SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Community Action Hampshire   DEFRA and BDUK Rural Community Broadband Fund   Friday 17 February 2012
Introduction Joanna Dixon Senior Rural Officer Community Action Hampshire Questions at the end of each session Email us at  [email_address] Twitter #RCBFHants
Joe Ling RDPE Manager 01905 768854 [email_address] DEFRA
Rural Community Broadband Fund (RCBF) What’s Available & How to Apply
What is the RCBF? £20M joint DEFRA and BDUK fund Grant aid for communities located in “ hard to reach ” locations to establish  Superfast Broadband  or ‘ Next Generation Access ” (NGA) ‘ Hard to reach ’ as defined in Local Authority Local Broadband Plans - those areas that will  not  receive superfast broadband through the wider BDUK funded programme Superfast / NGA  is  at least  24 - 30  megabits per second.
Who Can Apply? Eligible bodies include: Community  Enterprises E.g. Cooperatives, Companies Limited by Guarantee or  Community Interest Companies Charities Local Authorities : on behalf of communities Includes Parish Councils Other Local Partnerships : Groups of private businesses (that are beneficiaries,  not  individual Communications Provider businesses)
Who Can Apply? Applicants must: Be a legal entity in order to enter into a Funding Agreement (existing or proposed) Be able to source the resources in order to fund expenditure prior to claiming any grant Be able demonstrate compliance with State Aid and public procurement rules (at Full Application stage) Be able to sign up to an RDPE Funding Agreement by December 2013
What Can I Apply For? An eligible body can apply for funds to: Procure a network operator , or: Establish the equipment/ infrastructure required to  deliver the service themselves As a guide, there are two  broad models  to consider in developing an application; Extending the Local Broadband Plan –  Community works with the Local Broadband Plan lead on Demand Aggregation, to extend the proposed 90% area infrastructure into their area Community Enterprise –  Community establishes the required infrastructure themselves
How Much Could I Apply For? You can apply for up to  50%  of the total eligible project costs: No other  public funding  can be used as match Maximum support is  £300 grant per premise As an example, match funding can be found from: Those who will receive the service committing to pay a connection charge Or committing to receive the service for a minimum period at a set cost Other forms of community investment A procured Network Operator committing funds to infrastructure/ service development Not an exhaustive list
How do I apply? Submit and  Expression of Interest  (EOI) to your local RDPE Lead (“Sponsor”) Open Call Approach , in Rounds: Round 1 –  closed 31 st  January 2012 Round 2 –  to be announced, planned to open May 2012 EOI will require you to demonstrate that: your community is likely to be  hard to reach  (within the final 10%) There is sufficient  local need and demand You have the  capacity to deliver  for reasonable  value for money If your EOI is  endorsed , you will be invited to prepare a detailed  Full Application , to a timescale you agree with your Sponsor
How will my EOI be assessed? EOI Assessment Criteria; Strategic Fit  – target communities in a “final 10%” hard to reach area, fit with County Local Broadband Plan Value for Money –  does the project demonstrate good value for money? Outcomes –  evidence of local need/ demand for superfast broadband / NGA, economic and social outcomes, population served Delivery –  is the proposed solution generally realistic and sustainable – technically and financially Uplands Area  – is the project located in an Uplands area? Community Engagement –  evidence of community engagement and support for your project
What Next? Round 2 of the invitation of calls for interest to be announced, expected  May 2012 Work with your local County Council Lead – are you within reach? Identify your local need and demand Scope out your options for delivering what your community needs Talk to us
What Next? Joe Ling 01905 768 854 [email_address]
Broadband Delivery UK Adrian Wooster BDUK Community aspects  and Next Generation Access in the final 10% Natasha Innocent Director Community Partnerships Demand Stimulation and  Digital Inclusion [email_address]
Rural Community Broadband Toolkit Hampshire 17th February 2012
Background Government objective: “ best superfast broadband in Europe by 2015 ” Market expected to deliver to around 70% of country but not “final third” Broadband Strategy launched with £530m Government funding to deliver: Superfast broadband to around 90% of the population A 2 Mbps universal service commitment to everyone Rural Community Broadband fund launched to support communities in the final 10% wanting  more than basic broadband
RCBF is NGA only!
