Telstra applies for disaster exemptions

Flooding in Melbourne has affected Telstra services so extensively that it has applied to the Australian Communications Authority for a "mass service disruption" exemption.

The "Mass Service Disruption" temporarily exempts the company from provisions in the Telecommunications Act that force the telco to guarantee a certain level of service. The floods have mostly affected normal fixed-line telephone services -- however, Telstra will not say just how severe outages caused by the floods are or how many customers are affected, claiming it's too early to tell exactly how severe any damage is. The company would only describe the outages as "substantial". The company will put all available technical staff on overtime over the weekend and has called in every available contractor to help to restore services to affected customers.

"We've got all staff available working on maximum over time on Saturday and Sunday," a spokeswoman said.

The application for a Mass Service Disruption exemption from the company's obligations under the Telecommunications (Customer Service Guarantee) Standard is not rare, the spokeswoman added. "When we are faced with conditions that are outside our control... we apply for exemptions through a mass service disruption... It's not out of the ordinary," she explained.

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Talkback 2 comments

    This would be right. Telstra w ...Anonymous -- 31/01/04

    This would be right.
    Telstra will blame ANYBODY and ANYTHING for service outages. Last time it was a virus, now its god. I sure hope that their application is refused.

    This mob of incompetents gotta ...Anonymous -- 03/02/04

    This mob of incompetents gotta be joking!
    The ACA must demand to see Telstra's CPAS{pressure}national data.This will show Thousands of cables in alarm condition un-attended because of cost cutting.It is a bit rich to leave a large proportion of the network at risk and then call foul when it gets wet.

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