produce and services to
my constituents across the city, but it did not follow from that
that they had the necessary digital skills, cyber-skills in
particular, to maintain a sustainable and secure business. Yet
the Government’s flagship Help to Grow digital scheme provides
only £8.30 for each UK small and medium-sized enterprise. That is
a missed opportunity to empower small businesses and workers to
succeed in the digital age.
My right hon. Friend the Member for East Ham mentioned the call
for greater help in the community, and closing and reducing the
opening hours of so many libraries has not helped there. Will the
Minister say whether we will have a digital strategy for small
business inclusion as well?
Digital skills and confidence are related, but are not quite the
same thing. As a chartered engineer, I have been deeply disturbed
by the way in which so many of my constituents are now fearful of
technology. They are forced to claim benefits online when they
cannot afford broadband, and required to sit on hold for hours as
an algorithm determines their future. They see their children
bullied online and their favourite footballers trolled online.
They see public figures, particularly women in the public eye,
attacked and often threatened online. They see their phone used
as an instrument of surveillance by their employers and their
employment cancelled by text message.
Ensuring digital confidence means supporting and empowering our
digital citizens. It means introducing legislation that protects
people online, but for 11 years that is exactly what successive
Tory Governments have failed to do. Even now, four years after
they finally promised legislation, we have the online safety Bill
only in draft form, and that is inadequate on so many levels.
The Nominet Digital Youth Index, published today for the first
time, highlights that nearly three in five young people in the
LGBTQ+ community have experienced hate speech online. Nearly half
of young people feel isolated, and one third of 17 to
19-year-olds say the internet has a negative impact on their
mental health, but the online safety Bill does not prioritise
action against racism, misogyny or homophobia. The draft Bill
also manages to shift—this is quite an achievement—more power to
the tech platforms, allowing them to mark their own homework
without giving their executives any legal liability. It does give
plenty of power to Ministers, but does not give the regulator the
resources or powers necessary to guard against tomorrow’s future
harms such as algorithmic control—a harm that is very much here,
but is growing is scale.
Finally, I come to digital infrastructure. As we have heard, we
have had another wasted decade. Internet access is an essential
utility but, again, many households in this country do not have
reliable broadband. The Prime Minister promised full fibre for
everyone—I hope the Minister will tell us what happened to that
promise—and then in 2019 that was downgraded to nationwide
gigabit broadband coverage by 2025. Two years on, we now have a
target of 85% gigabit broadband by 2025, but the actual plan
shows that the Government will spend only £1.2 billion of the
promised £5 billion to achieve that. No doubt the Minister will
mention the rural broadband scheme, but the number of times it
has been announced is, I think, greater than its number of
users.
We need infrastructure to be affordable. A third of adults who
are not online cite cost as a reason, according to research
carried out by Lloyds. Two million households struggle to afford
their internet bills. We have also heard that the universal
service obligation is an obligation to provide service at
whatever ridiculously high price it may be calculated at. To
deliver a high-skilled, high-wage economy, all corners of the UK
need to be able to access world-class digital infrastructure at
affordable rates. Without it, we are pricing out a significant
proportion of the population from the digital world.
As we have also heard today, charities and some businesses are
working to address data and device poverty. The Good Things
Foundation has built a national data bank to provide free mobile
data for people on low incomes who need it, working with local
community partners and mobile network operators. However, I hope
that the Minister will appreciate what I mean when I say that it
should not be up to charities to ensure digital equity, and I
think the hon. Member for West Bromwich West highlighted
that.
Labour decided, because of the lack of action from this
Government, to take matters into our own hands. After months of
consultation with a wide range of stakeholders— including
businesses, platforms, individuals, charities, citizen
organisations, trade unions and other groups—we published our
report, “Our Digital Future”, in the summer. It set out the ways
in which we can beef up digital skills, confidence and
infrastructure, and improve digital public services to ensure
digital inclusion.
Labour wants Britain to be the best place to grow up in, to work
in, to raise children in and to grow old in. We want empowered
citizens who do not merely have access to the internet as passive
consumers but who are equipped with the skills and tools to make
the most of technology, and who are protected from those who use
technology to cause harm. To achieve this aim, we support a
robust regulatory framework that protects users, and enhances
individual and national security. Labour will consider whether we
need a Minister whose portfolio is entirely focused on digital
inclusion, to ensure proper digital access and bring everyone
online. That is what closing the digital divide requires.
14:32:00
The Minister for Media, Data and Digital Infrastructure ()
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Ali. I hope
that my voice holds up today. I have done my test and thankfully
I do not have covid. However, I have a very tickly throat, so I
hope that I do not have a conference
whatever-it-was—2018?—moment. I am grateful to the right hon.