RCBF Scope The solution must turn the area “NGA Grey” Competitively priced wholesale service A choice of service providers RCBF is included in the BDUK State Aid application
RCBF Scope The fund is technology neutral Projects may choose any combination of technologies  if  they conform to agreed NGA definitions Individual satellite services are excluded Compliance with industry standards is required Proposals for extension of existing NGA rollout are encouraged
RCBF & Local Broadband Plans RCBF extends the scope of community engagement Proposals should be endorsed by A majority of the premises in the target area A local accountable body (e.g. Parish Council)  The Local Authority Community Industry Public Sector RCBF
The toolkit Will become a living web-based resource Pointers to existing guidance & material INCA Beyond Broadband bit.ly/ulnx4d FttH Council Business Guide bit.ly/uHO1iB Erisa Broadband Portal bit.ly/uENpgc Rural Broadband Partnership bit.ly/vrIdOu
FROM CAMPAIGN TO SOLUTION
High-level Process EoI to RCBF Full Submission to RCBF
Keys to success A solid business plan A reliable network A basic set of services A local set of services Customer Care Communication An “Us feeling” Only 1 is technical 4 relate to  your  community! * Kees Rover’s 7-pillars
Capacity & Capability Community Capability Community Investment Capacity Demand Aggregation DIY Build & Benefit Concession Partnership Using LA  Partners Community Enterprise Do Nothing
#1 Demand Aggregation The community decides it wishes to have more than the minimum The community works to Improve quality of the solution from a minimum in-fill solution to an NGA based solution Confirm actionable verifiable demand in support of the case for more investment With LA Partners
#2 Build & Benefit Community is willing to help deliver NGA E.g. civil engineering, way-leaves or additional funding Community happy that RoI is gained from benefitting from an improved service Open Access & ISPs delivered by LA partner With LA Partners
#3 Partnership The community want to raise some of the risk capital & expect an investment return Partners are needed to Provide additional investment Build & operate the network  Open Access & ISPs delivered by partners Investment and Exit plans need to be considered Community Organisation
#4 Concession The community are able to raise all the risk finance  They have no ambition to be a network operator A concession is offered by the community to design, build and operate their network The community must steer strategic decisions Open Access &ISPs delivered by the concession partner Investment and Exit plans need to be considered Community Organisation
#5 DIY The community are able to raise all of the finance  They have a  strong  desire to be the network operator The community design, build & operate their own network Open Access & Service Providers delivered by the community Investment and Exit plans need to be considered Community Organisation
Engagement  ->  Sustainable
Thank you!  Adrian Wooster [email_address] 07788 167776 Natasha Innocent [email_address] 07917 174205
Go ON campaigns  Communities
BDUK goals for UK  by 2015  The best Superfast Broadband in Europe  Standard broadband delivered to virtually  all communities  To  achieve both  the UK also needs world leading levels of digital capability  AND  the right environment to stimulate demand –  t  This is what Go ON campaigns seek to do  do
Go ON local  campaigns aim  to inspire  people to recognise the benefits of being online and build their capability  to support  everyone in a local area to experience an enhanced social, cultural + economic life from being online  to create  demand for superfast broadband
Secure  connected communities  Inspiring  local people +  businesses  to change behaviour  using  tried + tested  successful projects  such as  eHampshire  to support change  Using the activists  in your community to  drive further demand through their enthusiasm, energy + skills Using interesting, relevant + engaging Go ON messaging
Supporting  Local Broadband Plans  Communities can play a significant role in  driving demand at very local level By working together Local Authorities and  active communities can achieve increased  demand + potentially more roll out from  the investment pot available
Getting  started  Identify local partners  who could help you get your message across  Gather as much  data as possible on who needs support  Recruit digital champions  to build skills + raise awareness of the benefits  a fast network will bring Support your network of champions  to stay active + engaged
Go ON  community partners  Make use of community networks to help drive demand  at local level  Faith Communities  Existing volunteer networks  Community organisations  Local pubs and post offices  Scouts + Girl Guides The Women’s Institute
Recruit  digital champions  Local people willing to share their skills + enthusiasm with friends, neighbours, colleagues or family  Knowing someone’s interests, passions or information triggers allows a personalised introduction to the web  Champions  don’t need to be IT experts  experts  – it’s much more important to be  a good communicator
Next  steps  Consider adopting a local  Go ON  campaign  Use the free marketing assets to promote  the benefits of being online  recruit and inspire digital champions to  promote Go ON messaging + drive demand  Collect + promote local case studies to  inspire others to join in  Have fun
Questions  ?
Panellists Joe Ling – DEFRA Natasha Innocent - BDUK Adrian Wooster – BDUK Daniel Fearnley – HCC
Refreshment break Next session starts at 3.30 pm
Hampshire Country Council’s Local Broadband Plan Daniel Fearnley IT Business Partner Hampshire County Council 01962 846359 [email_address]
Hampshire’s Local Broadband Plan Daniel Fearnley, IT Business Partner & Programme Director
This is important… We understand the frustration We understand the benefits We have Chief Officer, Karen Murray , sponsorship Support from The Leader, Executive Member for Economic Development & Rural Affairs plus Broadband Champion Senate, Districts and LEPs
What does Hampshire look like without the programme?
Where are we now? Revised bid November 2011 Procurement completed end 2012 Approved January 2012
What are the timescales? 2013 2015 Schedule to be decided with commercial partner Based upon economic principles. E.g. Demand vs. Cost Gap funded model Demand stimulation remains key
What are the targets 90% of premises 24Mbps + Remaining 10% minimum 2Mbps
What does 90% look like?
90% and beyond…. Demand stimulation Reuse of existing assets Efficient implementation Consultation and engagement
Hampshire’s role in RCBF Share details of our Local Broadband Plan - You need to be in the final 10% We can offer support and advice Facilitation – like today! Can’t bid, but can work together to ensure maximum value
The final 10%....
The final 10%....for now..
Hampshire Broadband What next… Detailed planning Procure a partner Engagement with you and all stakeholders Improved website, regular updates & quarterly stakeholder engagement
Questions?
CAH support Joanna Dixon Senior Rural Officer Community Action Hampshire 01962 857354 [email_address]
Joanna Dixon Senior Rural Officer Community Action Hampshire 01962 857354 [email_address]
Why an issue? Equalities issue – linked to education, citizenship Access to services issue – a new dimension Market forces issue – little rural investment Hidden disadvantage – not always recognized Rural economy – dependent for growth Essential for everyone – not an “add on”
What can CAH do? Brokering role  - today’s event ; open a dialogue   Signposting role  – to other sources of expertise & help; other community projects Help demonstrate demand  – raising awareness, educating about benefits & encouraging take up through engagement processes
Further advice & support OCSI parish profiles – socio-economic data Bid writing Organizational & legal structures Developing social enterprise Business planning Networking & cooperation Intelligence gathering & feeding back
Questions and Next Steps Map to identify whether you are eligible Where to go for further advice and information Use Google - rural broadband solutions Share information - talk to each other
Today's speakers Joe Ling – DEFRA Natasha Innocent - BDUK Adrian Wooster – BDUK Daniel Fearnley – HCC
Thank you Joanna Dixon Senior Rural Officer Community Action Hampshire 01962 857354 [email_address]

More Related Content

PPT
Tom Koutsky on Minnesota brNational Broadband Policy and Implications for Min...
PPTX
Broadband in se mn 2021 survey
PPTX
MN County Broadband Profiles
PPTX
Psu fire ems council presentation handout 3 4-14
PPTX
Broadband in Southeast MN 2021 survey
PPTX
Farm Fresh Broadband
PPTX
Broadband 101 mn bb conf 2021
PPT
Tom Koutsky on Minnesota brNational Broadband Policy and Implications for Min...
