Press Release

actnow reaches out to the rural communities in Cornwall

The Rural Cornwall & Isles of Scilly Partnership has awarded funding of £99,525 to launch a new project called actnow reach, aimed at boosting broadband use in rural Cornish communities. This funding is from the South West Regional Development Agency Rural Renaissance scheme.

actnow reach  will set out to achieve a number of different targets when the project launches in May 2007. This includes connecting 50 voluntary and community projects to broadband as well as providing funding and training support to at least 30 of these.

Nigel Ashcroft, Project Director of actnow, which is led by Cornwall Enterprise and funded through Objective One, was delighted to receive the Rural Renaissance funding to extend their remit. He says: ‘actnow was originally set up to promote broadband use amongst businesses, but our vision is to see the benefits of broadband being enjoyed by every single man, woman and child in Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly. This new project will reach out to people in rural communities that have not yet experienced the benefits of broadband.’

actnow reach will focus on bringing the benefits of broadband to at least 250 small businesses in rural areas that have not yet connected to broadband.

Bill Holliday, Manager of the Rural Cornwall & Isles of Scilly Partnership, says: ‘actnow reach will now enable the transformational power of broadband to be enjoyed by the wider rural community. Essential services have become centralised, often leaving those in rural areas in need and forced to travel. We are keen to find new ways to provide essential services in rural areas and broadband is a vitally important element of this. Broadband not only makes it easier for people in rural areas to access services, it also makes it easier for rural businesses to thrive.’

actnow reach will also help set up three community centres in Cornwall where the benefits of IT and the Internet can be promoted to local residents, including the elderly and people with disabilities, who often stand to gain significantly from broadband as it offers easier access to services. The location for the three centres will be selected via a ‘community challenge.’

These community centres have been inspired by the success of projects such as The Computer Club in Helston, set up by retired businessman John Mitchell and providing huge benefits to local people such as Annie Heyden of Mullion, who is now an avid broadband user and uses it to stay in close contact with her children and grandchildren, who live hundreds of miles away.

Annie says: ‘Because of the skills I’ve learned, I now use broadband to have frequent communication with all my family. The grandchildren send me photos of what they have been up to and the latest photos of their pets. My grandson even persuaded me to join MSN Messenger. It’s great – I can have live email chats with them over the Internet. One of my sons is planning to spend some time in Australia soon, but because of broadband, if he goes it will not seem so far away.’

Annie continues: ‘I do my banking online now. It’s wonderful and saves me having to travel into Helston all the time as we have no banks in Mullion anymore. I also use it for shopping sometimes and this makes life a lot easier, especially when you live in Cornwall and would have to travel a long way to be able to find what you were after in the shops.’

Blair Thomson, Chairman of the Cornwall Strategic Partnership says: ‘Voluntary and community groups are at the heart of local communities across rural Cornwall. It is vital that we help them connect to broadband as that will not only allow them to work more effectively, it will also act as a catalyst, helping to promote further broadband usage in their local community. It is excellent that the vital role that voluntary and community groups play is being recognised through this new project.’

John Berry, Managing Director of Cornwall Enterprise, which is part-funding actnow reach, adds: ‘ Broadband is boosting the competitiveness of Cornish businesses and helping individuals benefit from new education and leisure opportunities, but much remains to be done. It is not just about whether companies and individuals have broadband, it is about how effectively they are using the technology.. This pilot project will break new ground as it looks at innovative ways to engage with rural communities and ensure that the benefits of broadband are available to all.’

 

 

BTSouth West of England Regional Development AgencyCornwall EnterpriseBusiness Link for Devon & CornwallThis project is part-funded by European Union Structural FundsCornwall CollegeCornwall County CouncilThe Objective One Parnership for Cornwall and Scilly Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs