The Government has marked a major milestone for rural connectivity with the official opening of the 500th RCG mobile tower in Anawhata today.
Communications Minister, Paul Goldsmith said the towers have enabled access to enhanced broadband to over 34,000 homes and mobile phone services to support safety to nearly 1,500kms of state highways and many tourism locations.
“Rural, rugged and remote, like many of the 500 towers delivered, RCG worked alongside community stakeholders to deliver better connectivity for Anawhata and the wider community,” said the Minister.
“The community was severely impacted by Cyclone Gabrielle and so this new site provides extra resilience to communicate in the case of other weather events.
“This Government is committed to delivering better public services and this kind of infrastructure is critical for those that live and operate businesses within our rural communities.”
The tower site has 30 solar panels and a back-up power generator, which will help people stay connected for longer in the event of outages.
“The Rural Connectivity Group are to be congratulated for their work and serve as great example of the good that comes from government partnering with the private sector to improve the lives of New Zealanders,” said Mr Goldsmith.
The entire Rural Broadband and Mobile Black spots programme, including commercial and Wireless Internet Service Provider coverage has delivered essential broadband and mobile services to rural homes and businesses across all regions of New Zealand.
1,481km of State Highway have gained mobile coverage increasing safety on some of New Zealand’s most dangerous roads. 159 tourism spots now have mobile coverage.
84,300 rural homes and businesses now have access to new or improved broadband across the Rural Broadband programme.