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Background Notes for Smart Communities Workshop March 3, 2003

Hickling Arthurs Low. Background Notes for Smart Communities Workshop March 3, 2003. Technology Management, Strategy, and Economics. Mid-Term Evaluation of The Smart Communities Demonstration Program. Background. Definition of Smart Community.

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Background Notes for Smart Communities Workshop March 3, 2003

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  1. Hickling Arthurs Low Background Notes for Smart Communities WorkshopMarch 3, 2003 Technology Management, Strategy, and Economics Mid-Term Evaluation of The Smart Communities Demonstration Program

  2. Background

  3. Definition of Smart Community “Smart Communities are towns and cities that use information and communications technologies in new and innovative ways to empower their residents, institutions and region as a whole.” Report of the Panel on Smart Communities (Industry Canada, 1998)

  4. 1998 Panel Report Context of Smart Communities • Part of the Connectedness Agenda (6 “pillars”) • Canada On-Line • Canadian Content On-Line • E-commerce • Government On-Line • Connecting Canada to the World • Smart Communities

  5. Smart Communities Program Goal • Establish world-class Smart Communities across the country so that Canadians can fully realize benefits that information and communication technologies have to offer

  6. Smart Communities Program Objectives • Assist communities in developing and implementing sustainable Smart Communities strategies • Create opportunities for learning through the sharing among communities of Smart activities, experiences and lessons learned • Provide new business opportunities, domestically and internationally, for Canadian companies developing and delivering information and communication technology applications and services

  7. Selection Criteria • Community Engagement • Strategic Partnerships with community stakeholders • Smart Services • Offer informative, interactive, innovative services; international links • Smart Infrastructure • On-line access available to majority of community • Organization • Credible organizational structure or sponsoring organization • Smart Results • Improvement in economic and social well-being

  8. Preliminary Mid-term EvaluationFindings

  9. Study Methodologies • Document review • Program documents, original proposals, contribution agreements, website reviews, etc. • Interviews with • Leads and partners in all 12 demonstration projects • Members of the 1998 Panel that recommended the program • Selection Committee members • Case studies • Representative of different types of communities ie rural, urban, remote, Aboriginal, and francophone • Kuh-ke-nah Network, SmartCapital, La Péninsule acadienne • Surveys online • Applicants that did not receive funding • Website users • Workshop

  10. Evaluation Issues • Relevance • Program Design • Program Delivery • Objectives Achievement • Lessons Learned • Future Directions

  11. Relevance (1) • Program Goal and Objectives • Virtual unanimous support for program goal and objectives : ““The program goal and objectives are very visionary and appropriate” (SC Representative). • Approach of delegating delivery to communities very well received, enables strategies suited to local opportunities/ capacity • Raised awareness of potential of Smart Communities • Highlighted capabilities of ICTs to deliver services, provide linkages etc. • In remote communities, led to increase in number of computers in homes and in use of the Internet

  12. Relevance (2) • Strong incrementality • Many ICT services and applications • Would have taken much longer without the program or • Would not have happened at all • Provided equality of access to services, information • Especially important in rural and remote communities • Generated interest on an international scale • Majority of communities reported international interest • Connect Calgary named Intelligent Community of the Year 2002

  13. Design and Delivery (1) • Selection Criteria • Virtually all consulted felt appropriate • Enabled comparison of very different proposals • Concern expressed over infrastructure requirements, many smaller communities may not have considered applying • Suggestion that portfolio criteria (ex. achieving a balance between urban, rural, remote etc. communities) could have been better communicated • Suggestion also that compensation for weak infrastructure by strong community engagement could have been explicitly stated

  14. Design and Delivery (2) • Two-stage application process • First round: Letter of Intent • 129 submissions • Second round: Full proposals • 46 submissions • National Selection Committee established to make recommendations

  15. Design and Delivery (3) • 12 demonstration projects selected • 10 provinces + aboriginal and northern • $4.5 million over three years (to March 2004) • Matching from partners • Contribution agreements with each project • Vendor agreement model with specific deliverables • Lead projects act as umbrellas for sub-projects • Different strategies followed • Sub-projects delivered through partnerships • Sub-projects delivered through the lead • Combination of both

