National Get online day to launch at Royston Lifelong Learning Centre
News archive
Press release
13 October 2009
National Get online day to launch at Royston Lifelong Learning Centre
The nation's third Get online day will be launched at Royston Lifelong Learning Centre on Friday 23 October, leading the way for 700 other Get online day's at UK online centres across England.
Royston Lifelong Learning Centre will be welcoming VIP guests including Champion for Digital Inclusion and dotcom entrepreneur Martha Lane Fox, Barnsley Council's Chief Executive Phil Coppard and Managing Director for UK online centres Helen Milner. They're also inviting local people to drop in to join the celebrations, and give the internet a go!
New research released today from Martha Lane Fox's office shows the economic benefit of getting everyone online in the UK is £22billion. For digitally excluded households, not being online could mean they're missing out on average savings of £560 per year from shopping and paying bills online. Martha Lane Fox will be in Barnsley next week urging people to pledge their support in helping others get online so that they can enjoy the benefits technology has to offer. She says: "Get online day is a great way for off-line people to take the plunge and get started with technology, and Barnsley is a fantastic example of how communities can benefit from being online. I'm really looking forward to meeting some of those people whose lives have been transformed by the internet."
Centre Manager Nigel Ball adds: "We're really excited about having Martha Lane Fox visit the centre, and proud that Barnsley's been chosen to host Get online day! I'm looking forward to showing visitors how all the different community services at the centre work together, and particularly how we're helping people use technology to help themselves. Some of those people are now also helping others, and we're getting some of our regular learners to bring in off-line friends for a special digital photography session. We'll also be getting some of our Silver Surfers onto the internet for the first time with the Get online day taster GOLDRush, and are looking forward to helping anyone dropping by find out how computers and the internet could save them time, hassle - and as this latest research shows - money."
One regular at the centre is local woman Sheila Govier, 67. For her, the best thing about the internet has been the possibilities for keeping in touch - but it wasn't easy to make a start. It was her brother who first signed her up for a computer course at Royston Lifelong Learning Centre. Sheila says: "To be honest, when he told me what he'd done I didn't want to go and played merry hell about it! But eventually I gave in and went and I'm so glad I did - it's the best thing I've ever done. Obviously I was very nervous at first. You become frightened of new technology as you get older and even though I knew a little bit from a previous course I was still worried I might somehow do something wrong! But the tutor was marvellous and really put me at ease. Plus it was great to find there were other people my age in the same boat.
"The best moment for me was when I sent an email to my nephew who is travelling around Australia and he replied straightaway. Words can't describe how I felt when that email came through to me - it was the most brilliant thing that's ever happened. He said in his reply that it was great that I'd joined the 21st Century at last and he was right. I didn't used to know what people were talking about when they spoke about web addresses and email, but now I can join in the conversation. I'd certainly recommend others to come in on Get online day and give it a go!"
Get online day in Barnsley is the first major milestone for the Totally Online Barnsley campaign, which aims to get everyone in the borough online by 2012. Royston Community Learning Centre opens its doors at 9.45, with the official launch of Get online day across the nation at 10.00. For more information about other Get online day events across Barnsley and beyond, call 0800 77 1234.
Ends
Media are invited to attend the Get online day flagship events, split across Royston Lifelong Learning Centre in the morning (9.30), and Barnsley Central Library in the afternoon (13.15).
For more information about this press release or to send a photographer and/or journalist to cover the event, please contact:
Abi Stevens, UK online centres, on astevens@ufi.com or 0778 666 0689
Kevin Smith, Barnsley Council, on kevinsmith@barnsley.gov.uk or 01226 773442.
Notes to editors
Digital inclusion
- The government recommended the role of a Champion for Digital Inclusion who would be independent of government, industry and the third sector. Martha Lane Fox was delighted to accept this role in June 2009 for a period of two years
- Digital Inclusion is a cross departmental government funded but independent organisation set up by Martha Lane Fox to support her work as the UK's Champion for Digital Inclusion
- Digital Inclusion is independent of government and will build partnerships across the public, private and third sectors to support the 17 million people in the UK who don't benefit from online technologies. Digital Inclusion will particularly focus on the new tools that can help the most vulnerable 6 million people of this group.
- Martha Lane Fox co-founded lastminute.com, Europe's largest travel and leisure website, in 1998, then went on to co-found and chair the private karaoke chain, Lucky Voice. In 2007 she launched Antigone, a grant-giving foundation that supports education, health and criminal justice charities to reflect her commitment to social justice. She is non-executive director at Marks & Spencer plc, Channel 4 Television and Mydeco.