Member for East Ham () and my hon. Friend the
Member for North Devon () for securing this
incredibly important debate, and I am grateful to other hon.
Members for their useful and heartfelt contributions.
Improving digital connectivity for everybody across the UK is a
priority for our Government, for all the reasons that have been
cited. If we knew before the pandemic that digital services,
infrastructure and skills were important, our experience during
covid has really deepened that understanding, in ways that I do
not think any of us could have imagined. The moving of so much
economic activity online, as well as so much of our social lives,
and even schooling and healthcare services, in the past 18 months
to two years means that the challenges arising from any existing
digital divide have been amplified. And just as our eyes are open
to the huge opportunities presented by a more digital world, as
set out by the hon. Member for Newcastle upon Tyne Central
(), we have to be aware of the risk that people who do
not have the confidence, the capability or the tools to access
that world could be excluded from those opportunities. So, I am
very grateful to hon. Members here in Westminster Hall today for
highlighting that risk. My hon. Friend the Member for West
Bromwich West () really brought the issue to
life in his contribution; I must say it was an excellent first
contribution by him in Westminster Hall.
In my previous role, in the Cabinet Office, I looked closely at
how we could improve online Government services for the citizen
and tried to put accessibility, inclusion, trust and good
customer services at the heart of the system that we are
designing for a new Government app. A lot of work has also been
going on about how easy it is to fill out forms online and how to
streamline things on gov.uk, so I hope that reassures the right
hon. Member for East Ham that I will want to apply similar
principles to my new role as the Minister for Media, Data and
Digital Infrastructure. I want to know how our interventions are
working on the ground for people. Are we getting people the
connectivity they need? Are we equipping them with the right
digital skills? Are we creating the right environment for
companies to deliver? Are we putting resources in the right
places?
There is a lot of work to do here and we are ambitious in what we
want to achieve. But as we have discovered here today, there will
be challenges along the way, which is why debates like this one
are helpful to me as a Minister, because they give me
intelligence about what is really going on on the ground, rather
than just the official view.
On the pandemic, of course there were challenges, but the
superfast infrastructure that was already there has held up
pretty well. Huge amounts of work were done between telecom
providers and Government on social tariffs and I want to try to
build on some of that progress, because there was excellent
working between some of the providers—thousands of laptops were
provided.
In terms of isolation, when I spoke to some of the charities in
my constituency, particularly those for disabled people, I found
that they were able to innovate and introduce new ways of
connecting with the people whom they were serving with quiz
nights, meetings and different kinds of outreach which, for some
people, was a new and beneficial addition to their
life—notwithstanding all the other problems of isolation that,
obviously, the pandemic brought.
Addressing the digital divide means that we make sure that
everybody in the UK can access and use digital communication
services. That means getting the right infrastructure in place to
deliver connectivity for everybody. It means making digital
skills training available to everybody who needs it. I will set
out what we are doing in each of those areas. Some of those
issues are covered by other ministerial colleagues, so I will
take away the things that I am unable to cover in this debate. I
also assure hon. Members that meetings are taking place between
DCMS Ministers and ministerial colleagues in DFE and DWP, because
we think there is a lot of overlap here and we need to get this
policy right.
On connectivity and infrastructure, we are in the midst of the
biggest digital build in UK history in the form of Project
Gigabit, which aims for nationwide gigabit coverage. One of my
concerns in this area is whether people understand why they
should want gigabit speeds over superfast speeds—a point raised
by my hon. Friend the Member for North Devon. It is important to
say that Project Gigabit is as much about future-proofing against
the needs of tomorrow as it is about giving constituents
lightning-fast speeds today. As we start to understand and
anticipate a world where more and more applications depend on
having reliable digital infrastructure, it is important that we
have the highest quality infrastructure in place.
The best way to achieve gigabit coverage and eliminate the
digital divide is to create a competition-friendly environment
where deployment is commercially viable, and then to focus
Government funds on that 20% of the country where we think
commercial deployment is unlikely. This approach is working. In
January 2019, 6% of premises had access to gigabit-capable
networks. That figure is now 58% thanks to our thriving market of
80 providers. We think that will reach 60% by the end of this
year, but we are targeting a minimum of 85% gigabit coverage by
2025.
