Techie Isles by Juha Saarinen

Juha Saarinen keeps his feet on New Zealand's shaky ground and his head up in the long white cloud.

Rethink Visionstream disaster, Telecom

Posted by Juha Saarinen @ 0:00 3 comments

Paul Reynolds at Telecom NZ deserves some of his bonus for steering Telecom clear of the public relations disasters that it ran into regularly in the past, and which cemented the company as the Evil Empire in people's minds.

Now, however, it's time to test Reynold's mettle over the Visionstream debacle, where Telecom's lines techies — the people who actually keep the network going and who extend it — are being forced into the cold confines of dependent contracting as owner-operators, facing start-up costs of $20,000 or more while their incomes drop by a half to two-thirds. And, they're asked to go along with this amidst a massive global recession.

Slashing costs is one thing, but the way Telecom's done it via its infrastructure arm, Chorus, threatens to undo all of Reynolds' public image repair work. It's hard to imagine a more raw deal than the one offered to the techies, especially when there's plenty of work for them to do at a company that has the profitable monopoly on much of NZ's telecommunications.

If Telecom thought that the public would ignore it, and not support the striking techies, it thought wrong. The whole Visionstream idea may have looked good in an Excel spreadsheet, but it may end up costing Telecom far more than it was supposed to save.

The opposition Labour party is making hay over the issue, putting pressure on Communications Minister Joyce who would rather be busy with his already-delayed broadband network. Joyce won't appreciate the disruption, and it may end up costing Telecom bits of the national broadband network business.

What's worse, Northland National MP John Carter's now come out in support of the striking techies, telling his constituents not to sign the Visionstream contracts. They're "crock", Carter says, and it's not in the techies' interests to go along with them.

Telecom's wholesale customers like Orcon are also grizzling, as they have to tell their customers to expect delays to fault fixing, which is err, no fault of their own. How long before the strikes start to affect Telecom's regulatory undertakings and even its own retail and wholesale operations?

It can't be said clearer than that, really, but so far, Telecom's showing no sign of listening to the public opinion. Perhaps Reynolds has to stay out of Chorus' immediate business because of operational separation requirements, but even so, Reynolds would be wise to look up what happened last time Telecom gave the New Zealand public the two-finger salute, and not let the dispute drag on until the bitter end. The Visionstream deal just isn't going to work in its current incarnation, and needs to be dumped.

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Talkback 3 comments

    Tech turn into criminals Anonymous -- 15/09/09

    After listening to a womans conversation in Takapuna a few days ago i started wondering how safe our valuebles are in our homes. Refering to the conversation a Tech "stocked up" tools before handing in his van. In better words stole. This guy Garth are one of many tech who signed up with Visionstream. It made me wonder if i want him coming into my home. Did this bussiness turn workers into criminals. Watch them every second when they enter your homes.

    Vision Stream Techrims k.Barnes -- 28/09/09 (in reply to #320299527)

    Unfortunately G Young and his ilk have had to resort to lying and thieving to make any money under Vision Sream's owner operator model.Lies and shonky shortcuts will have to be utilsed to survive.The real losers are the Kiwis, as the network deteriorates without sufficient honest ; well skilled staff on board.It will not collapse as it has not even walked yet and will get worse.If they came back with a normal waged model they would have high quality dependable staff,instead of their wafer thin layer of workers they currently have.After 25 years continuous service on cable restoration, I could see what a terrible deal it was as anyone who is well well experienced could and that is what they have lost..Pity the CBD businesses.Watch the carnage.

    Visionstream/Chorus Carnage? Anonymous -- 07/10/09

    Who are they turning to now that the fault count has blown out in Northland? And how much more an hour have they been offered to fix it up? What happens next, if they dont get the required owner operators on board during the clean up phase, what next? If I was one of the decommissioned Telco workers I would have told them to fix their own problem. Good thing these guys are professionals who love and are good at what they do. As for turning into criminals, I very much doubt that scenario per 15/9/09 anonymous, as their vans are audited and anything of value that was missing would be easy to trace.

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Juha Saarinen

Juha Saarinen

NZ correspondent

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