Race online research
The overall potential economic benefit of getting everyone online is in excess of £22bn, and is made up as follows:
|
Annual saving (£ billion) |
Lifetime saving (£ billion) |
|
|
Online shopping |
4.50 |
8.85 |
|
Home access for children |
|
10.80 |
|
Improved ICT skills for the employed |
|
0.56 |
|
Improved access to employment for the unemployed |
|
0.56 |
|
Government efficiencies |
0.90 |
1.77 |
|
|
|
22.54 |
Research was conducted by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) between 16th September and 9th October 2009.
- The PwC research estimates the potential benefits to individuals, government and the wider economy of getting more people online.
- The research focuses on four key areas of potential benefit: education and employment; health and wellbeing; transforming contact and transactions with government and online shopping.
- Previous research on digital inclusion has tended to focus on social and consumer benefits. This is the first time that research has brought together the economic case for getting more people online.
- The research defines a person as offline if they have never used the internet: in addition to the 10 million adults who have never used the internet, there are nearly two million adults who have not used the internet in the last three months.
- Whether a person is socially excluded is based on several factors including income, employment status, health and education.
- Evidence that access to a computer and the internet can boost children's educational performance and lifetime earnings has been used to underpin the Government's case for the Home Access Programme: it has been used as the basis for estimating the benefit of extending similar access across all digitally excluded children.
- The consumer saving of £560 a year is an average across all digitally excluded households: for the 20% of households on the lowest incomes, the average saving is £300 a year.
- The consumer saving is equivalent to around £3 in every £100.
- The biggest consumer savings are estimated to come from purchases of energy, insurance, clothing and package holidays.
- The estimates of consumer savings are based on work undertaken for the Post Office.
- Evidence from research by the Centre for the Economics of Education suggests that ICT skills can help individuals to earn 3-10% more than their peers without such skills.
- Each person who can improve their ICT skills by moving online can expect to increase their lifetime earnings by over £8,000.
- If 5% of digitally excluded unemployed could find work by using job websites it would deliver an estimated £560million to the UK economy.
- Providing online access has the potential to reduce some of the barriers to unemployed people finding work: the estimated benefits are based on 5% of the digitally and socially excluded unemployed being able to find work more quickly.
- It is estimated that the benefit to the UK economy would be between £560 million and £1.3billion from moving adults online and into employment depending how effective any support is.
- Government can potentially save between £3.30 and £12.00 for each offline contact which is moved online.
- If all 10 million digitally excluded adults could undertake one more contact or transaction online each month (rather than relying on offline channels), this would save at least £900 million a year in customer contact costs
- It was outside the remit of this research project to suggest solutions for how to help more people get online or to estimate the costs of any potential solutions.
Barnsley Council
- Barnsley, along with its South Yorkshire neighbours, will be the first region in Europe to enjoy ubiquitous next generation broadband, delivered by the £94m Digital Region project.
- Barnsley has announced its intention to be the first place in Britain where everyone is online, that is
- they understand how they can benefit from digital tenchologies
- they have the skills and the confidence to use them
- they have access to them
and to do so by the time of the 2012 Olympic Games
- Phil Coppard is the only local government member of the Digital Inclusion Taskforce
Get online day and UK online centres
- Get online day is a campaign from UK online centres, supported by Ofcom, Intel, NHS Choices and the government's Learning Revolution Festival
- myguide - www.myguide.gov.uk - offers a free, easy to use email service and web search facility from a clean, simple homepage, plus taster courses to help people get to grips with computers and the internet. The idea is to make the internet available and accessible to those who have never used it before - whether because of lack of motivation, skills, confidence, or even disability. myguide allows people to personalise and save their settings, change screen colours or font sizes, and choose to have the text read to them without needing additional software. The service has developed with input from users and stakeholders including AbilityNet and RNIB. myguide courses are arranged across three levels - starting, using and understanding. The journey helps users track their learning progress and build their own journey based on the subjects that interest them.
- UK online centres provide millions of people with access to technology and support in using it. They offer free or low cost access to the internet and email, deliver online courses and encourage people to progress onto further learning. For more information please visit www.ukonlinecentres.com. UK online centres are managed by Ufi, the organisation also behind learndirect




