Podcast Episode: Broadband Access And Equity

Pip: Digital Inclusion Alliance Aotearoa — where the internet access gap meets the people trying to close it, one modem sleeve at a time.

Mara: This episode covers posts from Laurence Zwimpfer, and the territory spans three areas: troubleshooting the physical and procedural side of Jump, who the service can and cannot serve, and a significant new fibre product aimed at low-income households.

Pip: Let's start with the surprisingly physical problem of getting a modem out of its box.

Tight covers and outdated guides

Mara: The practical reality of running a modem lending programme is that the hardware itself can become a barrier — and Grey District Library found that out firsthand with the Futura modems.

Pip: The post "Those tight covers!!" puts it plainly. "The newest modem boxes have very tight orange covers, which take two staff members to remove. One to hold the cover and one to pull the box out, and even then, it's still not easy. We have had staff members accidentally rip the modem box when trying to get it out."

Mara: So the upshot is that a packaging decision is creating real friction at the point of service — staff time, torn equipment, and patrons waiting. The fix turned out to be a short YouTube clip produced by the Jump operations team over a weekend.

Pip: Meanwhile, "Hoisted by my own petard!" tackles a different kind of operational hazard: a partner found a 2020 blog post describing a procedure that no longer exists. The correct process — completing a Modem Returns form — is in the November 2024 Partner Guide, page 21. Old posts, it turns out, age badly.

Mara: The practical guidance is clear: for anything about modem distribution and recovery, contact jump@diaa.nz. For Skinny Jump service issues, the Care Team is on 0800 475 4669. Treat older posts about operational procedures with caution.

Pip: From packaging to eligibility — the hardware challenge is one thing, but who the service actually fits is another question entirely.

When Jump isn't quite the right fit

Mara: "Getting older — is Jump right for you?" works through two real cases where partners tried to connect older people with limited digital capacity to Jump, and hit structural limits of the prepay model.

Pip: The core tension is the "set and forget" problem. Jump does not support auto plan renewals, so someone who cannot manage a login and plan selection every month is going to struggle — unless a family member or support worker takes on account management, sometimes from another country.

Mara: The post also flags a technical mismatch in one case: a phone designed for voice calls via big buttons and family photos requires a fixed-line connection, not a mobile data service. Skinny Jump simply does not support standard voice calls.

Pip: Three other posts round out this territory. "The clock is ticking for Ciena signups" notes 271 families signed up toward a 2026 target of 350 — and that the Ciena plan means free internet for the rest of the school year, saving eligible families up to $240.

Mara: "Never say never" makes the case for encouraging declined applicants to keep checking — Pātea had no broadband capacity on its cell tower for years, and then it did. The address checker updates nightly. And "Coverage review finds 18 more families who can now get Jump" shows that re-checking past declined applications found 21 out of 42 now had coverage, with 18 contacted directly.

Pip: Coverage and eligibility keep shifting — which makes the new fibre product worth understanding carefully.

Equity Fibre and the school index

Mara: Chorus has launched a wholesale product called Equity Fibre 100, and the post explaining it is careful to distinguish Chorus from retail providers. Chorus builds and owns the infrastructure — about 70 percent of New Zealand's ultra-fast broadband network — and sells wholesale to retailers like Skinny or Spark.

Pip: The product is retail-capped at thirty dollars a month for 100/20 Mbps unlimited fibre. But the eligibility criteria are layered: households must be in public or community housing or near a lower-decile school, have an inactive fibre connection already installed, and hold a Community Services Card or MSD benefit letter.

Mara: The post is direct about where Jump falls short and where Equity Fibre could help: "We recognise that Jump doesn't suit every household, e.g. large households with many internet users, where the Jump data cap of 225GB simply isn't enough, and of course for families in high density housing areas where the 4G cell towers are at capacity."

Pip: That last point lands hard — over 130 customers turned away in four months because of cell tower capacity. A social housing complex with 200 apartments where 120 are on Jump because fibre was never affordable is exactly the gap this product targets.

Mara: The school equity index — the 490-plus threshold that determines eligibility — was clarified in a follow-up post, "Demystifying the school equity index." A community supporter named Steven Price built a public Google Map showing New Zealand schools with their equity index scores, with schools meeting the Chorus criteria marked in green.

Pip: So the bureaucratic threshold that might have caused eyes to roll now has a map. That is genuinely useful.

Mara: Partners are not expected to handle sign-up — the role is to help customers navigate eligibility and refer them to one of the four retail providers currently offering the product. A Stepping UP information module is coming.


Pip: Coverage that appears overnight, packaging that needs two people, fibre that was always there but never affordable — the gap keeps shifting shape.

Mara: Next time, more on how partners and the people they serve are navigating all of it.

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Author: Laurence Zwimpfer

I am committed to supporting the development of New Zealand as a digitally included nation, where everyone has equitable opportunities to benefit from the digital world.

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