Broadband in se mn 2021 survey
MN County Broadband Profiles
Psu fire ems council presentation handout 3 4-14
Broadband in Southeast MN 2021 survey
Farm Fresh Broadband
Broadband 101 mn bb conf 2021

What's hot (20)

PPTX
SMIF Regional Broadband Forum: Le Sueur Count Broadband Initative
PPTX
Region 5 mn broadband event
PPTX
Broadband Presentation for MN PUC
PPTX
Expanding Broadband - Ryan Collins
PDF
Expanding Broadband - Jim Baldwin
PPTX
Update on MN Office of Broadband Development
PPTX
Figuring out Community Return on Public Investment in Broadband
PPTX
Regional Broadband meeting in NW MN from Office of Broadband Development
PPTX
Surveys, Data and Stories to Inform Policy and Investment
PPT
Broadband Policy Workshop Mankato
PPTX
2020 Broadband County Profiles
PPTX
Obd update on federal broabdand funding
PPTX
Expanding the Impact with Cooperation
PPTX
Koochiching Charrette Presentation
PDF
Community based broadband report by Executive Office of the President
PPT
Broadband and universal access: challenges for regulators - Martha García-Mur...
PDF
'Review: Community Media Association Conference & Annual General Meeting: 2 N...
PPTX
Broadband in Chisago County
PPTX
A Comprehensive Community Approach to Broadband
PPTX
CCG Gateway to the Feasibility Charrette Process
SMIF Regional Broadband Forum: Le Sueur Count Broadband Initative
Region 5 mn broadband event
Broadband Presentation for MN PUC
Expanding Broadband - Ryan Collins
Expanding Broadband - Jim Baldwin
Update on MN Office of Broadband Development
Figuring out Community Return on Public Investment in Broadband
Regional Broadband meeting in NW MN from Office of Broadband Development
Surveys, Data and Stories to Inform Policy and Investment
Broadband Policy Workshop Mankato
2020 Broadband County Profiles
Obd update on federal broabdand funding
Expanding the Impact with Cooperation
Koochiching Charrette Presentation
Community based broadband report by Executive Office of the President
Broadband and universal access: challenges for regulators - Martha García-Mur...
'Review: Community Media Association Conference & Annual General Meeting: 2 N...
Broadband in Chisago County
A Comprehensive Community Approach to Broadband
CCG Gateway to the Feasibility Charrette Process
Ad

Viewers also liked (6)

PDF
Happy and Prosperous 2013
PDF
Calaveras Economic Summit
PPT
CAH and HCC Rural Broadband Event 17 February 2012
PPTX
Change and Response: Media Convergence and Benedict College experience
PDF
Boosting Social Ad Results with Audience Segmentation: Nowspeed and Hitachi D...
PDF
The Power of Business Networking
Happy and Prosperous 2013
Calaveras Economic Summit
CAH and HCC Rural Broadband Event 17 February 2012
Change and Response: Media Convergence and Benedict College experience
Boosting Social Ad Results with Audience Segmentation: Nowspeed and Hitachi D...
The Power of Business Networking
Ad

Similar to 2012 02-17 rcbf event - combined presentations - all slides (20)

PPTX
INCA Industry Day - Adrian Wooster Presentation
PPT
C2C Forum no2 Bill Murphy final
PPTX
Broadband Summit 1
PPT
Broadband Summit 3 - Update on Progress
PPTX
Adams Columbia March 7 2016
PPTX
Matt Agar - Wireless Broadband Opportunities in BDUK Initiatives
PPTX
Provider Partnership Strategies
PPTX
The Rural Broadband EIS Fund 121108
PPTX
Where's the Broadband? Inter-County Coordinating Committee, 4.21.14
PPTX
Regional Support for Broadband
PPTX
170925 inca creating-collaborative-projects-bop-consulting
PDF
Dean Creamer, Deputy Director, Broadband Delivery UK (BDUK)
PDF
B4 connecting your non profit in the digital age hand out - connecting your...
PPTX
WACEC: Supporting Community Development with Broadband
PDF
Rural Broadband & Eastern Ontario Regional Network - Laura Bradley, Action In...
PPTX
Broadway Partners @ INCA Superfast Wireless Workshop
PPTX
Superfast Wireless Broadband - State Aid Requirements
PDF
Broadband Infrastructure: A Foundation for Pervasive Cloud Computing - Laura ...
PPT
Nh telecom summit_052011
INCA Industry Day - Adrian Wooster Presentation
C2C Forum no2 Bill Murphy final
Broadband Summit 1
Broadband Summit 3 - Update on Progress
Adams Columbia March 7 2016
Matt Agar - Wireless Broadband Opportunities in BDUK Initiatives
Provider Partnership Strategies
The Rural Broadband EIS Fund 121108
Where's the Broadband? Inter-County Coordinating Committee, 4.21.14
Regional Support for Broadband
170925 inca creating-collaborative-projects-bop-consulting
Dean Creamer, Deputy Director, Broadband Delivery UK (BDUK)
B4 connecting your non profit in the digital age hand out - connecting your...
