Bartlett: Get hands dirty on NBN strategy

 

Winners won't just be those who get fibre first.

Former Tasmanian Premier David Bartlett has urged Australia's "patchwork" of state governments to "get politics out of the NBN", focusing instead the network's role in economic and community renewal in regional centres.

Speaking at the CeBIT conference in Sydney, Bartlett said that selling the potential of the NBN should not be left to Canberra.

"I'm not convinced a Sydney marketing or advertising company knows how to talk to the homes of Smithton or Armidale frankly on what the NBN means to them," he said.

"Running a centralised marketing campaign for the NBN won't engage homes. We have to engage them with local content and local stories.

"We've got to get our hands dirty."

Bartlett urged local community leaders such as mayors, local government general managers, and town/shire regional economic groups to create digital strategies ahead of NBN Co's arrival.

"The winners - those who get the most potential out of the NBN - will not be those [communities] who are cabled first," Bartlett said.

"The winners will be those who get prepared with a digital strategy, a broadband strategy, that underpins renewal in every aspect of their society.

"Even if the NBN doesn't arrive until 2014 now is the time for local leadership to emerge."

Bartlett said that with "everything against regional economies at the moment" - the loss of local manufacturing, a high Australian dollar, and natural disasters - that broadband offered "the brightest hope and light for renewal to occur".

He also said that local leaders could develop local "narratives" to market the NBN to communities, selling the concept beyond the mantra that it will give them "faster internet speeds".

"The NBN is so much more [than that]," he said.

"We need local leaders to emerge to tell the stories to craft the narrative, to dream much bigger dreams and articulate that there's a better place to live because broadband is on its way."

"Uninformed" debate

Bartlett also addressed some elements of the continued debate on the NBN, urging state, local and industry leaders not to allow it to get in the way of promoting the national network project.

"Of course there will continue to be - and should be - debate about a Government expenditure of this size. Governments should be accountable for those sorts of expenditure," he said.

"But let's not, in this debate... kill the goose that laid the golden egg through stupid uninformed debate about infrastructure and its rollout."

Bartlett singled out a talkback radio gaffe as a particular instance of the "terrible pathway we, as leaders in this area, must avoid the nation going down."

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Bartlett: Get hands dirty on NBN strategy
"Rossyduck wrote: as we march in lockstep to a national disaster. Not sure if you noticed but the coalition are not in power and their patchwork plan is not on the cards at the moment since ..."
By HubertCumberdale
 
 
 
Comments: 3
HubertCumberdale
May 31, 2011 9:38 PM
Wise words from Mr Bartlett unfortunately Tony Rabbitt and his zoo crew dont see it that way, they would be quite happy to wallow around in mediocrity for the next 100 years with a substandard network. Then you have twits like Alan Jones that the uninformed listen to, not much can be said for these types. Australia used to be smarter than this now we seem to be heading down the same stupidity path the USA has been on for a while. We will find out for sure at the next election.
Rossyduck
May 31, 2011 10:18 PM
The uninformed are indeed a problem as we march in lockstep to a national disaster. Surely Barlet hasn't been pulled into the Con?. According to Quigly - http://www.aph.gov.au/hansard/joint/commttee/J32.pdf
NBN Co are not going near rural Australia, or even beyond the outer neighbourhoods of the cities. Towns of less than a 1000 premises - 80 % of rural Australia - are not getting fibre. As they were told 18months ago by FttH council NBN Co have architectured their network so badly that is too expensive for them to break out to those towns through which blackspot fibre is passing. Copper is getting withdrawn and according to their own justification for fibre (I agree), their 12Mbps wireless is not going to meet the needs of the lagards in three years time. So lucky us in the narrow coastal fringes who will have our broadband cable replaced by fibre. At least as we pay off an unnecessary debt we should give thanks to our rural cousins who got nothing but are also paying it off. Wonder what Bartlet was smoking when he gave that speach ?.
HubertCumberdale
May 31, 2011 11:11 PM
Rossyduck wrote:
as we march in lockstep to a national disaster.

Not sure if you noticed but the coalition are not in power and their patchwork plan is not on the cards at the moment since NBNco are actually rolling out a FTTH network not a FTTN network, perhaps the disaster you are referring to will happen if they win the next election and they decide to "destroy" it all.


Rossyduck wrote:
Towns of less than a 1000 premises - 80 % of rural Australia - are not getting fibre.

wow 80% sounds like big scary number but not so much when you consider the 93% of Australia that will get FTTH in the initial roll out and as Quigley has said network extensions are not out of the question, so towns with less than a 1000 premises may get fibre eventually but it'll never happen if the rest isn't built.


Rossyduck wrote:
At least as we pay off an unnecessary debt we should give thanks to our rural cousins who got nothing but are also paying it off.

I'd question your sincerity on this, I mean before the whole FTTH plan was put forward anyone that wanted faster speeds (even those in large regional towns/citys) were told to move to the big capital cities if they wanted more speed now we are supposed to believe you and your ilk actually care about the 7% that wont be getting fibre? Put your money where your mouth is: I am willing to pay a levy on my FTTH internet plan when it eventually arrives in my town so it can fund much of that 7%, how about you?
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