The Government must carefully assess the impact that the proposed broadband
levy may have on people on low incomes, warned the head of Ofcom’s
Communications Consumer Panel (CCP).
Anna Bradley said
the Panel had
already heard rumblings of discontent from consumers about the proposed charge
and believed that, to avoid paying, some people may disconnect their landline
phone.
Speaking at the
Westminster
Media Forum yesterday, Ms Bradley voiced her concerns about how well the
levy had been thought out. She told Computeractive that: “We haven’t seen the
Government’s assessment of this yet and want to examine it to understand how it
reaches its figures.
"It may be the only way to raise the funds but there could be other means, so
it has to be carefully investigated; especially with the current economic
problems. Some people may be badly affected by such a charge; even though it is
a small amount.”
The charge Ms Bradley was talking about was proposed in last month’s
Digital
Britain report headed by Stephen Carter. In the report
Lord
Carter suggested a £6 per year ‘tax’ on the phone lines to people’s homes.
The aim is to start a fund that would help pay for the infrastructure
necessary to deliver
next-generation
broadband to areas of the country internet service providers (ISPs) feel are
commercially unviable.
The report said it could raise about £150- £175m per year, for the
Independent Next Generation Fund. This will be administered by
Ofcom,
the telecommunications regulator and operators could bid for to roll out
super-fast broadband - with speeds of up to 100Mbits/sec.
Ms Bradley said that the CCP would be looking carefully at the proposal over
the coming months.
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