  16. Design and Delivery (4) • Circumstances challenged the delivery of the program • Delays in release of funding • Keeping interest of partners while waiting • Meltdown of high tech sector • Loss of key private sector partners • Supportive synergies with other programs • Federal: FedNor, WD, ACOA; CAP • Provincial

  17. Design and Delivery (5) • Smart Communities Directorate • Provides ongoing guidance and advice - organizes annual meetings of 12 Smart Communities • Showed flexibility in allowing adjustments to contribution agreements as conditions changed (e.g., loss of private sector partners) • Established Smart Communities website - Resource Exchange (clearing house of best practices), Tool Kit and Skills Development (online and in-person training) - evidence that website not yet achieving significant usage among funded and un-funded communities

  18. Achievement of Objectives (1) • High usage of many services that are operational, despite many sub-projects not yet fully up-and-running • Implementation of community-wide ICT projects promoted linkages amongst diverse players; silos bridged among players that not normally communicate • Momentum created within communities (even some of those that did not receive funding)

  19. Examples of Sub-projects • Kuk-ke-nah Network (Aboriginal) • Access to health information • Potentially significant impact on treatment of diabetes • SmartCapital (Ottawa) • Integration of public, university and national library catalogues online • Calgary Connect • Services and information provided to “at risk” population

  20. Achievement of Objectives (2) • Community Engagement • Significant impact • Engaged many partners and ordinary citizens • Seen as “liberating,” “empowering” • Equality of access to services, information, training • Capacity building • All communities developed new capacities • Technical • Organizational/Managerial

  21. Achievement of Objectives (3) • Achievements varied with type of community (Remote, Rural, Urban) • Different challenges • Infrastructure was lacking in remote communities • Community engagement more difficult in urban communities • Technical capabilities lacking in remote & rural communities • Incremental impacts • Deep impact, small population in remote communities • Wide impact, large population in urban communities • Interest in sharing solutions different • Much sharing among remote and francophone communities, and those with similar strategies

  22. Achievement of Objectives (4) • Leverage • Funding • Levered funding from other programs to fill in gaps (e.g. infrastructure) such as Community Access Program providing local access centres • Levered funding from regional development agencies (FedNor, WD, ACOA) • Infrastructure • Levered fibre and other infrastructure builds by provinces (e.g. Ontario, New Brunswick, Saskatchewan)

  23. Achievement of Objectives (5) • Sustainability • Sub-projects are sustainable; many may be supported or maintained by other agencies (municipal, provincial, educational, health) • Project offices may not be sustainable; will impact on ability • To share know-how • To provide international leadership • Projects may have significant positive social and economic outcomes • Too early to tell at mid-term • Important to measure in individual project evaluations and in final program evaluation

  24. Lessons Learned (1) • Valuable know-how developed in project offices but means need to be found to capture and retain – in danger of being lost (with end of program) • Opportunities for commercializing smart community products and services – steps required to avoid competition among Smart Communities to provide these services • Dissemination cannot be passive (e.g., Smart Communities website) - need concerted marketing efforts, best focused on “like” communities ie remote, rural, urban

  25. Lessons Learned (2) • The three types of communities (remote, rural, and urban), have differing capacities and needs in becoming Smart Communities eg demands on rural and remote to build technical and managerial skills • Willingness of business partners to contribute leading edge approaches greatly affected by economic health of technology sector • Three-year time frame may be too short for full demonstration; five years appears more realistic • Time for consultation among local groups • Time to develop and work with partners • Time to develop and implement applications

  26. Future Directions • Develop models/structures to: • Capture and make available know-how, knowledge • Market ideas pro-actively to entire country and internationally • Exert international leadership • Provide incentives for others to become smart communities • Continuing focus on applications and services enabled by provincial and municipal broadband network builds

  27. This Study Activities underway to complete the study: • Case Studies (3) • Online surveys (2) • Workshop (March 3) • Draft and final reports (by March 31)

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