WACEC: Supporting Community Development with Broadband
Rural Broadband & Eastern Ontario Regional Network - Laura Bradley, Action In...
Broadway Partners @ INCA Superfast Wireless Workshop
Superfast Wireless Broadband - State Aid Requirements
Broadband Infrastructure: A Foundation for Pervasive Cloud Computing - Laura ...
Nh telecom summit_052011

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
CloudStack 4.21: First Look Webinar slides
PDF
A comparative study of natural language inference in Swahili using monolingua...
PPT
What is a Computer? Input Devices /output devices
PDF
DP Operators-handbook-extract for the Mautical Institute
PDF
TrustArc Webinar - Click, Consent, Trust: Winning the Privacy Game
PDF
Getting Started with Data Integration: FME Form 101
PDF
WOOl fibre morphology and structure.pdf for textiles
PDF
ENT215_Completing-a-large-scale-migration-and-modernization-with-AWS.pdf
PDF
Architecture types and enterprise applications.pdf
PDF
August Patch Tuesday
PDF
Taming the Chaos: How to Turn Unstructured Data into Decisions
PPTX
The various Industrial Revolutions .pptx
PDF
Transform Your ITIL® 4 & ITSM Strategy with AI in 2025.pdf
DOCX
search engine optimization ppt fir known well about this
PDF
Microsoft Solutions Partner Drive Digital Transformation with D365.pdf
PDF
Assigned Numbers - 2025 - Bluetooth® Document
PPTX
Web Crawler for Trend Tracking Gen Z Insights.pptx
PDF
Video forgery: An extensive analysis of inter-and intra-frame manipulation al...
PPTX
observCloud-Native Containerability and monitoring.pptx
PDF
DASA ADMISSION 2024_FirstRound_FirstRank_LastRank.pdf
CloudStack 4.21: First Look Webinar slides
A comparative study of natural language inference in Swahili using monolingua...
What is a Computer? Input Devices /output devices
DP Operators-handbook-extract for the Mautical Institute
TrustArc Webinar - Click, Consent, Trust: Winning the Privacy Game
Getting Started with Data Integration: FME Form 101
WOOl fibre morphology and structure.pdf for textiles
ENT215_Completing-a-large-scale-migration-and-modernization-with-AWS.pdf
Architecture types and enterprise applications.pdf
August Patch Tuesday
Taming the Chaos: How to Turn Unstructured Data into Decisions
The various Industrial Revolutions .pptx
Transform Your ITIL® 4 & ITSM Strategy with AI in 2025.pdf
search engine optimization ppt fir known well about this
Microsoft Solutions Partner Drive Digital Transformation with D365.pdf
Assigned Numbers - 2025 - Bluetooth® Document
Web Crawler for Trend Tracking Gen Z Insights.pptx
Video forgery: An extensive analysis of inter-and intra-frame manipulation al...
observCloud-Native Containerability and monitoring.pptx
DASA ADMISSION 2024_FirstRound_FirstRank_LastRank.pdf

2012 02-17 rcbf event - combined presentations - all slides

  • 1. Community Action Hampshire DEFRA and BDUK Rural Community Broadband Fund Friday 17 February 2012
  • 2. Introduction Joanna Dixon Senior Rural Officer Community Action Hampshire Questions at the end of each session Email us at [email_address] Twitter #RCBFHants
  • 3. Joe Ling RDPE Manager 01905 768854 [email_address] DEFRA
  • 4. Rural Community Broadband Fund (RCBF) What’s Available & How to Apply
  • 5. What is the RCBF? £20M joint DEFRA and BDUK fund Grant aid for communities located in “ hard to reach ” locations to establish Superfast Broadband or ‘ Next Generation Access ” (NGA) ‘ Hard to reach ’ as defined in Local Authority Local Broadband Plans - those areas that will not receive superfast broadband through the wider BDUK funded programme Superfast / NGA is at least 24 - 30 megabits per second.
  • 6. Who Can Apply? Eligible bodies include: Community Enterprises E.g. Cooperatives, Companies Limited by Guarantee or Community Interest Companies Charities Local Authorities : on behalf of communities Includes Parish Councils Other Local Partnerships : Groups of private businesses (that are beneficiaries, not individual Communications Provider businesses)
  • 7. Who Can Apply? Applicants must: Be a legal entity in order to enter into a Funding Agreement (existing or proposed) Be able to source the resources in order to fund expenditure prior to claiming any grant Be able demonstrate compliance with State Aid and public procurement rules (at Full Application stage) Be able to sign up to an RDPE Funding Agreement by December 2013
  • 8. What Can I Apply For? An eligible body can apply for funds to: Procure a network operator , or: Establish the equipment/ infrastructure required to deliver the service themselves As a guide, there are two broad models to consider in developing an application; Extending the Local Broadband Plan – Community works with the Local Broadband Plan lead on Demand Aggregation, to extend the proposed 90% area infrastructure into their area Community Enterprise – Community establishes the required infrastructure themselves
  • 9. How Much Could I Apply For? You can apply for up to 50% of the total eligible project costs: No other public funding can be used as match Maximum support is £300 grant per premise As an example, match funding can be found from: Those who will receive the service committing to pay a connection charge Or committing to receive the service for a minimum period at a set cost Other forms of community investment A procured Network Operator committing funds to infrastructure/ service development Not an exhaustive list
  • 10. How do I apply? Submit and Expression of Interest (EOI) to your local RDPE Lead (“Sponsor”) Open Call Approach , in Rounds: Round 1 – closed 31 st January 2012 Round 2 – to be announced, planned to open May 2012 EOI will require you to demonstrate that: your community is likely to be hard to reach (within the final 10%) There is sufficient local need and demand You have the capacity to deliver for reasonable value for money If your EOI is endorsed , you will be invited to prepare a detailed Full Application , to a timescale you agree with your Sponsor
  • 11. How will my EOI be assessed? EOI Assessment Criteria; Strategic Fit – target communities in a “final 10%” hard to reach area, fit with County Local Broadband Plan Value for Money – does the project demonstrate good value for money? Outcomes – evidence of local need/ demand for superfast broadband / NGA, economic and social outcomes, population served Delivery – is the proposed solution generally realistic and sustainable – technically and financially Uplands Area – is the project located in an Uplands area? Community Engagement – evidence of community engagement and support for your project
  • 12. What Next? Round 2 of the invitation of calls for interest to be announced, expected May 2012 Work with your local County Council Lead – are you within reach? Identify your local need and demand Scope out your options for delivering what your community needs Talk to us
  • 13. What Next? Joe Ling 01905 768 854 [email_address]
  • 14. Broadband Delivery UK Adrian Wooster BDUK Community aspects and Next Generation Access in the final 10% Natasha Innocent Director Community Partnerships Demand Stimulation and Digital Inclusion [email_address]
  • 15. Rural Community Broadband Toolkit Hampshire 17th February 2012
  • 16. Background Government objective: “ best superfast broadband in Europe by 2015 ” Market expected to deliver to around 70% of country but not “final third” Broadband Strategy launched with £530m Government funding to deliver: Superfast broadband to around 90% of the population A 2 Mbps universal service commitment to everyone Rural Community Broadband fund launched to support communities in the final 10% wanting more than basic broadband
  • 17. RCBF is NGA only!