To address the right hon. Member for East Ham on our targets, we
have been transparent that delivering nationwide gigabit coverage
by 2025 will be challenging. There are various different issues,
including skills, where some of the commercial roll-out means
that there is a challenge in trying to incentivise providers to
want to provide for the very difficult, hard-to-reach areas. Our
manifesto explicitly acknowledged how difficult it will be, but
85% coverage would still be a huge jump on 2019, when the
coverage was 6%. That is not the limit of our ambitions and we
want to keep going so that we get as close to 100% as possible by
2025. The Prime Minister is extremely passionate about that
target and we want to make sure that he is not disappointed.
By listening to industry and working closely with Ofcom, we have
made a number of policy and regulatory changes to stimulate the
market, including instructing Ofcom to create a pro-investment,
pro-competition regulatory system for telecoms. We are
introducing a 130% super deduction on qualifying plants and
machinery investments, which means that millions more homes are
expected to receive coverage without any Government subsidy.
We want to change the law to make it easier to connect premises
and blocks of flats. We are piloting innovative new approaches to
streetworks, which we think will speed up build by 10% to 40%. We
are working with industry to set up a gigabit take-up advisory
group with the Confederation of British Industry and the
Federation of Small Businesses, so that we can increase consumer
demand for gigabit and incentivise further investment from the
private sector.
I am listening with great interest to what the Minister is
saying. She has explained a little about why the target was
downgraded from, I think, initially 100% fibre by 2025 to 85%
now. Surely it would be possible to do better if more of the
funding was available earlier, rather than much of the £5 billion
being postponed until after 2025. Could it not be brought forward
again?
It is all part of the Treasury gating process. The money is
available, but there needs to be confidence of success. We will
have to iron out some difficulties in the way that we procure
contracts, and learn some of the lessons that my hon. Friend the
Member for North Devon referred to in relation to the superfast
roll-out and other parts of the gigabit coverage. There will be a
bit of testing to see what works best before the Treasury is
confident to release the next funds. However, the funds are
available. I am happy to explore that further with the right hon.
Gentleman if he would like more details.
Since 2018, we have provided gigabit coverage to more than
600,000 rural premises, so that the same commercial and other
opportunities reliant on connectivity can be provided for those
living in the countryside as those living in towns.
On the point raised by my right hon. Friend the Member for East
Ham () about the holding factors in
rolling out superfast broadband, the Minister mentioned skills. I
understand that the skills necessary to dig up so many roles may
be limited at the moment. What is she doing to increase the
number of skilled engineers needed for the roll-out?
That is one of the issues that we are talking to the DWP about.
We are also working very closely with the likes of Openreach and
others to try and get that skills pipeline going, because it will
be critical to the success of the roll-out.
Those 600,000 rural premises are just the start. In Devon and
Somerset, 66,000 further premises now have gigabit coverage
through the gigabit-capable delivery as part of the superfast
broadband programme. I have been pressing officials on some of
the previous challenges of that programme further to discussions
that I have had in the Lobby with my hon. Friend the Member for
North Devon.
We have a number of interventions to address the part of the
build that we think the market will not cover, including
broadband vouchers. We are funding full-fibre networks at 1,084
schools that were previously stuck in the digital slow lane, and
we want to connect 6,800 public buildings by the end of the year,
including hospitals, GP surgeries and fire stations. That was
another important point raised by my hon. Friend the Member for
North Devon.
We are also bringing forward procurements to provide coverage to
as many of the remaining premises as possible. My hon. Friend the
Member for West Bromwich West raised some incredibly important
points about some of the issues that the Public Accounts
Committee looked at in relation to procurement, which are very
much on my mind. I want to make sure we get this right, but there
will be challenges.
The first procurement for Cumbria got under way last month, and
further procurements will begin shortly for areas including
Cambridgeshire, Durham, Northumberland and parts of Dorset. We
will then continue with the pipeline of procurements to cover the
rest of the UK as quickly as possible. I note the points raised
by the right hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland (Mr Carmichael)
about Scotland. I am exploring BDUK’s relationship with the
Scottish Government and what more we can do to help people in the
devolved nations. I am talking to my officials about that.
I am grateful to the Minister for giving way again. I want to
make sure I have understood the point she is making. Is she
saying that the constraint is the industry’s capacity to deliver
the infrastructure?
I think there are challenges with that; yes. As I say, it is
something that I am discussing closely with industry. There are
some questions about where we want to target resource because,
looking at the final percentages, those will be the hardest to
reach. It will require a different kind of manpower and skill,
and it will require much more resource and time. We have to
decide whether to go for the hardest-to-reach areas or to focus
resource on getting as many people covered as possible. Those are
some of the tricky choices that have to be made. I am fairly new
to this brief, so I am trying to work my way through all these
questions with officials.
