- Mayor launches Digital Inclusion Service pilot to reduce the number of Londoners who are digitally excluded
- An estimated 270,000 Londoners are completely offline, with 2 million having very low engagement [1]
- The new Service aims to support up to 75,000 people over three years and offer support through providing offline Londoners with upcycled devices, providing free or low/cost mobile connectivity, and making people aware of basic skills education courses available to them locally
- The Mayor to call on businesses and public bodies to donate retired laptops and other devices, believed to be in the thousands each year, to the new service, in order to support excluded Londoners and reduce electronic waste.
A new scheme to help tens of thousands more Londoners get online and reduce digital exclusion has been launched today by the Mayor Sadiq Khan, in partnership with the London Office of Technology and Innovation (LOTI), and Good Things Foundation.
An estimated 270,000 Londoners have no access to the internet or digital access at all, with a further 2 million having very limited use, for example those without their own device to get online, or those who can get online but have difficulty accessing online forms or internet banking.
The service will be funded by the London Recovery Programme as part of Sadiq’s commitment to upskilling Londoners, aiding post-covid recovery and boosting the economy.
Research by the London Office of Technology & Innovation (LOTI) has found there are more than 100 different initiatives across the capital to address digital exclusion[2], but these often offer only part of the support people need, like basic skills, a device or a cheap connection. As a result, it isn’t easy for digitally excluded Londoners, or those that support them, to access what they need.
The new Digital Inclusion Service pilot scheme will offer Londoners all they need to get online wherever they live. Lack of a device has been reported as one of the major contributing factors to digital exclusion and the service will target large organisations and businesses to donate unwanted phones and laptops to be refurbished for Londoners who need them – also helping to reduce the number of old devices sent to landfill.
The Digital Inclusion Service will be developed in partnership with LOTI and digital inclusion charity Good Things Foundation, and its key aims are:
- Upcycling old devices from public bodies and businesses for distribution to digitally excluded Londoners through a new Device Bank run by Good Things Foundation
- Providing free or low-cost mobile connectivity via a Data Bank and the promotion of ‘social tariffs’ (cheap internet connections offered by telecommunications firms)
- Linking to existing skills offers by Good Things Foundation and hundreds of GLA-funded free adult education courses on basic skills, as well as borough and voluntary and community sector provision across the capital.
- Creating a cross-London digital inclusion network of organisations building on existing work to tackle digital exclusion
The scheme will bring together organisations who support digitally excluded Londoners and will explore how more digitally excluded groups could also be offered a device, a free or cheap connection, and basic skills training, including:
- Londoners in temporary accommodation
- Families and households still lacking a device
- Older or vulnerable people through social services or their GP
- Local community organisation staff and volunteers to support their work locally
Launching the scheme at the London Digital Inclusion conference today, the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said:
“Every Londoner should have digital access, but the sad reality is that too many Londoners lack the skills, technology and infrastructure to get online easily, preventing them from accessing the tools they need to thrive.
“The new Digital Inclusion Service will build on the amazing work already underway to tackle digital exclusion, and bring vital resources such as devices, connectivity, and learning opportunities to the fingertips of those who need them. I'm calling on large businesses and public bodies to join us in upcycling their old laptops and other tech to the new Device Bank to be reconditioned, to help bridge the digital divide, aid London’s recovery and build a better London for everyone.”
Genta Hajri, Digital Inclusion Lead at LOTI, said: “Tackling London’s digital divide is a key element in building a fairer and more prosperous city. Current rates of digital exclusion are utterly unsustainable and make other forms of inequality worse
“By teaming up with Good Things Foundation, we’ll be in a stronger position to support the work of local authorities and the voluntary sector as they seek to ensure no Londoner is excluded from the opportunities and benefits of being online. We’re hugely excited to have Good Things Foundation on board with this crucial work and look forward to getting the London Digital Inclusion Service underway.”
Philip Glanville, Mayor of Hackney and London Councils’ Digital Champion, said: “The digital divide is a very 21st century inequality and one that London local government is determined to tackle. As more and more local services are provided online, it’s essential to make sure that no Londoner gets left behind due to lack of digital skills, affordability or access to technology.”
Helen Milner OBE, Group Chief Executive, Good Things Foundation, said:
“The pandemic didn’t create the digital divide - but it did expose and exacerbate it.
"With more than a quarter of a million Londoners still completely offline, fixing the digital divide is now an urgent priority.
"We’re delighted to work with the London Office of Technology & Innovation to create a uniquely sustainable service that can be rolled out to the rest of the UK, as the London Digital Inclusion Service becomes part of our digital circular economy.
"By working together, we can do good things for the planet, good things for excluded people, and help fix the digital divide.”
References
[1]Lloyds Consumer Digital Index 2021 Report
[2] LOTI Digital Inclusion Report 2022
Notes to editors
About the Digital Inclusion Service Pilot
- The pilot of the London-wide Digital Inclusion Service will be funded by £545k from the London Recovery Programme. The pilot aims to meet the objective set by the London Recovery Board to establish a ‘minimum digital access package for Londoners’, one year early.
- The pilot will be announced at the London Digital Inclusion Conference.The conference is run by the London Office of Technology & Innovation (LOTI), a collaboration between boroughs set up by the umbrella body London Councils with the Mayor’s support.
- The model is a one-year pilot with the aim of creating a sustainable service that can be maintained in London into the future.
- The design process will begin on 23 June and end in January 2023, when the Mayor hopes to launch a working sustainable model for the city.
About the Digital Inclusion Innovation Programme
- The Digital Inclusion Innovation Programme (DIIP) is a two-year programme running between June 2021 and May 2023, led by LOTI and funded by the GLA. The programme aims to support the delivery of London’s Digital Access for All Recovery Mission, which aims to ensure that “Every Londoner has access to good connectivity, basic digital skills and the device or support they need to be online by 2025”. Year One work focused on improving data on digital inclusion in the capital, guidance for device upcycling and work with specific cohorts of excluded Londoners.
- From August 2020 the Essential Digital Skills Entitlement funded by the Mayor’s Adult Education Budget enables Londoners over the age of 19 years with no to low digital skills to access 428 fully funded entry and Level 1 digital skills courses from local colleges. Entry level skills are suitable for adults with no or little prior experience of using digital devices or the internet) and Level 1 for adults with some experience of using digital devices and the internet but lacking basic digital skills.
About LOTI
- The London Office of Technology and Innovation (LOTI) was established in July 2019 to help its members (currently 23 London boroughs, the Greater London Authority (GLA) and London Councils) to collaborate on projects that bring the best of digital and data innovation to improve public services and outcomes for Londoners.
About Good Things Foundation
- Good Things Foundation is a digital inclusion charity, helping people to thrive in a digital world. Through thousands of network partners in communities across the UK, Good Things Foundation helps people improve their lives through digital; and believes that everyone should have the confidence, skills, and access to use digital technology, participate in society and benefit from the digital world. For more information on Good Things Foundation visit www.goodthingsfoundation.org