There are calls for the government to tighten Telstra’s obligation to its customers to include “timely and to standard” upgrades of its mobile services after towns were left disconnected for a fortnight.
Nationals leader David Littleproud said the government needed to make changes to the Universal Service Obligation (USO).
Under the USO, Telstra has an obligation to provide a “standard telephone service” within a reasonable timeframe.
“The USO was put in place when Telstra was privatised, over landlines and payphones because that’s the only technology we had,” Mr Littleproud said.
“Subsequent to that, we’ve seen technology shift … mobiles have now taken over.
“What we said in the last election is what the Coalition would do … extending that USO to cover the mobile phone infrastructure.”
More than 13,000 residents in Dalby, on Queensland’s Western Downs, had mobile calls, internet and other services including EFTPOS and ATMs disrupted for two weeks this month due to Telstra upgrading a tower.
Telstra told the ABC that customers needed to have a backup option available.
“This is when it’s really important to have that second type of connection … such as NBN, satellite, or landline,” regional general manager Ms Boisen said.
“We understand people are using the mobile network, that’s why we’re doing this massive upgrade on the tower in Dalby.”
Mr Littleproud said the response was “substandard”.
“We’ve seen this elsewhere … in St George, and in Goondiwindi, we had outages going well beyond days. That’s why the government needs to step in,” he said.
A spokesperson from the office of Communications Minister Anika Wells told the ABC the government was looking to include mobile coverage in its legislation.
“Through Universal Outdoor Mobile Obligation (UOMO), the government is putting mobile coverage right at the core of the Universal Services Obligation,” they said.
“While the Coalition left USO reform to languish, Labor has taken real steps to ensure regional communities aren’t forgotten when it comes to mobile coverage.”
When the ABC asked for additional information, the government sent a statement released in February by then-communications minister Michelle Rowland.
It stated the government would consult and introduce legislation this year to cover the mobile network.
“Implementation of outdoor SMS and voice will be expected by late 2027, with many Australians likely to obtain access before then,” the release said.
“Basic mobile data will be considered in the future as technology road maps and capacity considerations develop.”
Locals left rattled
Telstra switched off Dalby’s mobile services on Monday, June 16 in order to upgrade its base tower to 5G.
NBN, satellite, and landline connections were uninterrupted, but locals called it a safety issue, with many businesses and medical staff impacted in the town of about 13,000 people.
Mr Littleproud, also the member for Maranoa, said the regional town had been forgotten.
“If it was happening in Sydney, Melbourne, or Brisbane, Telstra would have fixed this by now. But because it’s in Dalby, they don’t care,” he said.
Mobile services in Dalby and surrounds were restored after the two-week disruption, but the outage left businesses and residents shaken.
“It’s a bit of a catch here — we have to rely on Telstra as once you leave town most other providers aren’t available,” Anna Story from Dalby’s Chamber of Commerce said.
“They need to change their advice for future outages.
“[Saying] ‘coverage is likely to be impacted’ is a very different thing to no coverage for five days.”
It was stressful for residents too.
“My elderly father-in-law has been in hospital for several weeks in the Scenic Rim and my husband — his power of attorney — has been uncontactable in the case that urgent medical and care decisions need to be made,” Tina Burnett said.
“My husband works out of town, and he was unable to contact his employer or the other works to coordinate tasks as they had no service on their mobile phones.”
Ms Burnett said the outage was poorly communicated.
“They provided a link to outage details which required me entering my address. When I did that, the website told me that there was no outage in my area,” she said.
“The comment about having a backup plan such as a landline in a cost-of-living crisis showed a complete disregard for any sort of customer service.”
Not really good enough.
People pay each month for the ability to connect via the Telstra Network.
I wonder if all those who were inconvenienced by this outage, were automatically refunded for the 5days they were unable to make or receive calls?
I guess Telstra would probably say that people may apply for a refund; but, wouldn’t it be nice if this was a Telstra Policy to automatically refund customers when Telstra obviously cannot keep their part of the contract for a lengthy period of time.
I live in Goonellabah, the largest suburb of Lismore, high above flood level.
Recently, our fire station was demolished, so it can be rebuilt, and the tower hosting Optus and Vodaphone networks was demolished with it. Since then, mobile service in the central part of the suburb, including all the shops, has been appalling. I have between 0 and 2 bars, and mostly can’t access data, unless I’m at home using wifi.