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Minister of Energy, Mining
and Telecommunications, Clive Mullings, has announced
that the Ministry will be placing emphasis on the
establishment of community access points, as part of
efforts to increase public access to information
technology.
"We are going to have
these community access points in shops, community
centres and the like. This means that the man in the
community can go to the shop, which has an electronic
access point, and pay his bill so you do not have to
have the actual hardware and software in your home," he
stated.
Minister Mullings, who
was addressing the sixth in a series of focus group
meetings on the Electronic Transactions Act on November
15 at the Altamont West Hotel in Montego Bay, said the
administrators of the Universal Access Fund, with whom
he met recently, shared his enthusiasm about this
initiative.
Turning to the
E-Transactions Act, the Minister said the legislation
marks a change in the way business is transacted in
Jamaica. "The world is online, and we now have to ensure
that we keep in step with what is happening," he
emphasized.
"Hotel reservations,
rental of ground transport, airline reservations and
other activities related to the travel and tourism
industries are increasingly being done electronically.
At the same time, more Jamaicans are using the computer,
internet, and other digital technologies to do business
transactions," Minister Mullings pointed out.
The government, he
stated, continues to support a technology policy that
promotes e-governance, e-commerce, distance education
and the use of information and communications technology
to drive the process of development and generation of
jobs.
According to the
Minister, the convergence of technologies and the
dynamic nature of that sector, dictates that the
government continually examine and modify policies and
the legislative framework in order to facilitate, rather
than hinder the development process.
The E-Transaction Act,
which came into effect on April 2, 2007, sets out the
legal framework for electronic business transactions in
Jamaica.
The focus group meetings, which are being staged by the
Ministry, are aimed at informing the general public
about their responsibilities and rights under the Act
and the benefits that can be derived.
Director General in the
Ministry, Karlene Francis, said that the sessions, which
started in October, will continue through to January
2008. The next meeting will be held in Ocho Rios. |