  • 18. RCBF Scope The solution must turn the area “NGA Grey” Competitively priced wholesale service A choice of service providers RCBF is included in the BDUK State Aid application
  • 19. RCBF Scope The fund is technology neutral Projects may choose any combination of technologies if they conform to agreed NGA definitions Individual satellite services are excluded Compliance with industry standards is required Proposals for extension of existing NGA rollout are encouraged
  • 20. RCBF & Local Broadband Plans RCBF extends the scope of community engagement Proposals should be endorsed by A majority of the premises in the target area A local accountable body (e.g. Parish Council) The Local Authority Community Industry Public Sector RCBF
  • 21. The toolkit Will become a living web-based resource Pointers to existing guidance & material INCA Beyond Broadband bit.ly/ulnx4d FttH Council Business Guide bit.ly/uHO1iB Erisa Broadband Portal bit.ly/uENpgc Rural Broadband Partnership bit.ly/vrIdOu
  • 22. FROM CAMPAIGN TO SOLUTION
  • 23. High-level Process EoI to RCBF Full Submission to RCBF
  • 24. Keys to success A solid business plan A reliable network A basic set of services A local set of services Customer Care Communication An “Us feeling” Only 1 is technical 4 relate to your community! * Kees Rover’s 7-pillars
  • 25. Capacity & Capability Community Capability Community Investment Capacity Demand Aggregation DIY Build & Benefit Concession Partnership Using LA Partners Community Enterprise Do Nothing
  • 26. #1 Demand Aggregation The community decides it wishes to have more than the minimum The community works to Improve quality of the solution from a minimum in-fill solution to an NGA based solution Confirm actionable verifiable demand in support of the case for more investment With LA Partners
  • 27. #2 Build & Benefit Community is willing to help deliver NGA E.g. civil engineering, way-leaves or additional funding Community happy that RoI is gained from benefitting from an improved service Open Access & ISPs delivered by LA partner With LA Partners
  • 28. #3 Partnership The community want to raise some of the risk capital & expect an investment return Partners are needed to Provide additional investment Build & operate the network Open Access & ISPs delivered by partners Investment and Exit plans need to be considered Community Organisation
  • 29. #4 Concession The community are able to raise all the risk finance They have no ambition to be a network operator A concession is offered by the community to design, build and operate their network The community must steer strategic decisions Open Access &ISPs delivered by the concession partner Investment and Exit plans need to be considered Community Organisation
  • 30. #5 DIY The community are able to raise all of the finance They have a strong desire to be the network operator The community design, build & operate their own network Open Access & Service Providers delivered by the community Investment and Exit plans need to be considered Community Organisation
  • 31. Engagement -> Sustainable
  • 32. Thank you! Adrian Wooster [email_address] 07788 167776 Natasha Innocent [email_address] 07917 174205
  • 33. Go ON campaigns Communities
  • 34. BDUK goals for UK by 2015 The best Superfast Broadband in Europe Standard broadband delivered to virtually all communities To achieve both the UK also needs world leading levels of digital capability AND the right environment to stimulate demand – t This is what Go ON campaigns seek to do do
  • 35. Go ON local campaigns aim to inspire people to recognise the benefits of being online and build their capability to support everyone in a local area to experience an enhanced social, cultural + economic life from being online to create demand for superfast broadband
  • 36. Secure connected communities Inspiring local people + businesses to change behaviour using tried + tested successful projects such as eHampshire to support change Using the activists in your community to drive further demand through their enthusiasm, energy + skills Using interesting, relevant + engaging Go ON messaging
  • 37. Supporting Local Broadband Plans Communities can play a significant role in driving demand at very local level By working together Local Authorities and active communities can achieve increased demand + potentially more roll out from the investment pot available
  • 38. Getting started Identify local partners who could help you get your message across Gather as much data as possible on who needs support Recruit digital champions to build skills + raise awareness of the benefits a fast network will bring Support your network of champions to stay active + engaged
  • 39. Go ON community partners Make use of community networks to help drive demand at local level Faith Communities Existing volunteer networks Community organisations Local pubs and post offices Scouts + Girl Guides The Women’s Institute
  • 40. Recruit digital champions Local people willing to share their skills + enthusiasm with friends, neighbours, colleagues or family Knowing someone’s interests, passions or information triggers allows a personalised introduction to the web Champions don’t need to be IT experts experts – it’s much more important to be a good communicator
  • 41. Next steps Consider adopting a local Go ON campaign Use the free marketing assets to promote the benefits of being online recruit and inspire digital champions to promote Go ON messaging + drive demand Collect + promote local case studies to inspire others to join in Have fun
  • 43. Panellists Joe Ling – DEFRA Natasha Innocent - BDUK Adrian Wooster – BDUK Daniel Fearnley – HCC
  • 44. Refreshment break Next session starts at 3.30 pm
  • 45. Hampshire Country Council’s Local Broadband Plan Daniel Fearnley IT Business Partner Hampshire County Council 01962 846359 [email_address]
  • 46. Hampshire’s Local Broadband Plan Daniel Fearnley, IT Business Partner & Programme Director
  • 47. This is important… We understand the frustration We understand the benefits We have Chief Officer, Karen Murray , sponsorship Support from The Leader, Executive Member for Economic Development & Rural Affairs plus Broadband Champion Senate, Districts and LEPs
  • 48. What does Hampshire look like without the programme?