If the industry comes forward with proposals with capacity to
deliver this more quickly than achieving 85% coverage by 2025—and
the funding could be brought forward, as the Minister said—would
she be open to looking at possibilities along those lines?
Yes, we certainly would. I appreciate the point that the right
hon. Gentleman is making.
Since the launch of the broadband universal service obligation,
which has been raised by a number of Members, BT has already
delivered USO connections covering more than 3,700 homes, and it
is in the process of building more than 2,500 more. Ofcom now
estimates that just 134,000 premises—or 0.4%—do not have access
to a decent broadband service and they may therefore be eligible
for a USO connection. However, to address the right hon.
Gentleman’s concerns, we know that some premises have received
very high quotes and may therefore be very hard to reach,
potentially requiring a different approach to deliver
cost-effective upgrades. That is why, in March, we published a
call for evidence on delivering improved broadband to very
hard-to-reach premises.
In addition, Ofcom announced in July that as a result of its
investigation, BT has provided assurances that it would use
Ofcom’s approach to calculating excess cost quotes. I therefore
encourage anybody who had previously been given a universal
service obligation quote to speak to BT, if they have not already
been contacted.
The progress that we are making with gigabit builds on the
earlier success of our superfast broadband programme. The final
independent evaluation of superfast by Ipsos MORI concluded that
the programme met its objectives to reduce the digital divide and
have significant local economic impact, including through the
creation of 17,000 jobs and an increase in the annual turnover of
local businesses by approximately £1.9 billion, which underlines
the importance of connectivity.
My hon. Friend the Member for North Devon mentioned the telecom
industry’s plans to look at a landline upgrade by 2025. I
appreciate the importance of landlines, particularly to older
people. I want to be clear that nobody is having their landline
taken away or removed. The way that landlines work in the UK is
changing. Providers are moving from the old public switched
telephone network to the new voice over internet protocol
technology.
The PSTN is a privately-owned telecoms network and the decision
to upgrade it was taken by the telecoms industry. What people
often miss about the issue is that the industry’s decision to
upgrade the PSTN is due to necessity, because that network is
increasingly unreliable and prone to failure, with some telecoms
companies finding it very hard to source certain replacements or
spare parts to maintain or repair connections. That makes it very
unreliable for consumers long into the future.
The VOIP technology is expected to offer consumers clearer and
better-quality phone calls, but I assure hon. Members that we are
working extensively with Ofcom, the emergency services and others
to ensure that all consumers and sectors are fully prepared for
the migration in 2025.
Will the Minister give way?
Happily.
I thank the Minister for giving way and making such efforts to
communicate with us. With regard to her comments about the public
switched telephone network, while it is true that they will not
be ripping the lines out of people’s homes, as I hope she knows
well one of the features of the PSTN is that it carries power
down the lines, which is not a feature of VOIP. People will find
that some aspects of the reliability of their telephones will
change—if there is a power outage, for example. What proportion
of people are aware that the PSTN will be switched off?
I will be looking closely at that issue. I am fairly new to my
brief, so I have not explored it in as much detail as I would
like, but I will take away the hon. Lady’s points and get back to
her. She is a telecoms engineer herself, so her expertise far
outweighs mine in that field.
We have an ambition to look at 5G signal and ensure that the
majority of the population have access to it by 2017, because
that can also help with bridging the digital divide and dealing
with some of the issues of connectivity for those who are
slightly behind on the gigabit roll-out. I am pleased that all
four network providers have now launched 5G services and that 5G
service availability has risen tenfold since December 2019; but
there is still a long way to go.
While the vast majority of investment in the roll-out is being
made by the private sector, my Department has launched the £200
million 5G testbeds and trials programme to prove that demand for
5G service is a reality. Once we have established the demand, we
need to move into the next phase, which is driving the roll-out
and adoption of 5G to level up and boost the economy across the
Union.
A number of hon. Members have raised the shared rural network,
which is incredibly important and tries to deal with the issue of
notspots. The agreement on the shared rural network will see the
Government and industry jointly invest over £1 billion to
increase 4G mobile coverage throughout the UK, to 95% geographic
coverage by the end of the programme.
The electronic communications code plays an integral part in
delivering our digital networks, and we reformed it in 2017 to
make the roll-out faster and more cost-efficient, but we
recognise that further changes need to be made. We are looking at
some reforms, which we will be bringing forward shortly.
