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freitasm

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#204230 22-Sep-2016 14:53
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Just received:

 

 

Spark announced today a new social programme to bring heavily subsidised broadband to thousands of New Zealand children whose families cannot afford commercial home broadband services. 

 

Spark Jump is an innovative programme for social change. Collaborating with community groups and government agencies, Spark will offer families with school-aged children at risk of digital exclusion entry-level home broadband for as little as $15 - about a quarter the price of the cheapest commercial services available.  

 

“Digital inequality, especially when it comes to online learning, is a significant challenge for New Zealand. Every day, tens of thousands of children do not have access to home broadband and come home from school unable to continue their online learning,” Spark Managing Director Simon Moutter said. 

 

“At Spark, we believe New Zealand children deserve to have the opportunity to learn and thrive in the modern digital economy. Spark Jump is our way of helping solve this Digital Divide, by ensuring children have digital access both at school and in the home. It’s very much part of Spark's overall ambition to ‘unleash the potential in all New Zealanders through amazing technology’." 

 

Spark Jump will offer selected families a 30GB no-frills broadband service for just $15. To offer flexibility for families, Spark Jump is pre-paid, no fixed-term contract and includes a modem while they are using the service. The service uses the Skinny Broadband platform and provides “wireless” home broadband via a 4G mobile signal connecting with the nearest cell tower.  Wireless broadband is available anywhere there is a good quality Spark 4G mobile signal.

 

This technology has only been available in New Zealand since mid-2015 and a team from Spark, Skinny and Huawei has been working to develop a heavily subsidised solution. The new service has been successfully piloted over recent months with families in Christchurch and Auckland.  

 

Spark Jump will be administered by Spark Foundation, the registered charity funded by Spark and governed independently by a Board of Trustees. Spark Foundation will partner with local community-based organisations who will identify and refer eligible families.  Spark Jump won’t be advertised as a commercial product, it will be distributed exclusively through these community partners to nominated families of school-aged children.

 

Spark Foundation Chair Nick Leggett says learnings from the Foundation’s four-year partnership with digital learning pioneer the Manaiakalani Education Trust led to the development of Spark Jump 

 

"Our work with Manaiakalani has shown that the lack of home broadband is a barrier to New Zealand children's learning and that whanau engagement plays a big role in children's educational success. By enabling whanau to support digital learning with home broadband, we can help build on the effectiveness of the Government’s efforts to improve broadband access within schools, through the rollouts of ultrafast fibre and the Network for Learning (N4L) managed network.” 

 

Spark hopes to make Spark Jump available to at least 5,000 families over the coming 12 months and is looking to collaborate with government agencies and community groups to scale to higher volumes.  

 

Linda Tame, N4L Board Director and General Manager of the Greater Christchurch Schools Network Trust (a Spark Jump founding partner) recognises the significant contribution home broadband can make transforming educational outcomes of New Zealand children.  

 

"We have a big task ahead of us, getting our children in the best position for a digital future. Making home broadband affordable for more families is a step in the right direction to empower our children with the skills they need to lead New Zealand into a sustainable future."

 





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Wheelbarrow01
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  #1639074 22-Sep-2016 22:59
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Whilst I work for Spark in the broadband arena, I knew nothing of this offer prior to today, so I can't comment in any official capacity.

 

My guess (and it is just that) is the $15 price point is a way of weeding out those who might seek to abuse the offer. Making it completely free could, in my opinion, lead to misuse, or at least people who don't need it trying to rort their way into it. The $15 pricing does, I assume, make it a little less attractive to those who seek 'something for nothing'. There's also the commercial side of things, where a totally free offer would most likely be completely unsustainable for a company who must, at the end of the day, return a profit overall for it's shareholders, even when striving to do something good for the community.

 

Whether the $15 pricing delivers the service at a loss or a small profit I cannot say. As the offer is inherently a benevolent one, I would assume that it will, at most, break-even. Cost recovery of the free hardware is likely built in to the monthly fee, but again, I cannot comment from a position of any authority.

 

I can offer my opinion, which is that I hope that some of the less fortunate families out there will be able to take up this offer, and maybe together we can stop their kids being left behind. I know it probably won't help every struggling family, but it's a start. When Spark staff received the announcement email from Simon Moutter this morning, many of those around me commented about how, at that moment, they felt proud to work at Spark, a company who rightly or wrongly gets its fair share of criticism.

 

There are those here and in other forums who will say that what Spark has done today is not enough. To those people I issue a challenge: put your money where your mouth is - find a way to sponsor a struggling family's broadband for a month. Or a year. Or whatever you can afford. Help Spark make a difference if you think they can't do it alone.

 

Spark staff in Christchurch recently held a fundraising quiz night for www.filltheirlunchbox.co.nz, a social enterprise which delivers healthy school lunches to pupils at low decile Christchurch schools on a "buy one, donate one" basis. $13 buys a lunch for you delivered to your Christchurch workplace, and another lunch delivered to a low decile Christchurch school. If you are not in Christchurch, you can 'shout a lunch' for just $5. The enterprise aims to deliver 40,000 school lunches this year. There are similar social enterprises in other areas as well, such as www.eatmylunch.nz

 

Many Spark staff also regularly donate to worthy causes via payroll giving and of course Spark runs GiveALittle, so I think it's accurate to say that Spark and their staff are doing what they can to give a hand up for those in need.

 

Again, these are my personal opinions and observations only.





The views expressed by me are not necessarily those of my employer Chorus NZ Ltd


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