  • 49. Where are we now? Revised bid November 2011 Procurement completed end 2012 Approved January 2012
  • 50. What are the timescales? 2013 2015 Schedule to be decided with commercial partner Based upon economic principles. E.g. Demand vs. Cost Gap funded model Demand stimulation remains key
  • 51. What are the targets 90% of premises 24Mbps + Remaining 10% minimum 2Mbps
  • 52. What does 90% look like?
  • 53. 90% and beyond…. Demand stimulation Reuse of existing assets Efficient implementation Consultation and engagement
  • 54. Hampshire’s role in RCBF Share details of our Local Broadband Plan - You need to be in the final 10% We can offer support and advice Facilitation – like today! Can’t bid, but can work together to ensure maximum value
  • 57. Hampshire Broadband What next… Detailed planning Procure a partner Engagement with you and all stakeholders Improved website, regular updates & quarterly stakeholder engagement
  • 59. CAH support Joanna Dixon Senior Rural Officer Community Action Hampshire 01962 857354 [email_address]
  • 60. Joanna Dixon Senior Rural Officer Community Action Hampshire 01962 857354 [email_address]
  • 61. Why an issue? Equalities issue – linked to education, citizenship Access to services issue – a new dimension Market forces issue – little rural investment Hidden disadvantage – not always recognized Rural economy – dependent for growth Essential for everyone – not an “add on”
  • 62. What can CAH do? Brokering role - today’s event ; open a dialogue Signposting role – to other sources of expertise & help; other community projects Help demonstrate demand – raising awareness, educating about benefits & encouraging take up through engagement processes
  • 63. Further advice & support OCSI parish profiles – socio-economic data Bid writing Organizational & legal structures Developing social enterprise Business planning Networking & cooperation Intelligence gathering & feeding back
  • 64. Questions and Next Steps Map to identify whether you are eligible Where to go for further advice and information Use Google - rural broadband solutions Share information - talk to each other
  • 65. Today's speakers Joe Ling – DEFRA Natasha Innocent - BDUK Adrian Wooster – BDUK Daniel Fearnley – HCC
  • 66. Thank you Joanna Dixon Senior Rural Officer Community Action Hampshire 01962 857354 [email_address]

Editor's Notes

  • #18: RCBF supported projects are strategic NOT tactical
  • #22: Some of this material is contradictory and there are gaps in publicly available information The material will be collated into a single source, with clear attribution to the authors Gaps will either be highlighted, requested from partners, commissioned or delivered by BDUK
  • #26: Community investment Broad view – could be true sweat equity as well as cash Community Ambition The desire of a community to be an active stakeholder in the project All approaches are considered equal IF They deliver the outcome required Pass value for money criteria Have a community mandate
  • #28: Model in test in Cumbria
  • #29: Community strategic involvement Introducing a social impact – inclusion Traditional social enterprise models may not be appropriate when large proportion of the investment is external It will also need to be perceived as a professional investment opportunity, whether its seeking high-network-individuals within the community or external investors. Longer term options are numerous – refinance by the European Investment Bank or a trade sale, for example There is on reason why the partner couldn’t be the LA partner
  • #30: There is no reason why the concession couldn’t be taken by the LA partner – a community NYnet. Being built and run by specialists, possibly as part of a group of concessions, exit strategies are numerous including trade sale to the concession owner or to a third party network operator.
  • #31: The community will need to demonstrate they understand what this entails, and that they are in a position to take long-term strategic decisions Securing service providers will be very challenging for networks smaller then Digital Region! Proving sufficient quality to provide confidence to the health service for tele-health, for example, will be very hard Exit strategies are challenging – trade sale will require substantial due diligence for what may be perceived as a small increase in customer-base. These decisions will affect community members for possible another generation – 20 years!