Before I finish, I want to talk about some of the digital skills
inclusion issues that have been discussed today. DCMS works
closely with the rest of Government to ensure that all
Departments are considering the needs of digitally-excluded
people when making policy. I talked earlier about the nascent one
log-in for Government project and the funding for that. When I
was in the Cabinet Office, we made sure that included digitising
the Home Office’s births, deaths and marriages register, so that
people with a smaller footprint do not find themselves digitally
excluded as more and more services move online. I want to apply
some of the principles of the work that I did in the Cabinet
Office to my new role, particularly when it comes to digital
identity and ensuring that people are not excluded as digital
identity becomes more of an everyday part of their lives.
The pandemic has highlighted the importance of digital access and
digital capability for connecting with family and accessing vital
services online. Digital skills are required across all sectors
of the economy, but are now more important than ever. Our tech
industry is also continuing to grow and create a vast amount of
jobs, so we do not want people to be excluded from those.
I thank the Minister for giving way again. I hope that she will
not finish without addressing my question about a digital
inclusion strategy. The vast majority of her speech has been on
infrastructure but, as we know very well, skills and confidence
are going to drive the take-up of digital services and digital
inclusion.
As I said, I am working with Ministers in DWP and DFE to look at
some of those issues of digital inclusion, but I will take away
the hon. Lady’s specific point.
Over the past three years DCMS has supported the development of
seven local digital skills partnerships, in Lancashire, the heart
of the south-west, the west midlands, the south-east, Cornwall,
the Isles of Scilly and, more recently, West Yorkshire. We are
going to launch the eighth in Hull and East Yorkshire in
mid-December. Those partnerships bring together large employers,
regional academia, the local public sector and training providers
from the region to collaborate and develop digital skills
programmes that help build capability in the regions and reduce
the digital divide. That was very evident in the early stages of
the pandemic lockdown, when all seven regions worked with
multiple stakeholders to ensure that the most vulnerable in our
communities had access to the internet and were supported with
relevant digital skills training to get online.
We have also funded the fast track digital workforce fund, a £3
million digital bootcamp based in Greater Manchester and
Lancashire. The fund aims to move those in low-skilled and
low-paid jobs into better-quality digital roles that meet the
needs of the local economy.
In response to covid, and in partnership with social change
charity the Good Things Foundation, we also launched the digital
lifeline in February 2021. That is a £2.5 million fund that aims
to reduce the digital exclusion of people with learning
disabilities in particular, by providing free devices, data and
digital support to over 5,000 people with learning difficulties
who cannot afford to get online. In September, we also partnered
with industry leaders to launch the digital inclusion impact
group to tackle digital exclusion. One of the pilot programmes,
Dell donate to educate, will support children with the right
access to technology at school and at home. As I said, progress
of all of those items will require a lot of cross-Government work
with colleagues in other Departments.
Once again, I thank right hon. and hon. Members for securing the
debate, and also the all-party parliamentary group on broadband
and digital communication for its work. As everyone recognises,
improving digital connectivity for everybody across the UK is a
priority. We are working with energy to deliver fantastic digital
infrastructure across the country. We are trying to design
accessible online Government services. We are investing in
digital skills. Those are big tasks, and we will of course
encounter challenges along the way. The pandemic has made the
online world ever more integrated with the offline one, and I
hope that hon. Members will work with me to ensure that every
citizen can be taken along on this journey, so that people from
every part of our country and from all walks of life feel that
technology is ultimately an empowering force.
14:53:00
Thank you for the opportunity to say a few remarks by way of
concluding, Ms Ali. I am grateful to the Minister and to all hon.
Members who have taken part in the debate.
I particularly welcome the Minister’s offer that if the industry
proposed to extend the fibre and gigabit infrastructure at a
faster rate than is projected to meet the current target of 85%
by 2025, it would be possible for some of the £5 billion that has
been earmarked for that to be brought forward before 2025, and
hopefully to get a higher level of penetration than the current
85% target. If that is possible—and I want to pass on a message
to the industry to look at what they could achieve if additional
funding was available—I would hope that that would really help in
Orkney and Shetland, North Devon and elsewhere around the UK.
I hope as well that the Minister will be updating the digital
inclusion strategy, which we last saw in 2014. I welcome a number
of the points that she made towards the end of her speech about
that, and I particularly welcome the work that she described the
Department undertaking with the Good Things Foundation. However,
if that was all set out as a strategy, that would be encouraging
and would help achieve the goals that we have all agreed are so
important.
I am very grateful for the opportunity we have had to air the
matter of tackling the digital divide this afternoon. I hope that
we shall be able to review it regularly over the months ahead,
given its importance to the inclusion of all our
constituents.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the matter of tackling the digital
divide.
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